Court Opinion

ID: 8258407
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-10-16 15:50:50.425641+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:43:05.419061
License: Public Domain

Lewis, P. J.,
delivered the opinion of the court.
In the year 1849 a policy of insurance was issued by the defendant on the life of the plaintiff, Theophilus Packard, upon his application, in the sum of $4,000, payable on the event of his death, to his wife, Elizabeth P. W. Packard, and in the event of her death prior to that of the insured, then to her children. Theophilus Packard paid the annual premiums until the year 1860. He then opened a correspondence with the defendant concerning a change of the policy which should leave out his wife, and make his children the only beneficiaries. He was informed that this could be done without his wife’s consent. The old policy was returned to the defendant, and another was issued, bearing the same number, date, and amount of premium, and being a reproduction of the first in all particulars, excepting the names of the beneficiaries, of whom Mrs. Packard was not made one. No additional premium was required on account of the change, although the insured was older, by eleven years, than when the first policy was issued. The change was made without the knowledge or •consent of Mrs. Packard, who, in 1873, notified the defendant of this fact, and of her claim to be still considered *473a beneficiary. Mr. Packard continued to pay the annual premiums until the year 1876, inclusive. In 1877, he applied to the defendant for a paid-up policy in lieu of the one he held. Some correspondence ensued, in which the defendant expressed a willingness to issue a paid up policy, but took the ground that the change of 1860 was made under a mistaken view of the law governing the case, and was unauthorized, and that a paid up-policy, if issued, must be for the beneficiaries who were named in the original policy of 1849. Mr. Packard wrote upon his changed policy a qualified surrender, and mailed it to the defendant. In this surrender he copies from the defendant’s letter what he calls a written promise to give him a paid-up policy upon surrender of the original; and assuming that by the expression “original policy” the defendant means the substituted policy of 1860, he claims that the paid-up policy shall be, as to parties, in the same form with that. He omits to copy, however, the next following sentence in the same letter, wherein the defendant carefully explains that the paid-up policy, if issued, must follow the terms of the first policy, issued in 1849, and not those of the erroneously substituted policy. There was some further correspondence, in which both parties adhered to their respective positions, Mr. Packard still insisting that the paid-up policy must be made for the beneficiaries named in the substituted policy, and the defendant refusing to frame it otherwise than as the first was issued, in 1849. In 1878, Mrs. Packard paid the annual premium of $160.40 a few days before it fell due ; and on the day when it became due Mr. Packard tendered the proper sum in payment, but the defendant refused to receive it. The policy ■ was not delivered to Mrs. Packard, nor was it ever in her possession. This suit is brought by Theophilus Packard and his children to recover back the premiums paid, with interest. The Circuit Court, sitting as a jury, found for the defendant.
If the claim of the plaintiffs, that the substituted policy *474of 1860 was and is the true contract between the parties, could be sustained, it would still be difficult to perceive upon what ground the plaintiffs ought to recover in this action. The mere retention of the policy by the defendant, against the plaintiffs’ demand for possession, would certainly furnish no reason for a compulsory return of all the premiums paid. If not lost or destroyed, together with all proofs of its provisions, the contract could be observed and enforced in all its terms", whatever it might be. But the plaintiffs charge that the defendant has broken its contract, and therefore they are entitled to rescind, and to demand restitution. How has the defendant broken its contract? This must be either by its failure to issue a paid up policy, or by its refusal to receive from Mr. Packard the annual premium for 1878. As to the first of these supposed breaches, we do not perceive that the defendant was ever under obligation to issue a paid-up policy of any sort. No such obligation was expressed or implied in the original or the substituted contract. The promise by letter, on which the plaintiffs rely, was distinctly qualified by a reservation that the paid-up policy should be for the beneficiaries first named in 1849. But such a policy as this Mr. Packard was unwilling to receive. There was, therefore, no violation of any promise in the premises. Nor was there any breach of contract in the refusal of the annual premium for 1878. That refusal was not based on any indisposition to abide by and perform the contract. It was distinctly placed upon the fact that the premium had already been paid, and implied an actual adherence to the letter of the contract. In our opinion these considerations are sufficient to authorize an affirmance of the judgment rendered by the Circuit Court. But other questions have been discussed by counsel with so much earnestness, that it seems proper to note here our impressions concerning them.
It is insisted for the plaintiffs, that Mrs. Packard never held such a proprietary interest in the original policy of 1849 *475as would make her consent necessary to the validity of a material change in its terms, agreed upon between the insurer and the insured. It seems to be conceded that, under the statutory law of Connecticut, and the judicial decisions thereupon, the contrary might be true. But it is claimed that the controlling statute was not enacted until after the delivery of the policy under consideration, and that the amount of premium paid excludes this case from the operation of the statute; wherefore, the rights of these parties must be tested by the common law.
It is by no means certain that, under the common law, a policy of life insurance for the benefit of one having no pecuniary interest in the life, would be void in the hands of the beneficiary. Such is declared to be the rule in Ruppert v. Insurance Company, 7 Robt. 155. The learned judge there adds, that “the only manner in which a father could provide for his wife or minor children, by way of a life-policy upon himself, was to insure his life for his own benefit.” If this were really the settled rule, it might well be maintained in the present case that Mrs. Packard never acquired a vested right in the original policy, and that the contract remained subject to any modification that might be ágreed upon between insurer and insured, as the only contracting parties. But this view is not uniformly sanctioned, even by the English authorities. In the year 1744, a statute was enacted, entitled “An act for regulating insurances upon lives, and for prohibiting all such insurances except in cases where the persons insuring shall have an interest in the life or death of the persons insured.” 14 Geo. III., c. 48. In Craufurd v. Hunter, 8 Term Rep. 14, it was said by Gross, J., that whoever read that statute “ must see that before that time a wagering policy was not illegal. The words of that statute clearly show that before that time any person might have insured without interest.” Expressions of like effect were used in British Insurance Co. v. Magee, Coo. & Al. 182, and in several later cases. But in Dalby *476v. Assurance Co., 18 Jur. 1024, and in some American cases of high authority, the contrary view is emphatically declared. Ruse v. Insurance Co., 23 N. Y. 516. In fact, such a difference of opinion appeax-s to have prevailed that any reference to the general common-law rule would discover a very uncertain light for our present inquiry. It seems, however, to be pretty well understood that, in any view of the common law, where the assured or beneficiary has a direct pecuniary interest in the continuance of the life insured, the policy will be valid and enforceable in favor of such beneficiary. In this aspect, the rule is easy of application to the case of a wife who has the direct interest of her own maintenance in the life of her husband. Reed v. Assurance Co., Peake’s Ad. Cas. 70.
When it is once settled that a life-policy is valid and enforceable on behalf of the beneficiary named therein, there seems no difficulty in determining that the interest of such beneficiary cannot be disturbed, without his consent, by the mere act of the person insured cooperating with the insurer. In the case of a wife or children, the transaction has been regarded as a voluntary settlement, irrevocable by the grantor, although of doubtful assurance against the claims of creditors. In Fortescue v. Barnett, 3 Myl. & K. 36, the defendant held a policy on his own life, which he assigned by voluntary deed to trustees for the benefit of his sister and her children. The company had no notice of the assignment. Afterwards, he surrendered the policy to the insurance company, for valuable consideration. It was held, on a bill of equity against him, that the defendant could not thus defeat the settlement upon his sister and her children, and that he must give security to guarantee them against any loss of the benefits which should accrue to them from the policy, if kept alive. In the matter of the Succession of Kugler, 23 La. An. 455, it was held, on general principles, that “ a policy of insurance on the life of a man, *477taken out in favor of his wife and children, vests the right to the policy in them from the date of its execution.”
In most of the States where controversies like the present have arisen, there are statutes which expressly authorize insurance upon the lives of husbands for the benefit of their wives, and place the married women', as to such policies, on the footing of femes sole. The primary object of such enactments is, simply, to remove the mai-ital disability. If this were all, however, it might be asserted that, while the married woman may hold a certain property in the policy, so long as its existence continues, yet the husband, as the Only contracting party known to the insurer, may, nevertheless, modify his contract, with the cooperation of the latter, even so as to withdraw, in effect, his voluntary bounty to the wife. But it is uniformly held that the transaction, if effectual for any purpose in the interest of the wife, creates an irrevocable trust. Hence, an assignment of such a policy, made by the husband and joined in by the wife under duress, will be held invalid. Barry v. Assurance Soc., 59 N. Y. 587 In Bliss on Ins., sect. 318, it is stated as the general doctrine, that “ a policy and the money to become due under it belong, the moment it is issued, to the person or persons named in it as the beneficiary or beneficiaries ; and that there is no power in the person procuring the insurance by any act of his, by deed or by will, to transfer to any other person the interest of the person named.” Surely, if he cannot transfer such an interest, it must be equally beyond his power to destroy it of his own volition.
It is urged for the plaintiffs, that the defendant’s receipt of annual premiums on the substituted policy, after its knowledge that Mrs. Packard had not consented to the change, and its assurances to Mr. Packard that the change made was lawful and proper, must be held to estop the defendant against any assumption that the substituted policy is not binding. There is no estoppel in the case. The *478only assurances conveyed by the defendant to Mr. Packard, in the acts referred to, were assurances, not of any fact or facts, but of legal conclusions. Such intimations, either by acts or words, can constitute no foundation for an estoppel. Brewster v. Striker, 2 N. Y. 19. No fact was represented, aside from its legal bearings, which was not quite as well known to Mr. Packard as to the defendant. The case bears no analogy to that wherein a party having the right to waive a forfeiture induces another to believe that the forfeiture is, or will be, waived. There, the waiver, or its. refusal, is a matter of fact within the exclusive knowledge of the party holding the power to exercise the one or the other.
The judgment must'be affirmed.
Judge Bakewell concurs ; Judge Thompson not sitting.