Topinka v. Minnesota Mutual Life Insurance

248 N.W. 660, 189 Minn. 75, 95 A.L.R. 739, 1933 Minn. LEXIS 731
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMay 12, 1933
DocketNo. 29,351.
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 248 N.W. 660 (Topinka v. Minnesota Mutual Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Topinka v. Minnesota Mutual Life Insurance, 248 N.W. 660, 189 Minn. 75, 95 A.L.R. 739, 1933 Minn. LEXIS 731 (Mich. 1933).

Opinions

STONE, Justice.

In this action on a policy of life insurance plaintiif had a verdict. Thereupon defendant moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or a new trial. The motion for judgment notwithstanding was granted, and plaintiff appeals.

Defendant is, as its name indicates, a Minnesota mutual life insurance company, doing business on the old line plan. Plaintiff sues as beneficiary of the policy in suit, issued by defendant on the life of her son, Rudolph Topinka. He made application for the insurance at Cedar Rapids, Iowa, September 28, 1923. The policy was issued and dated October 5 and delivered to the insured at Cedar Rapids October 8, 1923. It was an ordinary $1,000 life policy on the 20-payment plan. The application, made part of the policy, pi’ovided “that in determining the due dates of any Premium the reckoning shall be from the date of the Policy.” The latter stated that it was issued “in consideration of the payment in advance of the annual premium of thirty-three and 33/100 dollars and of the further payment of a like sum on or before the fifth day of October in every year until premiums have been paid for a period of twenty years, or until the prior death of the Insured.” All premiums were made payable in advance at the home office of the company at St. Paul or to an agent upon delivery of a receipt signed by the president or secretary and countersigned by said agent. Subject to a grace of one month, it was provided that “the payment of any premium or instalment thereof shall not maintain the Policy in force beyond the date when the next premium or instalment thereof is payable.” The first premium was paid to defendant’s soliciting agent at Cedar Rapids. There was premium default on the first anniversary of the policy, October 5, 1924. On *77 the insured’s application, the policy was reinstated November 21, 1924, but on the payment of a six-months’ rather than a one-year’s premium. So another semi-annual premium instalment of $17.33 became due April 5, 1925. If that payment was not made, the policy was not in force June 22, 1925, when the insured died. The insurance had not been in force long enough to make effective its standard provisions for automatic extension upon premium default.

The complaint alleged the execution and delivery of the policy, and that the insured, “beginning with the payment of the first premium at or about November 17, 1923, did and performed all the terms and conditions of the said contract to be done and performed by him.” The defense is that the policy lapsed for nonpayment of the premium due April 5, 1925. At the trial, death of the insured and date thereof admitted, plaintiff introduced the policy and rested. For defendant, the evidence consisted of the home office records hereinafter mentioned. By those records, and not otherwise, was it proved that the premium due April 5, 1925, was not paid and that in consequence the policy had lapsed before the insured’s death.

Death of the insured admitted, production of the policy made a prima facie case for plaintiff. That is established by a long line of decisions. Hinchliffe v. Minnesota C. M. Assn. 142 Minn. 204, 171 N. W. 776. The rule is especially appropriate where the insurer is a mutual company, whereof issue of the policy makes the insured a member. Such a status, once established, may be presumed to continue for what, under the circumstances, is a reasonable time.

But the rule is a general one, its application varying in accommodation to facts. It is urged for plaintiff, with some authority in support (to be considered later), that it not only made a prima facie case for her but also shifted the whole burden of proof to defendant. That impossible extension of the rule can be achieved only by ignoring controlling factors.

Such cases as Lafferty v. Kansas City Cas. Co. 287 Mo. 555, 229 S. W. 750, to the contrary notwithstanding, nonpayment of the premium was not an affirmative defense. Plaintiff undertook to *78 establish contract liability. The burden of establishing it was on her at the beginning and remained so to the end. Hers was the burden of establishing every essential of liability. Issue of the policy was but the initial element. Proof of that had to be followed, in order to sustain plaintiff’s case, by evidence that the insured had performed the obligations necessary to continue the insurance beyond the time of his death. Upon plaintiff, then, was the burden to prove that the premium due April 5, 1925, had been paid.

Many of the cases (for collections of which see 4 Cooley, Briefs on Ins. [2 ed.] p. 3863, et seq; 8 Couch, Ins. § 2223) correctly say that by production of certificate or policy a distinct burden is shifted to the insurer if some affirmative action by the company was prerequisite to obligation to pay premium or assessment. Where the insurer must make an assessment and give notice before the insured is obliged to pay, the burden is upon it to prove the assessment, notice, and nonpayment. In such cases, there is a condition to be performed by the insurer precedent to liability of the insured to pay. That condition is normally present in fraternal and other assessment insurance.

But a very different situation is inherent in and characteristic of old line life insurance. Nothing affirmative is required of insurer after delivery of the policy. Not even is notice of premium maturity required. The standard provisions for automatic extension out of the case, as they are here, lapse is automatic upon expiration of the period of grace after nonpayment of a premium. New York L. Ins. Co. v. Statham, 93 U. S. 24, 23 L. ed. 789. In that connection, the idea of forfeiture and all its harsh implications are much overworked. There is no forfeiture in any proper sense. The insurance has no existence from year to year except for the premium payments essential to its continuance. Mutual L. Ins. Co. v. Girard L. Ins. Co. 100 Pa. 172, 180. The insured’s omission to pay a premium forfeits nothing. He but fails to exercise his option to purchase an extension. That is no more forfeiture than is the failure of a lessee to renew a lease which he has the option to renew merely by prepayment of a stipulated rent.

*79 Plaintiff having the affirmative, it was incumbent upon her to sustain the burden of proof, not only of the issue of the policy but also that it was in force at the insured’s death. Payment of the first premium, unless credit was extended or payment otherwise waived, was condition precedent to the going into effect of the policy. In similar fashion, payment of each additional premium during the period here in question was condition precedent to reneAval and consequent continúation of defendant’s liability. New York L. Ins. Co. v. Statham, 93 U. S. 24, 23 L. ed. 789. Such conditions differ broadly from those others the nonperformance of which may defeat a right already accrued and are therefore in the nature of defeasances. Compare Chambers v. N. W. Mutual L. Ins. Co. 64 Minn. 495, 497, 67 N. W. 367, 58 A. S. R. 549.

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Bluebook (online)
248 N.W. 660, 189 Minn. 75, 95 A.L.R. 739, 1933 Minn. LEXIS 731, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/topinka-v-minnesota-mutual-life-insurance-minn-1933.