Under Article IV of the Soldiers' and Sailors' Civil Relief Act
of 1940, as it stood prior to the 1942 Amendment, former servicemen
are not obligated personally to reimburse the United States for its
payment of defaulted premiums on their commercial life insurance
policies pursuant to requests made by them before the 1942
Amendment that their policies be protected under the Act against
lapse during their time of military service and for one year
thereafter. Pp.
352 U. S.
203-211.
1. The 1940 Act contained no provision which required
reimbursement for premiums paid by the Government on a lapsed
policy. Pp.
352 U. S.
204-205.
2. A right of the Government to reimbursement is not to be
inferred from the Act or from the common law doctrine that a
guarantor who pays the debt of another is entitled to
reimbursement. P.
352 U. S. 204,
n. 4.
3. The Government's claim for reimbursement is refuted by the
legislative history. Pp.
352 U. S.
205-208.
4. The administrative interpretation of the 1918 and 1940 Acts
does not support the Government's claim for reimbursement. Pp.
352 U. S.
208-211.
5. A serviceman's liability under the 1940 Act must be
determined under that Act, not under the 1942 Act. P. 209,
n 17.
227 F.2d 624 affirmed.
Page 352 U. S. 203
MR. JUSTICE BLACK delivered the opinion of the Court.
Article IV of the Soldiers' and Sailors' Civil Relief Act of
1940 provided a plan under which men inducted into the armed forces
would continue to receive the protection of previously purchased
commercial life insurance while in the service without paying
premiums. [
Footnote 1]
Insurance companies were required to keep the policies of
servicemen who elected to come under the Act in effect until one
year after their military service ended even though these men made
no further payments. The Government assured the insurance companies
that the premiums would eventually be paid by giving its promissory
certificates to the companies. The respondents, Plesha, Mabbutt,
and Kern, who entered the Army in 1941, had previously purchased
commercial life insurance. They invoked the benefits of the Act by
filing proper applications with their companies and the Veterans'
Administration. They made no further payment of premiums, but the
policies were kept in effect by government certificates. After
leaving the Army, they were notified by the Veterans'
Administration that, unless they paid back premiums with interest,
their policies would lapse. Respondents allowed the policies to
lapse, and the Government paid the insuring companies the back
premiums after first deducting the cash surrender value of the
policies. In this case, the Government contends that it has a legal
right to be reimbursed for these payments. [
Footnote 2] The District Court agreed with this
contention, 123 F. Supp. 593. The Court of Appeals reversed,
holding
Page 352 U. S. 204
servicemen had no statutory or contractual obligation to the
Government to repay the premiums. 227 F.2d 624. [
Footnote 3] We affirm the judgment below
because the language of the 1940 Act, its legislative history, and
its administrative interpretation demonstrate that Congress
intended that ex-soldiers would not have to reimburse the
Government.
1.
The Act. -- As the Government concedes, the 1940 Act
contained no express provision which required reimbursement for
premiums paid by the Government on a lapsed policy. [
Footnote 4] But, significantly, it did
contain specific provisions to reduce any losses the Government
might incur in administering the insurance plan by giving the
Government certain other rights. Under § 408, the United
States had a lien upon the policy from the time it came under the
protection of the Act. When a soldier died, the insurance company
was authorized by § 409 to deduct unpaid premiums from the
proceeds payable under the policy. If, after leaving the service,
the insured desired to maintain his policy, § 410 required him
to pay the unpaid premiums to the insurance company. If he chose
not to pay these premiums, § 410 further provided
Page 352 U. S. 205
that the policy would lapse. And if a policy lapsed, § 411
provided that the United States should be given credit for the
policy's cash surrender value as an offset against the Government's
promise to pay the back premiums. There was nothing that indicated
that an ex-soldier had to reimburse the Government for any balance
that it paid.
2.
The legislative history. -- The Government's claim
for reimbursement is refuted by the legislative history. Article IV
of the 1940 Act substantially reenacted the insurance provisions of
the Soldiers' and Sailors' Civil Relief Act of 1918, [
Footnote 5] and had little independent
legislative history. We agree with the Administrator of Veterans'
Affairs that this scant history "is of little, if any, help" in
interpreting the 1940 Act. [
Footnote 6] We must therefore examine the history of the
1918 bill. [
Footnote 7] During
the Senate Committee hearings on this bill, Senator Reed, who was
the principal critic of its insurance provisions, interpreted them
as permitting a soldier to let his policy lapse without any
obligation to restore the premiums paid by the Government.
[
Footnote 8]
Page 352 U. S. 206
He objected to the Government's bearing any part of the cost,
and even suggested that the bill should be amended to authorize the
Government to deduct the premiums from the soldier's monthly pay.
Professor John H. Wigmore, who as a major representing the Army,
had a dominant part in drafting the bill and presenting it to
Congress, strongly objected to Senator Reed's suggestions.
Professor Wigmore pointed out that this benefit would be in keeping
with the many new benefits which were being conferred on servicemen
at that critical war period. When directly asked whether a soldier
could be made to pay, he called attention to the fact that the
Government had a lien on the policy, and could recover the cash
surrender value. He admitted, however, that the cash surrender
value would not in all cases pay the entire amount of back
premiums, but predicted that the loss to the Government would be
very slight. [
Footnote 9]
The
Page 352 U. S. 207
Committee accepted Professor Wigmore's position and reported the
bill in the form he urged.
The House Judiciary Committee made a comprehensive report on the
1918 bill. [
Footnote 10] It
referred to the insurance sections as providing a method for the
Government to "carry" the premiums upon servicemen's policies in
private companies. The Committee recognized that carrying this
insurance would cost the Government money, but expressed the hope
that this burden would not be large, because:
"In the first place, the Government only guarantees the payment
of the premiums. If the soldier dies, the insurance company will
get its premiums out of the policy and the Government's guaranty
will not be called upon. If the soldier comes back from the war, he
will repay the premiums if he continues the policy, and, if he lets
the policy lapse, the Government will be subrogated to his rights.
[
Footnote 11]"
Thus, the Committee apparently thought that the Government must
look to the cash surrender value to mitigate its loss where a
policy was allowed to lapse.
In 1942, the 1940 Act was amended to require ex-servicemen to
reimburse the Government for back premiums paid by it on their
lapsed policies. [
Footnote
12] The Government
Page 352 U. S. 208
contends that this 1942 Amendment was to clarify and reaffirm
the meaning of the 1940 Act. However, it appears that the Veterans'
Administration requested the 1942 Amendment to
". . . eliminate the possibility of requiring the Government to
pay premiums on insurance which the insured does not intend to
carry except during his period of active service. . . . [
Footnote 13]"
And, during a hearing before the House Committee on Military
Affairs, a Veterans' Administration representative testified,
"[t]he insured is liable for all of the premiums of the $5,000
policy, the Government acting really as a guarantor. However, if
there is a default [by the ex-serviceman], there would not be any
liability for the whole amount, in excess of the cash [surrender]
value under present construction of existing law. [
Footnote 14]"
If the legislative history of the 1942 Act indicates anything,
it is that Congress thought that it was changing the law by
changing the language of the Act. [
Footnote 15]
3.
The administrative interpretation. -- The
administration of the 1918 and 1940 Acts does not support the
Government's claim for reimbursement. The Government
Page 352 U. S. 209
relies on the fact that a few soldiers who invoked the
protection of the 1918 Act and allowed their policies to lapse were
later required to reimburse it. However, these collections were so
sporadic and so insignificant that, instead of supporting the
Government's position, they contradict it. [
Footnote 16] Under the 1940 Act, § 401(2)
required the Veterans' Administration to issue notices explaining
the Act. None of the notices promulgated prior to 1943 suggested
any duty on the part of servicemen to reimburse the Government.
[
Footnote 17] But public
statements of Veterans' Administration officials gave the Act a
squarely contrary construction. [
Footnote 18]
Page 352 U. S. 210
Section 401(1) required soldiers seeking the benefit of the 1940
Act to file applications on forms prepared in accordance with the
regulations of the Veterans' Administration. The respondents here
filed such an application which included within its terms the
following agreement:
"In consideration hereof, I hereby consent and agree that the
United States shall be protected in the amount of any premiums and
interest guaranteed on the above numbered policy in the event of
its maturity as a claim, or out of the cash surrender value of the
policy at the expiration of the period of protection under the
Act."
"This contract, prepared by the Veterans' Administration,
contained no suggestion to soldiers that they would be expected to
reimburse the Government for its payment of premiums if they
permitted their policies to lapse. Had the Veterans' Administration
construed the Act as imposing such a liability on soldiers, we
think it would have mentioned the obligation in the contract that
it asked them to sign."
Congress passed the 1918 and 1940 Acts at a time when men were
being called from civilian life into the Army in the face of
impending war. Great efforts were made to ease the burden on these
men and their dependents.
Page 352 U. S. 211
Among these, the Government generously provided family
allotments, disability payments, and low-cost government insurance.
Similarly, the provisions under consideration here were adopted to
assist soldiers who had bought insurance before entering the Army,
and did not require them to reimburse the Government.
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER, MR. JUSTICE BURTON and MR. JUSTICE
HARLAN dissent for the reasons given by Circuit Judge Huxman in
United States v. Hendler, 225 F.2d 106.
[
Footnote 1]
54 Stat. 1183, 50 U.S.C.App. (1940 ed.) § 540.
[
Footnote 2]
Plesha brought suit against the Government to recover a dividend
declared on his National Service Life Insurance policy. The
Government attempted to offset the amount it had paid on his
commercial insurance. The other respondents intervened to litigate
the same basic issue.
[
Footnote 3]
We granted certiorari, 350 U.S. 1013, because this holding was
in conflict with
United States v. Hendler, 225 F.2d
106.
[
Footnote 4]
The Government contends that such an obligation should be
implied from the Act and from general principles of the common law
-- particularly the doctrine that a guarantor who pays the debt of
another is entitled to reimbursement. In regard to the common law
right of a guarantor, we are not persuaded from the record that the
insured servicemen were indebted to the insurance companies for the
wartime premiums, either under the Act or the terms of their
policies. Where no debt exists, there is no basis for applying the
common law rules of guaranty. In any event, we would be very
hesitant to infer a right to reimbursement from these servicemen in
favor of the Government based on a common law doctrine which was
not referred to in the Act or in its congressional history.
Cf.
United States v. Gilman, 347 U. S. 507.
[
Footnote 5]
40 Stat. 444. "The only change in this article [insurance]
relates to method of administration." H.R.Rep. No. 3001, 76th
Cong., 3d Sess. 4.
[
Footnote 6]
Decisions of the Administrator of Veterans' Affairs, No. 742
(April 1947), Vol. 1, Supp. 1, pp. 93, 98. The Government relies
here on a discussion between Congressmen Voorhis and Arends during
the House debates on the 1940 Act. 86 Cong.Rec., Part 12,
13132-13133. Apparently these gentlemen were not familiar with the
specific provisions of the Act. This is not surprising, since
neither was a sponsor of the measure. Moreover, since the 1940 Act
was a substantial reenactment of the 1918 Act, there were no
committee hearings to inform congressmen of the precise scope and
effect of the Act. As neither Mr. Voorhis nor Mr. Arends were
lawyers, it cannot be assumed that they were aware of the technical
common law theory of guaranty which the Government relies on here.
We think the Veterans' Administrator was correct in concluding that
the legislative history, which includes the Voorhis-Arends
colloquy, "is of little, if any, help" to the Government's
claim.
[
Footnote 7]
See Boone v. Lightner, 319 U.
S. 561,
319 U. S.
565.
[
Footnote 8]
"If he comes back and wants to keep his insurance in effect, I
take it the proposition here is that he must then pay the
Government; but if he does not want to keep this policy in effect,
he still has the option to walk away and leave it."
Hearings before the Subcommittee of the Senate Committee on the
Judiciary on S. 2859 and H.R. 6361, 65th Cong., 1st and 2d Sess.
135.
[
Footnote 9]
In closing the argument over requiring the soldiers to pay, the
following colloquy took place between Major Wigmore and Senator
Reed:
"Senator Reed: . . . Now, do you think that would be
undesirable, Major, or do you think it would be greatly to be
preferred, that the Government just carry the risk?"
"Maj. Wigmore: I can only speak for myself in that respect; but,
speaking from my own judgment, it would seem to me that that is
going further than this Nation ought to wish to go against its
soldiers and sailors. . . ."
"Senator Reed: . . . You really think it is desirable that the
Government should carry it, regardless of the attempt to reimburse
itself out of the man's pay?"
"Maj. Wigmore: I only want to point out the fact that the
Government, in the war-risk insurance bill . . . , has offered to
give Government insurance to soldiers and sailors at a rate of, I
think, $8 a thousand, which I am told means that the Government
pays the entire expenses of administration of that insurance . . .
They have therefore contributed that already to soldiers and
sailors in providing insurance. If the Government has gone that
far, it seems to me it would be inconsistent with that, in
principle, not to go this far."
Id. at 137-138.
[
Footnote 10]
H.R.Rep. No. 181, 65th Cong., 1st Sess.
[
Footnote 11]
Id. at 8.
[
Footnote 12]
"The amount paid by the United States to an insurer on account
of applications approved under the provisions of this article,
as amended, shall become a debt due to the United States
by the insured on whose account payment was made. . . ."
(Emphasis added.) 56 Stat. 775.
[
Footnote 13]
Letter of the Veterans' Administrator to the President of the
Senate, appended to S.Rep. No. 716, 77th Cong., 1st Sess. 6.
[
Footnote 14]
Hearings before the House Committee on Military Affairs on H.R.
7029, 77th Cong., 2d Sess. 38.
[
Footnote 15]
Even the Veterans' Administration stated in a formal decision in
1947 that:
"Fairness compels admission that the legislative history of the
1942 act reflects a probable belief, though an incorrect one, on
the part of the Seventy-seventh Congress that the 1940 act (passed
by the Seventy-sixth Congress) had been construed as not giving
rise to a debt owing by the insured to the Government upon the
latter's payment to the insurer of the amount by which the premiums
with interest exceeded the cash surrender value."
Decisions of the Administrator of Veterans' Affairs, No. 742
(April 1947), Vol. 1, Supp. 1, pp. 93, 103.
[
Footnote 16]
According to the Government's figures, 7,745 policies were
brought within the protection of the 1918 Act; 476 of these
policies were allowed to lapse. The total amount of back premiums
paid by the Government on these policies was less than $20,000, or
approximately $42 per policy, showing that Major Wigmore's prophecy
as to the smallness of the Government's losses was a correct one.
The Government sought reimbursement on only 10 of these 476 lapsed
policies, and total collections were $484.42. Records submitted
show that all collections were obtained from soldiers who were
still in the Army at the time they were called on to pay. The
demands for payment went through regular military channels.
[
Footnote 17]
Apparently the first time the Veterans' Administration ever
officially interpreted the Act as authorizing the Government to be
reimbursed for its payment of premiums on lapsed policies was in
Administrator's Decision No. 513, March 1, 1943. This decision held
that the Government's agreement to carry policies under the 1940
Act was a "gratuitous assumption of liability" which had been
retroactively changed by the 1942 Amendment. Decisions of the
Administrator of Veterans' Affairs, No. 513 (March 1943), Vol. 1,
781. However, we agree with the view expressed in a later
Administrator's Decision, No. 742, that a serviceman's liability
under the 1940 Act must be determined under it, and not under the
1942 Act.
And see Lynch v. United States, 292 U.
S. 571.
[
Footnote 18]
Less than two months after the 1940 Act was passed, the Director
of Insurance for the Veterans' Administration, replying to a
telegraphic inquiry, stated that "No provision is made in the Act
for collecting from insured the amount paid by Government to
insurer." Shortly afterwards, the Director made a similar statement
to an insurance company representative.
In the meantime, the Assistant Director made the following
statement for publication in an insurance journal:
"There is no provision in the Act at this time for collecting
from the insured the amount that the premium with interest may
exceed the cash surrender value at the time of termination."
This same interpretation was given by the Assistant Director
when testifying before the House Committee on Military Affairs in
favor of the 1942 Amendment.
See text at
note 14 supra.