Constantino v. Asia Life 2
Constantino v. Asia Life 2
Constantino v. Asia Life 2
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BENGZON, J.:
The facts are these: First case. In consideration of the sum of P176.04 as annual
premium duly paid to it, the Asia Life Insurance Company (a foreign corporation
incorporated under the laws of Delaware, U.S.A.), issued on September 27, 1941, its
Policy No. 93912 for P3,000, whereby it insured the life of Arcadio Constantino for a
term of twenty years. The first premium covered the period up to September 26,
1942. The plaintiff Paz Lopez de Constantino was regularly appointed beneficiary.
The policy contained these stipulations, among others:
All premium payments are due in advance and any unpunctuality in making
any such payment shall cause this policy to lapse unless and except as kept
in force by the Grace Period condition or under Option 4 below. (Grace of 31
days.)
After that first payment, no further premiums were paid. The insured died on
September 22, 1944.
It is admitted that the defendant, being an American corporation , had to close its
branch office in Manila by reason of the Japanese occupation, i.e. from January 2,
1942, until the year 1945.
Second case. On August 1, 1938, the defendant Asia Life Insurance Company issued
its Policy No. 78145 (Joint Life 20-Year Endowment Participating with Accident
Indemnity), covering the lives of the spouses Tomas Ruiz and Agustina Peralta, for
the sum of P3,000. The annual premium stipulated in the policy was regularly paid
from August 1, 1938, up to and including September 30, 1941. Effective August 1,
1941, the mode of payment of premiums was changed from annual to quarterly, so
that quarterly premiums were paid, the last having been delivered on November 18,
1941, said payment covering the period up to January 31, 1942. No further
payments were handed to the insurer. Upon the Japanese occupation, the insured
and the insurer became separated by the lines of war, and it was impossible and
illegal for them to deal with each other. Because the insured had borrowed on the
policy an mount of P234.00 in January, 1941, the cash surrender value of the policy
was sufficient to maintain the policy in force only up to September 7, 1942. Tomas
Ruiz died on February 16, 1945. The plaintiff Agustina Peralta is his beneficiary. Her
demand for payment met with defendant's refusal, grounded on non-payment of the
premiums.
All premium payments are due in advance and any unpunctuality in making
any such payment shall cause this policy to lapse unless and except as kept
in force by the Grace Period condition or under Option 4 below. (Grace of
days.) . . .
Plaintiffs maintain that, as beneficiaries, they are entitled to receive the proceeds of
the policies minus all sums due for premiums in arrears. They allege that non-
payment of the premiums was caused by the closing of defendant's offices in Manila
during the Japanese occupation and the impossible circumstances created by war.
Defendant on the other hand asserts that the policies had lapsed for non-payment
of premiums, in accordance with the contract of the parties and the law applicable
to the situation.
COURTS RULING
In Young vs. Midland Textile Insurance Co. (30 Phil., 617), we said that "contracts of
insurance are contracts of indemnity upon the terms and conditions specified in the
policy. The parties have a right to impose such reasonable conditions at the time of
the making of the contract as they may deem wise and necessary. The terms of the
policy constitute the measure of the insurer's liability.The comliance of the insured
with the terms of the contract is a condition precedent to the right of recovery."
In Glaraga vs. Sun Life Ass. Co. (49 Phil., 737), this court held that a life policy was
avoided because the premium had not been paid within the time fixed, since by its
express terms, non-payment of any premium when due or within the thirty-day
period of grace, ipso facto caused the policy to lapse.
It is contended for plaintiff that inasmuch as the non-payment of premium was the
consequence of war, it should be excused and should not cause the forfeiture of the
policy.
The first holds the view that "there are two elements in the consideration for which
the annual premium is paid First, the mere protection for the year, and second,
the privilege of renewing the contract for each succeeding year by paying the
premium for that year at the time agreed upon. According to this view of the
contract, the payment of premiums is a condition precedent, the non-performance
would be illegal necessarily defeats the right to renew the contract."
The second rule, apparently followed by the greater number of decisions, hold that
"war between states in which the parties reside merely suspends the contracts of
the life insurance, and that, upon tender of all premiums due by the insured or his
representatives after the war has terminated, the contract revives and becomes
fully operative."
The United States rule declares that the contract is not merely suspended, but is
abrogated by reason of non-payments is peculiarly of the essence of the contract. It
additionally holds that it would be unjust to allow the insurer to retain the reserve
value of the policy, which is the excess of the premiums paid over the actual risk
carried during the years when the policy had been in force. This rule was announced
in the well-known Statham6case which, in the opinion of Professor Vance, is the
correct rule.7
Like the instant case, the policy involved in the Statham decision specifies that non-
payment on time shall cause the policy to cease and determine.
In another part of the decision, the United States Supreme Court considers and
rejects what is, in effect, the New York theory in the following words and phrases:
Urging adoption of the New York theory, counsel for plaintiff point out that the
obligation of the insured to pay premiums was excused during the war owing to
impossibility of performance, and that consequently no unfavorable consequences
should follow from such failure.
It is well settled that a contract of insurance is sui generis. While the insured
by an observance of the conditions may hold the insurer to his contract, the
latter has not the power or right to compel the insured to maintain the
contract relation with it longer than he chooses. Whether the insured will
continue it or not is optional with him. There being no obligation to pay for
the premium, they did not constitute a debt. (Noblevs. Southern States M.D.
Ins. Co., 157 Ky., 46; 162 S.W., 528.) (Emphasis ours.)
It should be noted that the parties contracted not only for peacetime conditions but
also for times of war, because the policies contained provisions applicable expressly
to wartime days. The logical inference, therefore, is that the parties contemplated
uninterrupted operation of the contract even if armed conflict should ensue.
After perusing the Insurance Act, we are firmly persuaded that the non-payment of
premiums is such a vital defense of insurance companies that since the very
beginning, said Act no. 2427 expressly preserved it, by providing that after the
policy shall have been in force for two years, it shall become incontestable (i.e. the
insurer shall have no defense) except for fraud, non-payment of premiums, and
military or naval service in time of war (sec. 184 [b], Insurance Act). And when
Congress recently amended this section (Rep. Act No. 171), the defense of fraud
was eliminated, while the defense of nonpayment of premiums was preserved. Thus
the fundamental character of the undertaking to pay premiums and the high
importance of the defense of non-payment thereof, was specifically recognized.
For all the foregoing, the lower court's decision absolving the defendant from all
liability on the policies in question, is hereby affirmed, without costs.