Wade v. Victory Mutual Life Insurance

51 N.E.2d 704, 384 Ill. 555
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 16, 1943
DocketNo. 27105. Reversed, with judgment here.
StatusPublished

This text of 51 N.E.2d 704 (Wade v. Victory Mutual Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wade v. Victory Mutual Life Insurance, 51 N.E.2d 704, 384 Ill. 555 (Ill. 1943).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Smith

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellant brought this suit against appellee in the circuit court of Cook county. The purpose of the suit was to recover on an insurance policy issued by Victory Life Insurance Company. The policy was issued on the life of Frank B. Wade. Appellant, his wife, was named therein as beneficiary. The policy was issued on February 18, 1929. By the policy, the insurance company agreed to pay to appellant, as such beneficiary, the sum of $1500 upon the death of the assured, while the policy was in force. The circuit court entered judgment in favor of the defendant. On appeal to the Appellate Court for the First District, the judgment was affirmed. The case is here on leave to appeal granted by this court.

The facts are not in dispute. On May 25, 1933, a receiver was appointed, by the District Court of the United States for the Northern District of Illinois, for Victory Life Insurance Company. At that time the policy here involved was in force. All premiums thereon had been paid. The insured was then living.

Thereafter, with the approval of the court, in the receivership proceedings, appellee entered into a reinsurance contract with the receiver. By this agreement, appellee assumed the policies of the insolvent Victory Life Insurance Company. Appellee was given a lien on the reserve values of all policies in force, as of June 9, 1933. It was provided in the contract that appellee and the receiver of the insolvent company, should compute, as of that date, the value of the assets and the reserve value of each individual policy, in accordance with the formula set forth in the contract. It was further provided that there should also be computed, by appellee and the receiver of the insolvent company, the amount of the lien on such reserve values, to which appellee would be entitled under the reinsurance contract.

In accordance with the provisions of the contract, actuaries selected by appellee and the receiver made such computations. They made a tentative computation of the lien at 60 per cent of the reserve value of each policy, as of June 9, 1933. Upon a hearing the court entered a decree on February 13, 1934, in which the actual lien was definitely fixed at 57.092 per cent of the reserve values of the policies, as of June 9, 1933.

The decree further provided that such lien should be thereafter subject to reductions, as provided in the contract of reinsurance. It was recited in the findings of the decree that the receiver and the reinsuring company had tentatively computed the lien against the reserves at 6o per cent; that any adjustment therein to the exact amount of the lien, on individual policies “on a premium paying basis,” should be deferred until December 31, 1934.

By paragraph 9 of the decree it was provided that in order to save unnecessary actuarial expenses, the reinsuring company was permitted to defer making the actual credit on the individual policy cards, until December 31, 1934. This language, however, was followed by the proviso “that whenever any policy goes on a non-premium paying basis, the reinsuring company shall compute the actual credit to such reserve resulting from the distribution of said items.” The words “said items” used in this proviso, refer to three items referred to in paragraph 9, preceding the proviso, viz: (1) the difference between the tentative computation of the lien at 60 per cent and the actual lien determined by the decree, which was 57.092 per cent; (2) any savings or profits which should arise between June 9, 1933, and December 31, 1934, and which were to be distributed to the policyholders in reduction of the lien; (3) the credit of any savings which should arise because of the provisions concerning the election of creditors to take dividends as' set forth in paragraph 8. These are the items referred to in the proviso.

The policy contained an automatic extended insurance provision. Under this provision it was provided that, upon default in the payment of any premium, the company, without action on the part of the assured, would extend the insurance for the full face amount of the policy for such period of time as the reserve value of the policy, at the time of such default, would purchase. Upon such default the policy did not lapse, but was placed on a nonpremium paying basis during the extended term of the insurance. Default was made in the payment of premiums on August 18, 1934. By reason of such default, under the extended insurance provision of the policy, it was automatically placed on a nonpremium paying basis. It was, in effect, automatically converted into a term policy for such extended term as the reserve value of the policy would purchase insurance, on the life of the insured, for the full face amount of the policy. The gross amount of the policy reserve at that time was $90.75. There was, however, a loan indebtedness of $11.90, leaving the net value of the reserve $78.85.

The assured died on November 17, 1937. It is stipulated in the record that if appellee’s lien on the policy reserve be computed as 57.092 per cent thereof, which was fixed as the actual lien by the decree of February 13, 1934, the extended term of insurance for the full face amount of the policy, expired two days after the death of the assured. If the lien be computed at the tentative rate of 60 per cent, the extended insurance expired thirty-five days before his death. The sole question here involved is the correct computation of appellee’s lien on the reserve value of the policy, under the reinsurance contract and the orders of the court in the receivership proceedings.

We have already referred to the applicable provisions of the order of February 13, 1934. This decree remained unchanged until after the date the policy was automatically placed on a nonpremium paying basis. On September 25, 1934, which was a little more than a month after the policy was automatically placed on a nonpremium paying basis under the provisions of the policy, the appellee presented a petition to the court setting out that it had incurred certain unanticipated expenses in connection with the. business which it had assumed under the reinsurance contract. The prayer of the petition was that the court instruct appellee with respect to the manner in which it should account, under the contract of reinsurance, for the various items of earnings on continued business in reduction of the lien provided under the contract; that if the court be so advised, it authorize appellee and the receiver to enter into a supplemental agreement, a copy of which was attached to the petition, and such further relief as to the court should seem meet.

On the same day an order was entered by the court authorizing appellee to thereafter operate on the basis of a tentative lien of 60 per cent upon the policy reserves, and not distribute the difference between the tentative lien of 60 per cent and the actual lien of 57.092 per cent, until December 31, 1938, notwithstanding the provisions of the decree of February 13, 1934. For the purpose of carrying out this provision, the receiver was authorized to enter into a supplemental agreement with appellee. The only effect of this order was to modify the provision of the decree of February 13, 1934, relative to the time of distribution of the accumulated difference between the tentative lien of 60 per cent and the actual lien of 57.092 per cent.

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51 N.E.2d 704, 384 Ill. 555, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wade-v-victory-mutual-life-insurance-ill-1943.