Court Opinion

ID: 3520317
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 22:32:02.695125+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:43:25.365155
License: Public Domain

Appellees brought this action in the circuit court of Hinds county against appellant to recover the face value of a life insurance policy of five thousand dollars, issued by appellant on the life of Byron B. Boling, deceased. *Page 186 
The trial resulted in a judgment in appellees' favor for the amount sued for. From that judgment appellant prosecutes this appeal.
At the time of the death of the insured, the policy had been in force more than three and less than nine years. The insured had defaulted in the payment of premiums and had secured a loan on the policy. The policy contained, among others, this provision: "(c) Cash Surrender Value — If the Policy shall not have been indorsed for Participating Paid-up Insurance, the Insured, within three months after such default, but not later, may surrender this Policy and all claims thereunder and receive its Cash Surrender Value as at date of default less any indebtedness hereon. The Cash Surrender Value shall be the reserve on the face of Policy at date of default, omitting fractions of a dollar per thousand of insurance, and the reserve on any outstanding dividend additions and any outstanding dividend deposits, and less a surrender charge for the third to the ninth years, inclusive, of not more than one and one-half per cent of the face of the Policy. The reserve shall be computed on the basis of the American Table of Mortality and interest at 3 per cent."
The policy had not been surrendered. The questions involved grow out of the provision that in fixing the cash surrender value appellant had the right to deduct therefrom a surrender charge "of not more than one and one-half per cent of the face of the policy." Appellant deducted the maximum of one and one-half per cent; the cash surrender value was thereby reduced to an amount insufficient to keep the policy in force up to the time of the death of the insured. If such deduction had not been made it would have been in force. The precise question is whether or not that provision of the policy is valid and enforceable.
Appellant's evidence showed that this deduction was provided for the following purposes: (1) Repaying acquisition *Page 187 
expenses if the policy had not become self-sustaining; (2) paying the costs incident to the physical surrender and cancellation of the policy and issuance of a paid-up policy; and (3) a penalty imposed to prevent a policyholder from withdrawing from the company. It is left entirely to the insurer to determine, without agreement with the insured, whether the policy is self-sustaining, and what the acquisition expenses are, and the amount of penalty to be imposed to prevent the policyholder from withdrawing from the company.
Unless New York Life Insurance Company v. Blaylock, 144 Miss. 541,110 So. 432, is overruled, the judgment must be affirmed. Appellant argues that the decision of that case is not only contrary to the authorities in this country, but is unsound and ought to be overruled. Even if we regarded the Blaylock decision as unsound, we would be obliged to go further before overruling it and hold that it is mischievous in its operation or effect; because that case has stood in our books as the law for ten years. During this time thousands upon thousands of policies of life insurance have been issued and accepted. To overrule that case would make in a material respect a different contract out of all those thousands of policies as compared with what they were when they were issued and accepted. We do not agree that that decision is unsound, and will now undertake to give some reasons therefor that were not given in the Blaylock Case. Although not mentioned in the Blaylock Case, section 5171 of the Code of 1930 has an important bearing on this case. That statute is in this language: "No life insurance company doing business in Mississippi shall make any distinction or discrimination in favor of individuals of the same class and equal expectation of life in the amount of payments of premiums or rates charged for policies of life or endowment insurance, or in the dividends or other benefits payable thereon, or in any of the terms and conditions of the *Page 188 
contract it makes, nor shall any such company or any agent thereof make any contract of insurance or agreement as to such contracts other than are plainly expressed in the application and policy issued thereon; nor shall such company or agent pay or allow as inducements to insurance any rebate of premium payable on the policy or any special favor or advantage in the dividends or other benefits to accrue thereon, or any valuable consideration or inducement whatever not specified in the policy contract of insurance. Whenever it shall appear to the satisfaction of the commissioner, after a hearing before him upon notice that any company, officer, agent, subagent, broker or solicitor has violated any provision of this section, he shall revoke the license of any such company or person to transact business in this state, and no other license shall be issued to any such company or person within one year after such revocation. Provided, however, that nothing in this section shall prevent a company which transacts industrial life insurance on a weekly payment plan from returning to policyholders who have made a premium payment for a period of at least one year the percentage of premium which the company would otherwise have paid for the weekly collection of such premium, nor shall this section be construed to prevent the taking of a bona fide obligation, with legal interest, in payment of any premium."
It should be borne in mind that under the Constitution the state has the undoubted right to regulate the business of insurance; it has the right to provide the kind and character of insurance contracts that may be made. State v. Alley, 96 Miss. 720, 51 So. 467; General Accident Assurance Co. v. Walker,99 Miss. 404, 55 So. 51.
Although not decisive of the question here involved, the cases of Cole v. State, 91 Miss. 628, 45 So. 11, and Rideout v. Mars,99 Miss. 199, 54 So. 801, 35 L.R.A. *Page 189 
(N.S.) 485, Ann. Cas. 1913d 770, throw light thereon. They both turned upon the construction of the above statute. In the Cole Case the court held that the statute was violated by a stipulation in the policy for the return to the insured of an annual income, however small, during a designated time, although such obligation purported to be based on a valuable consideration. The facts in the Rideout Case were substantially as follows: The deceased, J.H. Rideout, was agent for the Union Central Life Insurance Company; he sold Mars a twenty-five thousand dollar policy in his company, which recited that the first premium of nine hundred fifty dollars was paid, as a matter of fact only three hundred dollars of it was paid; under the contract between the agent and the company that was its share, the balance of it was his; he gave Mars his share of the premium in order to induce him to take the insurance, his idea was that in effecting such a large policy his interest as insurance agent would be promoted; the agent died, his administrator brought suit against Mars for the unpaid premium. Construing this statute the court held that the administrator was entitled to recover; that the agreement was illegal because contrary to the public policy declared by the statute.
The statute not only prohibits unfair discriminations and practices being expressly provided for in the policy, but in addition a fair interpretation of it prohibits any provision so indefinite and uncertain as to allow such discriminations and practices. The provision in question is of the latter character. A fixed per cent. of the face value of the policy is not to be deducted in ascertaining its cash surrender value, but "not more than one and one-half per cent." Within that maximum the insurer is given the right to fix the amount to be deducted.
It is inconceivable that in carrying out the cash surrender value provision of the policy one policy would require any more labor, clerical or otherwise, than any *Page 190 
other policy. Where the policy is not surrendered the cash surrender value constitutes premium and keeps the policy in force a certain length of time, based on the amount of such premium. Under the provision in question the insurer could fix, to a certain extent, the amount of such premium; it could deduct therefrom as a surrender charge any amount from one and one-half per cent. of the face of the policy down to nothing. To that extent the cost of the policy to the insured is left entirely in the discretion of the insurer. The insurer could arbitrarily discriminate between policyholders of the same class. To illustrate: Two risks in the same class, one has a one thousand dollar policy, another has a one hundred thousand dollar policy; on the death of each of them the cash surrender value of his policy, without the deduction of the one and one-half per cent., would have kept it in force, while the deduction would have resulted in neither of them being in force; the insurer does not deduct it as to the one thousand dollar policy, but does as to the one hundred thousand dollar policy; the result, of course, is that the latter is not paid and the former is. That precise discrimination could be made under this policy. Such unfair practices are prohibited by the statute. The premium must be plainly written in the face of the policy. In its last analysis this cash surrender charge is simply a part of the cost of the insurance — premium.
The decisions of the courts of other states to the contrary are not controlling but only persuasive. If they are unsound they are not to be followed.
Affirmed. *Page 191