The provision in the statutes of New York that
"no life insurance company doing business in the New York shall
have power to declare forfeited or lapsed any policy hereafter
issued or renewed, by reason of nonpayment of any annual premium or
interest, or any portion thereof, except as hereinafter
provided"
does not apply to or control such a policy issued by a
corporation of New York in another state in favor of a citizen of
the latter state, but is applicable only to business transacted
within the New York, and in such case the rights of the parties are
measured by the terms of the contract.
Page 179 U. S. 263
On June 10, 1885, the petitioner delivered to Alexander Cohen,
in the State of Montana, a life insurance policy for $3,000
conditioned upon the annual payment of a premium of $89.61. Upon it
the insured paid premiums up to and including June 10, 1892. No
subsequent premiums were paid. On September 21, 1897, he died. His
wife, Tine Cohen, was the beneficiary named in the policy.
The application commenced in these words:
"Application for insurance in the Mutual Life Insurance Company
of New York, 140 to 146 Broadway, corner of Liberty Street, New
York City, subject to the charter of such company and the laws of
said state."
It further contained this provision:
"That if the insurance applied for be granted by the company,
the policy, if accepted, will be accepted subject to all the
conditions and stipulations contained in the policy. Among those
conditions and stipulations was this:"
"Notice that each and every such payment is due at the date
named in the policy is given and accepted by the delivery and
acceptance of this policy, and any further notice required by any
statute is thereby expressly waived."
On November 9, 1898, this action was commenced in the Circuit
Court of the United States for the District of Washington.
The single defense was the nonpayment of premiums after June 11,
1892. There was no suggestion of rescission, abandonment, knowledge
by the beneficiary of the nonpayment of the premium, or any refusal
or failure on her part in respect to the policy. A demurrer to the
answer was sustained, judgment rendered for the amount of the
policy, less the unpaid premiums, which judgment was affirmed by
the United States Circuit Court of Appeals for the Ninth circuit,
97 F. 985, and thereupon the case was brought here on
certiorari.
Page 179 U. S. 264
MR. JUSTICE BREWER delivered the opinion of the Court.
Mutual Life Insurance Company v. Phinney, 178 U.
S. 327, was an action against the same insurance
company, in the same district, on a policy like the one in
controversy here save that, in that, the insured was himself the
beneficiary. It resulted in a judgment in the circuit court against
the company. Thereupon the company sought to transfer it by writ of
error to the court of appeals of that circuit, but that court
dismissed the writ of error. Thereafter, on April 19, 1897, a
certiorari was issued by this Court. 166 U.S. 721. On examination,
we held that the court of appeals erred in dismissing the writ of
error, that it had jurisdiction, and that it ought to have reversed
the judgment of the circuit court. The decision was based on the
ground of error in the ruling of the circuit court in respect to
rescission and abandonment. In the opinion, we referred to the fact
that there was a primary question of the applicability of a statute
of the State of New York, but deemed it unnecessary to decide it.
That decision was followed by the cases of the same company against
Sears,
178 U. S. 345,
against
Hill, 178 U. S. 347,
against
Allen, 178 U. S. 351 --
all of which cases were disposed of in like manner.
The primary question noticed, but not decided, in those cases is
distinctly and solely presented in this.
The insurance policy contained a stipulation that it should not
be binding until the first premium had been paid and the policy
delivered. The premium was paid and the policy delivered in the
State of Montana. Under those circumstances, under the general
rule, the contract was a Montana contract, and governed by the laws
of that state.
Equitable Life Assurance Society v.
Clements, 40 U. S. 226,
Equitable Life Assurance Society v. Pettus, 140 U.
S. 226,
140 U. S. 232.
In that state, there being no statutory provisions to the contrary,
the failure to pay the annual premium worked, in accord with the
terms of the policy, a forfeiture of all claims against the
company.
New York, on the other hand, the state by which the insurance
company was chartered and in which it had its principal office, by
section 1 of chapter 321 of 1877, had enacted --
Page 179 U. S. 265
"SEC. 1. No life insurance company doing business in the State
of New York shall have power to declare forfeited or lapsed any
policy hereafter issued or renewed by reason of nonpayment of any
annual premium or interest, or any portion thereof, except as
hereinafter provided."
The provision referred to, and which is stated at length in the
succeeding part of the section, is one for notice of a special kind
and to be given in a particular way. The section is quoted in full
in
178 U. S. 178
U.S. 330.
This notice was not given. Hence, if the law of New York
controls, the policy was still in force, and the plaintiff was
entitled to recover.
The question therefore is whether the law of New York
controls.
The presumption is in favor of the law of the place of contract.
He who asserts the contrary has the burden of proof. The New York
statute does not purport to change any insurance company charter.
On the contrary, its obvious purpose is only to reach business
transacted within the state. Proceeding on the accepted principle
that a state may determine the conditions, the meaning, and
limitations of contracts executed within its borders, the language
of the statute reaches contracts made within the state. Undoubtedly
a foreign insurance company making a contract within the State of
New York would find that contract burdened by its provisions, and
equally clear is it that such company making a contract in another
state would be free from its limitations. There is no indication of
an intent on the part of the Legislature of New York to affect,
even if it were possible, the general powers of a foreign company
coming within the state and transacting business. But on the fact
of the statute, there is no express demarcation between foreign and
local companies. There is no attempt to say that a foreign company
doing business within the state shall, as to such business, be
subject to the prescribed limitations, and that a home company
doing business within the state and elsewhere shall as to all its
business be so limited. If we cannot from the language impute to
the legislature an intent to regulate the business of a foreign
company outside of the state, how can we
Page 179 U. S. 266
find in such language an intent to prescribe limitations upon
the contracts of a home company outside the state? In the absence
of an expressed intent, it ought not to be presumed that New York
intended by this legislation to affect the right of other states to
control insurance contracts made within their limits. Can it be
that the State of New York, aware of the fact that other states and
other countries might by their legislation properly prescribe terms
and conditions of insurance contracts, meant by this legislation to
restrict its local companies from going into those states and
countries and transacting business in compliance with their
statutes if in any respect they were found to conflict with the
regulations prescribed for business transacted at home?
Again, it is worthy of notice that the State of New York has
changed its legislation repeatedly in the last quarter of a century
in respect to this very matter of notice.
See Laws 1876,
c. 341, section 1; the statute now under consideration, Laws 1877;
Laws 1892, c. 690, section 92; Laws 1897, c. 218, section 92. The
varying provisions of these statutes, directed in terms not to
local companies, but to companies doing business in the State of
New York, strengthen the conclusion that the state was not thus
changing the several charters of its companies, but prescribing
only that which in its judgment from time to time was the proper
rule for business transacted within the state.
Again, the terms of the act itself tend in the same direction.
It provides for a thirty-day notice. While such a notice might be
reasonable as to all policies within the state, yet when it is
remembered that some, at least, of the New York insurance companies
are doing business in all quarters of the globe, it is obvious that
a thirty-day notice in many cases would be of little value.
Further, by section 2, the statute provides that an affidavit by
one authorized to mail the notice shall be "presumptive evidence"
of the giving of the notice. Can it be supposed that the
Legislature of New York was contemplating a rule of evidence to be
enforced in every state and nation of the world?
These considerations lead to the conclusion that the statute
of
Page 179 U. S. 267
New York, directed as it is to companies doing business within
the state, was intended to be and is in fact applicable only to
business transacted within that state.
It is not doubted that a contract by an insurance company of New
York executed elsewhere may, by its terms, incorporate the law of
New York, and make its provisions controlling upon both the insured
and the insurer. And it is urged that, although there is nothing in
the policy to indicate this, the language of the application has
that effect. It recites that it is "subject to the charter of such
company and the laws of said state," and the contract refers to the
application, and declares that it is issued "in consideration of
the application for this policy and of the truth of the several
statements made therein." While the contract is based upon the
application, yet the latter is only a preliminary instrument, a
proposal on the part of the insured, and a stipulation that it
shall be controlled by the charter and the laws of the state is not
tantamount to a stipulation that the policy issued thereon shall
also in like manner be controlled. That such language was
incorporated into the application is not strange. Its meaning is
clear, and is that no local statute as to the effect of statements
or representations or any other matter in the application should in
these respects override the provisions of the charter and the laws
of New York. In other words, if, by the charter or the laws of New
York, any statement in an application is to be taken as a warranty,
no local statute declaring that all statements in an application
are to be taken as simply representations shall override the terms
of the charter and the New York law. But that is very different
from a provision that the contract issued upon such application
should also be in all its respects controlled by the laws of New
York.
Further, it may be noticed that, even if the language justifies
a broader construction, it may well mean that only such laws of the
State of New York as are intended to and do change the charters of
the companies, or are intended to have extraterritorial
application, should be considered a part of the policy.
The stipulation in this policy is different from that presented
to the Court of Appeals of New York in
Baxter v.
Brooklyn
Page 179 U. S. 268
Life Ins. Company, 119 N.Y. 450, 454, which was that it
was "a contract made and to be executed in the State of New York,
and construed only according to the laws of that state." There was
a direct provision in respect to the contract itself, and thus
incorporated those laws into its terms.
While authorities on this particular question are not numerous,
we may properly refer to an opinion of the Supreme Court of
Washington, the state in which this action was brought,
Griesemer v. Mutual Life Insurance Company, 10 Wash. 202,
in which, referring to this special question and the contention
that this very statute of the State of New York became a part of
the contract of the company in the State of Washington, the court
said, on pages 206, 207:
"It is claimed on the part of the plaintiff that, upon its
enactment, it became attached to the defendant, it being a
corporation organized under the laws of New York, and effected a
change in its charter, so that every policy thereafter issued by
it, whether in the State of New York or elsewhere, became subject
to its provisions. On the other hand, it is claimed by the
defendant that it only affected policies issued to, or held by,
residents of the State of New York; that the evident object of its
enactment was to protect such residents; that to give it a broader
effect would be to convict the legislature of having discriminated
against life insurance companies organized under the laws of the
state."
"We are unable to construe the law in accordance with the
contention of either party. The construction contended for by the
defendant is too narrow. The language used is that 'no life
insurance company doing business in the State of New York shall
have power to declare forfeited or lapsed any policy. . . .' This
language, construed in its ordinary sense, seems to preclude such a
narrow construction. Beside, if it were warranted by the language,
it would not be reasonable to suppose that the legislature intended
to so limit the effect of the statute. If it had so intended, it
would have made use of language which in some manner confined the
rights to be affected by the statute to residents of the state,
instead of the companies doing business therein. While the
construction contended for by the
Page 179 U. S. 269
plaintiff seems to be equally untenable, for the reason that it
would convict the legislature of having sought to accomplish
something not in its power. So construed, the act would apply to
all policies of any company which should do business in the State
of New York, wherever issued, regardless of the question as to
whether or not it was organized under its laws. That the
Legislature of New York could not control companies not organized
under its laws as to their business transacted in other states is
too clear for argument. Hence, the construction contended for by
respondent would convict the legislature of having attempted that
which it could not do, or of having deliberately discriminated
against its own companies."
"In our opinion the reasonable and ordinary construction of the
language used in the statute is such as to make it applicable to
business done in the State of New York, and that the question as to
whether or not the companies doing such business were organized
under its laws, or those of some other state, has no influence upon
the question as to whether or not the statute is applicable. This
construction is justified by the language used, and will give force
to every work, while the other will not do so. And since the well
settled rule as to construction of statute requires every word to
be given force if possible, it follows that the limitations of the
act are impressed upon all policies issued in the State of New York
by either domestic or foreign companies, and that it has no
application to policies not issued therein, even although the
companies issuing them were organized under its laws."
The New York cases cited by counsel throw no light on the
question.
Baxter v. Brooklyn Life Ins. Co., 119 N.Y. 450,
contained in the contract, as heretofore stated, an express
stipulation of the controlling law. In
Carter v. Brooklyn Life
Ins. Co., 110 N.Y. 15, the question was as to the significance
of the word "renewed" in the section referred to, and it does not
appear where the policy was issued. In
Phelan v. Northwestern
Mutual Life Ins. Co., 113 N.Y. 147, the statute was held
applicable to a foreign insurance company doing business in the
State of New York, the notice given was held insufficient, and no
question was considered as to the scope of the statute
otherwise.
Page 179 U. S. 270
De Frece v. National Life Ins. Co., 136 N.Y. 144, was
likewise an action against a foreign insurance company, and
involved no question like that before us.
Rae v. National Life
Ins. Co., 60 F. 690, was also an action against a foreign
insurance company, and the question was simply as to the
sufficiency of the notice.
We conclude, therefore, that the statute of the State of New
York does not, under the circumstances presented, control, and that
the rights of the parties are measured alone by the terms of the
contract. The insured having failed to pay the premium for years
before his death, the policy was forfeited. The judgment of the
circuit court of appeals will be reversed, and the case remanded to
the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of
Washington with instructions to set aside the judgment and overrule
the demurrer.
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA dissents.
MR. JUSTICE PECKHAM takes no part in the decision of this
case.