Court Opinion

ID: 9811283
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-31 22:15:28.20454+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:11:27.820670
License: Public Domain

Hoke, J.
There was no error in the ruling of the court below. It appeared that on 21 of March, 1898, plaintiff took out a life insurance policy in defendant company, insuring his life for a period of ten years on payment of weekly premiums, and at the end of the specified time the policy contained several options looking to a continuance of the same on certain terms and also one numbered four in words as follows:
“4. Surrender this policy and draw the entire cash value, that is, the legal reserve computed according to the actuaries table of mortality and four per cent interest, together with the dividend.” The premiums having been paid for ten years and plaintiff having elected to terminate the contract relation under the fourth option set out above, the claim was calculated and the amount due under the provisions of said option $3.62 was duly tendered plaintiff’and refused. Plaintiff made the refusal on the ground that the agent of the company during the bargain about the *175policy assured plaintiff that at the end of ten years he would get back the premiums and interest thereon at four per cent and on the trial testified to that effect.
We have said in Floars v. Insurance Co., 144 N. C., p. 232-235: “It is also accepted doctrine that when the parties have bargained together touching a contract of insurance and reached an agreement, and in carrying out, or in the effort to carry out, the agreement a formal written policy is delivered and accepted, the written policy, while it remains unaltered, will constitute the contract between the parties, and all prior parol agreements will be merged in the written instrument; nor will evidence be received of prior parol inducements and assurances to contradict or vary the written policy, while it so stands as embodying the contract between the parties. Like other written contracts, it may be set aside or corrected for fraud or for mutual mistake; but, until this is done, the written policy is conclusively presumed to express the contract it purports to contain,” citing Beach’s Laws of Insurance, secs. 495, 496; Vance on Insurance, pp. 163, 348; Insurance Co. v. Mowry, 96 U. S., p. 547. This position being well recognized and the policy not providing for any such settlement or adjustment of plaintiff’s claim as he now demands, a recovery could only be had by reformation of the policy or on the ground of fraud or deceit. The action having originated in the court of a justice of the peace and that court having no equitable jurisdiction in actions' for reformation of written instruments, the first ground of relief is not open to plaintiff. Berry v. Henderson, 102 N. C., p. 525; Dougherty v. Sprinkle, 88 N. C., p. 301; Fisher v. Webb, 84 N. C., p. 44. And the demand can only be maintained, if at all, on the second ground stated, for fraud or deceit. The suit being for no more than fifty dollars, there is no defect of jurisdiction in this aspect of the case whether the action be considered as one in tort or in contract. Stroud v. Insurance Co., 148 N. C., p. 54; Duckworth v. Mull, 143 N. C., p. 461.
We concur in the opinion, however, that the evidence is not sufficient to sustain an action for fraud or deceit. Nor would it justify a reformation of the policy on that ground. True, plaintiff testified that defendant’s agent assured him in general terms *176that the investment was as good as a savings bank and told Mm that tinder this clause four he would get his premiums back with interest at four per 'cent, but these representations were not of a kind nor under circumstances that justified plaintiff in relying upon them, nor would they uphold the view that an actionable fraud had been perpetrated. The testimony showed that plaintiff was a man of fair intelligence and some business experience. He could read and write, had worked for about twelve months in a furniture store, taking written leases from purchasers; ^that he also worked in a grocery store five or six years, selling goods on time and entering up the items of charge’ in the credit department of the business, and in a hardware store for some months, where he had done the same thing; that plaintiff and defendant’s agent, who solicited the insurance, -had worked in a mill together, and there was nothing to show any disparity between them either in intellect or information, and the case, we think, ^ comes clearly under the class considered and passed upon in Cathcart v. Insurance Co., 144 N. C., p. 623, and Clements v. Insurance Co., at present term.
There is no error and the judgment of nonsuit is
Affirmed.