1. A policy of life assurance which stipulates for the payment
of an annual premium by the assured, with a condition to be void on
nonpayment, is not an insurance from year to year, like a common
fire policy, but the premiums constitute an annuity, the whole of
which is the consideration for the entire assurance for life, and
the condition is a condition subsequent, making, by its
nonperformance, the policy void.
2. The time of payment in such a policy is material, and of the
essence of the contract, and a failure to pay involves an absolute
forfeiture which cannot be relieved against in equity.
3. If a failure to pay the annual premium be caused by the
intervention of war between the territories in which the insurance
company and the assured respectively reside, which makes it
unlawful for them to hold intercourse, the policy is nevertheless
forfeited if the company insist on the condition; but in such case
the assured is entitled to the equitable value of the policy
arising from the premiums actually paid.
4. This equitable value is the difference between the cost of a
new policy and the present value of the premiums yet to be paid on
the forfeited policy when the forfeiture occurred, and may be
recovered in an action at law or a suit in equity.
5. The doctrine of revival of contracts suspended during the war
is based on considerations of equity and justice, and cannot be
invoked to revive a contract which it would be unjust or
inequitable to revive, as where time is of the essence of the
contract or the parties cannot be made equal.
6. The average rate of mortality is the fundamental basis of
life assurance, and as this is subverted by giving to the assured
the option to revive their policies or not after they have been
suspended by a war (since none but the sick and dying would apply),
it would be unjust to compel a revival against the company.
Page 93 U. S. 25
The first case is a bill in equity, filed to recover the amount
of a policy of life assurance granted by the defendant (now
appellant) in 1851 on the life of Dr. A. D. Statham, of
Mississippi, from the proceeds of certain funds belonging to the
defendant attached in the hands of its agent at Jackson in that
state. It appears from the statements of the bill that the annual
premiums accruing on the policy were all regularly paid until the
breaking out of the late civil war, but that in consequence of that
event, the premium due on the 8th of December, 1861, was not paid;
the parties assured being residents of Mississippi, and the
defendant a corporation of New York. Dr. Statham died in July,
1862.
The second case is an action at law against the same defendant
to recover the amount of a policy issued in 1859 on the life of
Henry S. Seyms, the husband of the plaintiff. In this case also the
premiums had been paid until the breaking out of the war, when, by
reason thereof, they ceased to be paid, the plaintiff and her
husband being residents of Mississippi. He died in May, 1862.
The third case is a similar action against the Manhattan Life
Insurance Company of New York, to recover the amount of a policy
issued by it in 1858, on the life of C. L. Buck, of Vicksburg,
Miss., the circumstances being substantially the same as in the
other cases.
Each policy is in the usual form of such an instrument,
declaring that the company, in consideration of a certain specified
sum to it in hand paid by the assured, and of an annual premium of
the same amount to be paid on the same day and month in every year
during the continuance of the policy, did assure the life of the
party named, in a specified amount, for the term of his natural
life. Each contained various conditions, upon the breach of which
it was to be null and void, and amongst others the following:
"That in case the said [assured] shall not pay the said premium
on or before the several days hereinbefore mentioned for the
payment
Page 93 U. S. 26
thereof, then and in every such case the said company shall not
be liable to the payment of the sum insured, or in any part
thereof, and this policy shall cease and determine."
The Manhattan policy contained the additional provision that in
every case where the policy should cease or become null and void,
all previous payments made thereon should be forfeited to the
company.
The nonpayment of the premiums in arrear was set up in bar of
the actions, and the plaintiffs respectively relied on the
existence of the war as an excuse, offering to deduct the premiums
in arrear from the amounts of the policies.
Page 93 U. S. 30
MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY, after stating the case, delivered the
opinion of the Court.
We agree with the court below that the contract is not an
assurance for a single year, with a privilege of renewal from year
to year by paying the annual premium, but that it is an entire
contract of assurance for life, subject to discontinuance and
forfeiture for nonpayment of any of the stipulated premiums. Such
is the form of the contract and such is its character. It has been
contended that the payment of each premium is the consideration for
insurance during the next following year -- as in fire policies.
But the position is untenable. It often happens that the assured
pays the entire premium in advance, or in five, ten, or twenty
annual installments. Such installments are clearly not intended as
the consideration for the respective years in which they are paid,
for after they are all paid, the policy stands good for the balance
of the life insured without any further payment. Each installment
is in fact part consideration of the entire insurance for life. It
is the same thing where the annual premiums are spread over the
whole life. The value of assurance for one year of a man's life
when he is young, strong, and healthy, is manifestly not the same
as when he is old and decrepit. There is no proper relation between
the annual premium and the risk of assurance for the year in which
it is paid. This idea of assurance from year to year is the
suggestion of ingenious counsel. The annual premiums are an
annuity, the present value of which is calculated to correspond
with the present value of the amount assured, a reasonable
percentage being added to the premiums to cover expenses and
contingencies. The whole premiums are balanced against the whole
insurance.
But whilst this is true, it must be conceded that promptness of
payment is essential in the business of life insurance. All the
calculations of the insurance company are based on the hypothesis
of prompt payments. They not only calculate on the receipt of the
premiums when due, but on compounding interest upon them. It is on
this basis that they are enabled to offer assurance at the
favorable rates they do. Forfeiture for nonpayment is a necessary
means of protecting themselves from embarrassment. Unless it were
enforceable, the business
Page 93 U. S. 31
would be thrown into utter confusion. It is like the forfeiture
of shares in mining enterprises and all other hazardous
undertakings. There must be power to cut off unprofitable members
or the success of the whole scheme is endangered. The insured
parties are associates in a great scheme. This associated relation
exists whether the company be a mutual one or not. Each is
interested in the engagements of all, for out of the coexistence of
many risks arises the law of average which underlies the whole
business. An essential feature of this scheme is the mathematical
calculations referred to, on which the premiums and amounts assured
are based. And these calculations, again, are based on the
assumption of average mortality, and of prompt payments and
compound interest thereon. Delinquency cannot be tolerated nor
redeemed except at the option of the company. This has always been
the understanding and the practice in this department of business.
Some companies, it is true, accord a grace of thirty days or other
fixed period within which the premium in arrear may be paid on
certain conditions of continued good health, &c. But this is a
matter of stipulation, or of discretion, on the part of the
particular company. When no stipulation exists, it is the general
understanding that time is material and that the forfeiture is
absolute if the premium be not paid. The extraordinary and even
desperate efforts sometimes made when an insured person is
in
extremis to meet a premium coming due demonstrate the common
view of this matter.
The case therefore is one in which time is material and of the
essence of the contract. Nonpayment at the day involves absolute
forfeiture, if such be the terms of the contract, as is the case
here. Courts cannot with safety vary the stipulation of the parties
by introducing equities for the relief of the insured against their
own negligence.
But the court below bases its decision on the assumption that
when performance of the condition becomes illegal in consequence of
the prevalence of public war, it is excused and forfeiture does not
ensue. It supposes the contract to have been suspended during the
war and to have revived with all its force when the war ended. Such
a suspension and revival do take place in the case of ordinary
debts. But have they
Page 93 U. S. 32
ever been known to take place in the case of executory contracts
in which time is material? If a Texas merchant had contracted to
furnish some Northern explorer a thousand cans of preserved meat by
a certain day, so as to be ready for his departure for the North
Pole, and was prevented from furnishing it by the civil war, would
the contract still be good at the close of the war five years
afterwards, and after the return of the expedition? If the
proprietor of a Tennessee quarry had agreed in 1860 to furnish,
during the two following years, ten thousand cubic feet of marble
for the construction of a building in Cincinnati, could he have
claimed to perform the contract in 1865 on the ground that the war
prevented an earlier performance?
The truth is that the doctrine of the revival of contracts
suspended during the war is one based on considerations of equity
and justice, and cannot be invoked to revive a contract which it
would be unjust or inequitable to revive.
In the case of life insurance, besides the materiality of time
in the performance of the contract, another strong reason exists
why the policy should not be revived. The parties do not stand on
equal ground in reference to such a revival. It would operate most
unjustly against the company. The business of insurance is founded
on the law of averages -- that of life insurance eminently so. The
average rate of mortality is the basis on which it rests. By
spreading their risks over a large number of cases, the companies
calculate on this average with reasonable certainty and safety.
Anything that interferes with it deranges the security of the
business. If every policy lapsed by reason of the war should be
revived and all the back premiums should be paid, the companies
would have the benefit of this average amount of risk. But the good
risks are never heard from; only the bad are sought to be revived,
where the person insured is either dead or dying. Those in health
can get new policies cheaper than to pay arrearages on the old. To
enforce a revival of the bad cases, whilst the company necessarily
lose the cases which are desirable, would be manifestly unjust. An
insured person, as before stated, does not stand isolated and
alone. His case is connected with and correlated to the cases of
all others insured by the same company.
Page 93 U. S. 33
The nature of the business as a whole must be looked at to
understand the general equities of the parties.
We are of opinion, therefore, that an action cannot be
maintained for the amount assured on a policy of life insurance
forfeited, like those in question, by nonpayment of the premium,
even though the payment was prevented by the existence of the
war.
The question then arises must the insured lose all the money
which has been paid for premiums on their respective policies? If
they must, they will sustain an equal injustice to that which the
companies would sustain by reviving the policies. At the very first
blush, it seems manifest that justice requires that they should
have some compensation or return for the money already paid,
otherwise the companies would be the gainers from their loss, and
that from a cause for which neither party is to blame. The case may
be illustrated thus:
Suppose an inhabitant of Georgia had bargained for a house,
situated in a Northern city, to be paid for by installments, and no
title to be made until all the installments were paid, with a
condition that, on the failure to pay any of the installments when
due, the contract should be at an end and the previous payments
forfeited; and suppose that this condition was declared by the
parties to be absolute and the time of payment material. Now if
some of the installments were paid before the war, and others
accruing during the war were not paid, the contract, as an
executory one, was at an end. If the necessities of the vendor
obliged him to avail himself of the condition and to resell the
property to another party, would it be just for him to retain the
money he had received? Perhaps it might be just if the failure to
pay had been voluntary, or could by possibility have been avoided.
But it was caused by an event beyond the control of either party --
an event which made it unlawful to pay. In such case, whilst it
would be unjust, after the war, to enforce the contract as an
executory one against the vendor contrary to his will, it would be
equally unjust in him, treating it as ended, to insist upon the
forfeiture of the money already paid on it. An equitable right to
some compensation or return for previous payments would clearly
result from the circumstances of the case. The money paid by the
purchaser, subject to the
Page 93 U. S. 34
value of any possession which he may have enjoyed, should,
ex aequo et bono, be returned to him. This would clearly
be demanded by justice and right.
And so, in the present case, whilst the insurance company has a
right to insist on the materiality of time in the condition of
payment of premiums, and to hold the contract ended by reason of
nonpayment, they cannot with any fairness insist upon the
condition, as it regards the forfeiture of the premiums already
paid; that would be clearly unjust and inequitable. The insured has
an equitable right to have this amount restored to him, subject to
a deduction for the value of the assurance enjoyed by him whilst
the policy was in existence; in other words, he is fairly entitled
to have the equitable value of his policy.
As before suggested, the annual premiums are not the
consideration of assurance for the year in which they are severally
paid, for they are equal in amount, whereas the risk in the early
years of life is much less than in the later. It is common
knowledge that the annual premiums are increased with the age of
the person applying for insurance. According to approved tables, a
person becoming insured at twenty-five is charged about twenty
dollars annual premium on a policy of one thousand dollars, whilst
a person at forty-five is charged about thirty-eight dollars. It is
evident therefore that when the younger person arrives at
forty-five, his policy has become, by reason of his previous
payments, of considerable value. Instead of having to pay, for the
balance of his life, thirty-eight dollars per annum, as he would if
he took out a new policy on which nothing had been paid, he has
only to pay twenty dollars. The difference (eighteen dollars per
annum during his life) is called the equitable value of his policy.
The present value of the assurance on his life exceeds by this
amount what he has yet to pay. Indeed, the company, if well
managed, has laid aside and invested a reserve fund equal to this
equitable value, to be appropriated to the payment of his policy
when it falls due. This reserve fund has grown out of the premiums
already paid. It belongs, in one sense, to the insured who has paid
them, somewhat as a deposit in a savings bank is said to belong to
the person who made the deposit.
Page 93 U. S. 35
Indeed, some life insurance companies have a standing regulation
by which they agree to pay to any person insured the equitable
value of his policy whenever he wishes it -- in other words, it is
due on demand. But whether thus demandable or not, the policy has a
real value corresponding to it -- a value on which the holder often
realizes money by borrowing. The careful capitalist does not fail
to see that the present value of the amount assured exceeds the
present value of the annuity or annual premium yet to be paid by
the assured party. The present value of the amount assured is
exactly represented by the annuity which would have to be paid on a
new policy, or, thirty-eight dollars per annum in the case
supposed, where the party is forty-five years old, whilst the
present value of the premiums yet to be paid on a policy taken by
the same person at twenty-five is but little more than half that
amount. To forfeit this excess, which fairly belongs to the assured
and is fairly due from the company and which the latter actually
has in its coffers, and to do this for a cause beyond individual
control, would be rank injustice. It would be taking away from the
assured that which had already become substantially his property.
It would be contrary to the maxim that no one should be made rich
by making another poor.
We are of opinion, therefore, first that as the companies
elected to insist upon the condition in these cases, the policies
in question must be regarded as extinguished by the nonpayment of
the premiums, though caused by the existence of the war, and that
an action will not lie for the amount insured thereon.
Secondly, that such failure being caused by a public war,
without the fault of the assured, they are entitled
ex aequo et
bono to recover the equitable value of the policies with
interest from the close of the war.
It results from these conclusions that the several judgments and
the decree in the cases before us, being in favor of the plaintiffs
for the whole sum assured, must be reversed and the records
remanded for further proceedings. We perceive that the declarations
in the actions at law contain no common or other counts applicable
to the kind of relief which, according to our decision, the
plaintiffs are entitled to demand, but as the question is one of
first impression, in which the parties were necessarily
somewhat
Page 93 U. S. 36
in the dark with regard to their precise rights and remedies, we
think it fair and just that they should be allowed to amend their
pleadings. In the equitable suit, perhaps, the prayer for
alternative relief might be sufficient to sustain a proper decree;
but nevertheless the complainants should be allowed to amend their
bill if they shall be so advised.
In estimating the equitable value of a policy, no deduction
should be made from the precise amount which the calculations give,
as is sometimes done where policies are voluntarily surrendered,
for the purpose of discouraging such surrenders, and the value
should be taken as of the day when the first default occurred in
the payment of the premium by which the policy became forfeited. In
each case, the rates of mortality and interest used in the tables
of the company will form the basis of the calculation.
The decree in the equity suit and the judgments in the
actions at law are reversed and the causes respectively remanded to
be proceeded with according to law and the directions of this
opinion.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WAITE.
I agree with the majority of the Court in the opinion that the
decree and judgments in these cases should be reversed and that the
failure to pay the annual premiums as they matured put an end to
the policies notwithstanding the default was occasioned by the war,
but I do not think that a default, even under such circumstances,
raises an implied promise by the company to pay the assured what
his policy was equitably worth at the time. I therefore dissent
from that part of the judgment just announced which remands the
causes for trial upon such a promise.
MR. JUSTICE STRONG.
While I concur in a reversal of these judgments and the decree,
I dissent entirely from the opinion filed by a majority of the
Court. I cannot construe the policies as the majority have
construed them. A policy of life insurance is a peculiar contract.
Its obligations are unilateral. It contains no undertaking of the
assured to pay premiums; it merely gives him an option to pay or
not, and thus to continue the obligation of
Page 93 U. S. 37
the insurers, or terminate it at his pleasure. It follows that
the consideration for the assumption of the insurers can in no
sense be considered an annuity consisting of the annual premiums.
In my opinion, the true meaning of the contract is that the
applicant for insurance, by paying the first premium, obtains an
insurance for one year, together with a right to have the insurance
continued from year to year during his life upon payment of the
same annual premium, if paid in advance. Whether he will avail
himself of the refusal of the insurers or not is optional with him.
The payment
ad diem of the second or any subsequent
premium is therefore a condition precedent to continued liability
of the insurers. The assured may perform it or not, at his option.
In such a case, the doctrine that accident, inevitable necessity,
or the act of God may excuse performance has no existence. It is
for this reason that I think the policies upon which these suits
were brought were not in force after the assured ceased to pay
premiums. And so, though for other reasons, the majority of the
Court holds; but they hold, at the same time, that the assured in
each case is entitled to recover the surrender, or what they call
the equitable, value of the policy. This is incomprehensible to me.
I think it has never before been decided that the surrender value
of a policy can be recovered by an assured, unless there has been
an agreement between the parties for a surrender, and certainly it
has not before been decided that a supervening state of war makes a
contract between private parties, or raises an implication of
one.
MR. JUSTICE CLIFFORD, with whom concurred MR. JUSTICE HUNT,
dissenting.
Where the parties to an executory money contract live in
different countries, and the governments of those countries become
involved in public war with each other, the contract between such
parties is suspended during the existence of the war and revives
when peace ensues, and that rule, in my judgment, is as applicable
to the contract of life insurance as to any other executory
contract. Consequently I am obliged to dissent from the opinion and
judgment of the Court in these cases.