Brissette Estate v. Westbury
Life Ins. Co.; Brissette Estate v. Crown, Life Insurance Co.,
[1992] 3 S.C.R. 87
Gerald M. Brissette and Bernard
Bezaire
as Executor and Trustee of the Last
Will
and Testament of Mary Cecile
Brissette,
deceased Appellants
v.
Westbury Life Insurance Company,
formerly known as Pitts Life
Insurance Company Respondent
Indexed as: Brissette
Estate v. Westbury Life Insurance Co.; Brissette Estate v. Crown
Life Insurance Co.
File No.: 22125.
1992: February 27;
1992: October 29.
Present: La Forest,
L'Heureux‑Dubé, Sopinka, Gonthier, Cory, Stevenson* and
Iacobucci JJ.
on appeal from the court of appeal for
ontario
Insurance ‑‑
Life insurance ‑‑ Beneficiaries ‑‑ Husband and wife
jointly insured by policy with double indemnity clause in case of death by
accident ‑‑ Survivor named as beneficiary ‑‑ Husband
murdering wife ‑‑ Whether insurance company absolved of paying ‑‑
If not, whether double indemnity clause applicable.
A married couple
bought a term life insurance policy which named the surviving spouse as the
beneficiary. During the course of this policy, the husband murdered his wife
and all avenues of appeal from conviction were exhausted. The husband, acting
as a beneficiary and as executor, made a claim against the insurance company
for the proceeds of the life insurance policy, including the accidental
benefit. He later renounced his appointment as executor and trustee and
surrendered any rights arising under the policy to the executor of his wife's
estate. An order was then made that the claim initiated by him in 1986 against
the insurance company be continued.
In March, 1989, the
respondent insurance company brought a motion for summary judgment seeking the
dismissal of the appellant's claim. The appellant brought a cross‑motion
for a declaration that the estate was entitled to payment of the insurance
proceeds including the accidental death benefits. The trial judge found the
wife's estate was entitled to the insurance proceeds and the accidental
benefits. The Court of Appeal allowed an appeal from that judgment. At issue
here are: (1) whether the insurance company was absolved from paying anything
under the policy in these circumstances; and (2) if not, whether the accidental
benefit clause was applicable as a result of the murder.
Held (Gonthier and Cory JJ. dissenting):
The appeal should be dismissed.
Per La Forest, L'Heureux‑Dubé,
Sopinka and Iacobucci JJ.: The contract cannot be construed to require payment
to the victim's estate; that was never the parties' intention. Moreover, the
contract's wording was unambiguous: the money was to be paid to the survivor.
Public policy prevents the money from being paid in accordance with the
explicit terms of the contract to a survivor who has acceded to this status by
killing the other party. These terms cannot be rewritten under the guise of
interpretation and resort to a constructive trust is an acknowledgement that
this is so. A constructive trust is ordinarily resorted to when the
application of other accepted legal principles would produce an unjust result
and that would not be countenanced by a court's applying the principles of
equity.
The insurance
policy at issue here could not be viewed as two separate contracts with each
party insuring his or her own life with the other as beneficiary. The policy
listed the two parties together as the "insured" and provided for
payment to "the beneficiary" who was defined as "the
survivor".
Irrespective of the
ultimate payee of the insurance proceeds, denial of recovery is consistent with
public policy because it prevents the insured from insuring against his or her
own criminal act. There is nothing unjust, therefore, about the application of
public policy in this case.
Even if denial of
recovery to the estate were inconsistent with public policy, it would be
contrary to established principles of equity to employ a constructive trust in
this case. A constructive trust will ordinarily be imposed on property in the
hands of a wrongdoer to prevent him or her from being unjustly enriched by
profiting from his or her own wrongful conduct. No claim of unjust enrichment,
which is fundamental to the use of a constructive trust, was made out here.
The wrongdoer did not benefit from his own wrong and the insurer, in complying
with the terms of the contract, was not in breach of its duty to the other
insured. Moreover, the wrongdoer held no property to which a trust could be
fastened because of the operation of public policy. The effect of a
constructive trust would be to first require payment to the wrongdoer and then
impress the money with a trust in favour of the estate. A constructive trust,
however, cannot be used to bring property into existence by determining the
liability of the insurer to pay.
Per Gonthier and Cory JJ. (dissenting):
The reasonable intention of the parties must be taken into account in
interpreting the policy. The court should: (1) look at the words of the
entire contract to promote the true and reasonable intention of the parties at
the time of entering the contract; (2) look at the words of the contract
to determine if there is an ambiguity; and (3) construe any ambiguity in
favour of the insured. The doctrine of public policy should apply to insurance
contracts to ensure that a wrongdoer will not profit from his or her
wrongdoing. The rule should be narrowly construed and should not ordinarily be
used by an insurance company to avoid payment of its obligations.
The use of the
constructive trust to prevent the unjust enrichment of the wrongdoer reduces or
eliminates the element of confusion involved in deciding who is entitled to the
proceeds of the policy. The beneficiary of the constructive trust is the person
who, in the eyes of equity, has the best right to the proceeds. Where there
are circumstances showing that a particular person has a better equity than
anybody else the property should be given to that person but otherwise it
should be given to the estate of the victim for lack of "any other
suitable recipient," and in all cases the wrongdoer or anyone claiming
through him or her should be excluded. Where the wrongdoer is beneficiary
under the victim's life insurance the proceeds of the policy will in the normal
case be held for the estate of the victim but if there is an alternative
beneficiary then he or she should gain the proceeds and similarly if there is
evidence that the victim would have changed the beneficiary then that second
person should benefit and gain the proceeds.
The reasonable
intention of the parties, gleaned from the contract as a whole, was that the
sum insured should be paid to the husband in the event that the wife should
predecease him. Ambiguity exists, however, because the policy does not cover
the situation of one spouse's murdering the other. The absence of such a
provision is particularly significant in light of the care the insurer has
taken in other portions of the policy to stipulate the suicide exemption clause
and the other specific exemption provisions pertaining to accidental death.
Ambiguities should
be interpreted in favour of the insured. Although public policy prevents the
monies being paid to the murdering spouse, there is no reason for the insurance
company to benefit from that public policy doctrine. The insurance company
should therefore pay the proceeds to the survivor who, in order to comply with
the principles of public policy, must hold those funds as trustee for the
administrator of the estate of the murdered spouse.
The meaning of the
contract would be distorted and s. 171 of the Insurance Act (which
provides for payment to an estate for want of a surviving beneficiary) would be
given a perverse meaning if the survivor were deemed to have predeceased the
murder victim. Where a party to the contract, as opposed to a third party,
deliberately murders the insured, the death cannot be said to be by
"accidental means" and therefore cannot bring the double indemnity
clause into play.
Cases Cited
By Sopinka J.
Applied: Demeter v. Dominion Life
Assurance Co. (1982), 35 O.R. (2d) 560; distinguished: Cleaver
v. Mutual Reserve Fund Life Association, [1892] 1 Q.B. 147; referred to:
Consolidated‑Bathurst Export Ltd. v. Mutual Boiler and Machinery
Insurance Co., [1980] 1 S.C.R. 888; Spicer v. New York Life Ins. Co.,
268 F. 500 (1920), certiorari denied, 255 U.S. 572 (1921); Schobelt
v. Barber, [1967] 1 O.R. 349; Lac Minerals Ltd. v. International Corona
Resources Ltd., [1989] 2 S.C.R. 574; Hunter Engineering Co. v. Syncrude
Canada Ltd., [1989] 1 S.C.R. 426; Pettkus v. Becker, [1980] 2 S.C.R.
834.
By Cory J. (dissenting)
Demeter v. Dominion
Life Assurance Co. (1981),
33 O.R. (2d) 839 (H.C.), aff'd (1982), 35 O.R. (2d) 560 (C.A.); Cleaver
v. Mutual Reserve Fund Life Association, [1892] 1 Q.B. 147; Horwitz v.
Loyal Protective Insurance Co., [1932] O.R. 467; National Union Fire
Insurance Co. v. Reno's Executive Air, Inc., 682 P.2d 1380 (1984); Consolidated‑Bathurst
Export Ltd. v. Mutual Boiler and Machinery Insurance Co., [1980] 1 S.C.R.
888; Wigle v. Allstate Insurance Co. of Canada (1984), 49 O.R. (2d) 101,
leave to appeal to S.C.C. refused, [1985] 1 S.C.R. v; Standard Life Assur.
Co. v. Trudeau (1900), 31 S.C.R. 376; Equitable Life Assur. Soc. of
United States v. Weightman, 160 P. 629 (1916); Supreme Lodge Knights
& Ladies of Honor v. Menkhausen, 70 N.E. 567 (1904); Spicer v. New
York Life Ins. Co., 268 F. 500 (1920); Mutual of Omaha Insurance Co. v.
Stats, [1978] 2 S.C.R. 1153.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Insurance
Act, R.S.O. 1980, c.
218, s. 171.
Married
Women's Property Act, 1882 (U.K.), 45 & 46 Vict., c. 75, s. 11.
Authors Cited
Holz,
Shannon G. "Insurance Law: The Doctrine of Reasonable Expectations"
(1988), 37 Drake L. Rev. 741.
Keeton,
Robert. "Insurance Law Rights at Variance with Policy Provisions"
(1970), 83 Harv. L. Rev. 961
Leitner,
David L. "Enforcing the Consumer's `Reasonable Expectations' in
Interpreting Insurance Contracts: A Doctrine in Search of Coherent Definition"
(1988), 38 F.I.C.C. Quarterly 379.
Scott,
Austin Wakeman. The Law of Trusts, Vol. 5, 4th ed. By Austin Wakeman
Scott and William Franklin Fratcher. Boston: Little, Brown & Co., 1989.
Youdan,
T. G. "Acquisition of Property by Killing" (1973), 89 L.Q. Rev.
235.
APPEAL from a
judgment of the Ontario Court of Appeal (1990), 74 O.R. (2d) 1, 72 D.L.R. (4th)
138, [1990] I.L.R. {PP} 1-2631, 39 E.T.R. 86, 49 C.C.L.I. 282, allowing an
appeal from a judgment of Chilcott J. (1989), 69 O.R. (2d) 215, 60 D.L.R. (4th)
78, [1989] I.L.R. {PP} 1‑2483, [1989] I.L.R. {PP} 1‑2503, 33 E.T.R.
153, 41 C.C.L.I. 1. Appeal dismissed, Gonthier and Cory JJ. dissenting.
Robert E.
Barnes, Q.C.,
for the appellants.
John S. McNeil, Q.C., for the respondent.
The judgment of
La Forest, L'Heureux-Dubé, Sopinka and Iacobucci JJ. was delivered by
//Sopinka J.//
Sopinka
J. -- I have read the
reasons prepared by my colleague Justice Cory and find that I cannot agree with
the conclusion that he has reached. I would dismiss the appeal essentially for
the reasons expressed by Finlayson J.A. in the Court of Appeal for Ontario
(1990), 74 O.R. (2d) 1. Inasmuch as the reasons of my colleague take issue
with some aspects of those reasons, some amplification is required of the
reasons of Finlayson J.A.
In order to decide
this appeal two issues must be resolved:
(1) can
the insurance contract be interpreted so as to require payment of the insurance
proceeds to the estate of Mary Brissette; and,
(2) if
the contract of insurance cannot be so interpreted, can the Court achieve the
same result by resort to the device of a constructive trust.
Since I would
resolve both these issues against the appellant, it is not necessary for me to
deal with the issue of double indemnity.
Interpretation of the Contract
In interpreting an
insurance contract the rules of construction relating to contracts are to be
applied as follows:
(1) The
court must search for an interpretation from the whole of the contract which
promotes the true intent of the parties at the time of entry into the contract.
(2) Where
words are capable of two or more meanings, the meaning that is more reasonable
in promoting the intention of the parties will be selected.
(3) Ambiguities
will be construed against the insurer.
(4) An
interpretation which will result in either a windfall to the insurer or an
unanticipated recovery to the insured is to be avoided. See Consolidated‑Bathurst
Export Ltd. v. Mutual Boiler and Machinery Insurance Co., [1980] 1 S.C.R.
888.
The contract in
this case is not reasonably capable of the interpretation contended for by the
appellant. It cannot be construed to require payment to the estate of Mary
Brissette. That was never the intention of the parties. As stated by the
Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals in Spicer v. New York Life Ins. Co., 268
F. 500 (1920), at p. 501, certiorari denied, 255 U.S. 572 (1921):
There
is no promise to pay anything to the estate, or to the personal representative,
of that one of the two insured whose death first occurs during the continuance
of the contract.
Moreover, there is
nothing ambiguous about the wording of the contract. The money is to be paid
to the survivor. The problem is that something has occurred that the parties
neither contemplated nor provided for. The survivor acceded to this status by
killing the other party. Public policy prevents the money from being paid in
accordance with the explicit terms of the contract. These terms cannot simply
be rewritten under the guise of interpretation. The resort to a constructive
trust to achieve the result contended for by the appellant is an acknowledgement
that this is so. A constructive trust is ordinarily resorted to when the
application of other accepted legal principles would produce a result that is
unjust and that would not be countenanced by a court applying the principles of
equity. The question, therefore, is not one of interpretation but whether the
result of the application of the rules of interpretation are unjust so as to
require the court to employ a constructive trust and whether it can do so in
accordance with the applicable principles of equity.
Constructive Trust
In order to
determine whether, as a matter of public policy, the Court should resort to the
device of a constructive trust, it is appropriate to consider whether the
application of public policy which denies payment to the felonious beneficiary
would work an injustice if recovery is denied to the appellants. After all, it
is this policy that prevents the contract from taking effect in accordance with
its terms. If denial of recovery by the estate is not inconsistent with this
policy, then there is no misuse of public policy which would warrant a
conclusion that its application is unjust.
The results reached
in Demeter v. Dominion Life Assurance Co. (1982), 35 O.R. (2d) 560, and Cleaver
v. Mutual Reserve Fund Life Association, [1892] 1 Q.B. 147, define the
parameters of the application of this public policy. In Demeter the
assured took out an insurance policy on his wife's life naming himself as
beneficiary. He then arranged for her murder. Although the claim for the
proceeds of insurance was made by the daughter of the deceased wife, the court
made it clear that it would have been equally consistent with public policy to
deny recovery to the wife's estate. MacKinnon A.C.J.O. concluded as follows
(at p. 562):
We
are in agreement with the Motions Court judge that the life insured had no
interest in the policy, legal or equitable, which vested in her estate. In our
view it could be stretching equitable principles beyond recognizable limits to
grant either the infant plaintiff or her mother's estate an equitable interest
in the policies and the proceeds of those policies.
The rationale of
the policy which denies recovery to the felonious beneficiary is that a person
should not profit from his or her own criminal act. It is consistent with this
policy that a person should not be allowed to insure against his or her own
criminal act irrespective of the ultimate payee of the proceeds. Denial of
recovery in Demeter to either the daughter or the wife's estate would
have been consistent with public policy. There was nothing unjust about such a
result calling for the special assistance of equitable principles.
On the other hand,
in Cleaver the insured took out an insurance policy on his own life with
his wife as beneficiary. The wife-beneficiary who murdered the insured-husband
was not a party to the contract of insurance. By virtue of the Married
Women's Property Act, 1882 (U.K.), 45 & 46 Vict., c. 75, the moneys
were payable to the estate of the insured to be held in trust for the
beneficiary. Public policy stepped in to deny payment to the wife-beneficiary
leaving the insurance moneys in the estate. Public policy was not allowed to
abrogate a right that the estate had by virtue of the statute. The principles
of equity were not resorted to in order to remedy a perceived injustice.
The contract of
insurance in this case is not identical to the contract in either Demeter
or Cleaver. It is necessary, therefore, to examine the whole of the
contract in order to determine whether in its essential features it more
closely resembles one or other of the contracts in those cases so as to attract
the policy underlying that decision. After review of the contract of insurance
in this case, I am of the opinion that it cannot be viewed as two separate
contracts with each of Gerald and Mary insuring their own lives with the other
as beneficiary so as to resemble the policy in Cleaver. The contract
lists the two of them together as the "insured" and provides for
payment to "the beneficiary" who is defined as "the
survivor". I agree, therefore, with the following characterization of the
policy by Finlayson J.A. in his reasons at p. 9:
I
think the approach of counsel for Westbury reflects a sounder construction of
the policy and thus the contract of insurance. He submits that Mary and Gerald
insured their joint lives in favour of the survivor, or the survivor's
designated beneficiary.
On this basis, the
result reached in Demeter is appropriate in this case. There is nothing
unjust in refusing to pay the proceeds of insurance to a beneficiary not
designated by the insurance contract when to do so would allow the insured to
insure against his own criminal act. Moreover, even if the contract of
insurance can be characterized as two separate contracts, as submitted by the
appellants, so as to resemble the contract in Cleaver, the result in Cleaver
cannot be achieved in the absence of a provision, statutory or in the contract,
providing for payment to the estate of the wife. Such a result can only be
attained by invoking the equitable principle of a constructive trust. Those
principles should only be invoked to cure an unjust application of public
policy. There is nothing unjust about the application of that public policy in
this case.
But, even if I had
concluded that the denial of recovery to the estate was inconsistent with
public policy, in my opinion it would be contrary to established principles of
equity to employ a constructive trust in this case. A constructive trust will
ordinarily be imposed on property in the hands of a wrongdoer to prevent him or
her from being unjustly enriched by profiting from his or her own wrongful
conduct. For example, in Schobelt v. Barber, [1967] 1 O.R. 349 (H.C.),
the court imposed a constructive trust on property which passed to a joint
tenant who had murdered his co-tenant. By virtue of the instrument creating
the joint tenancy the surviving tenant acceded to the whole property. In order
to prevent the wrongdoer from being unjustly enriched, the whole property was
impressed with a constructive trust with the estate of the deceased joint
tenant as beneficiary of one-half of the property.
The requirement of
unjust enrichment is fundamental to the use of a constructive trust. In Lac
Minerals Ltd. v. International Corona Resources Ltd., [1989] 2 S.C.R. 574,
Justice La Forest referred to Dickson C.J.'s review of the development of
the constructive trust in Hunter Engineering Co. v. Syncrude Canada Ltd.,
[1989] 1 S.C.R. 426. At pages 673-74, La Forest J. stated:
This
Court has recently had occasion to address the circumstances in which a
constructive trust will be imposed in Hunter Engineering Co. v. Syncrude
Canada Ltd., [1989] 1 S.C.R. 426. There, the Chief Justice discussed the
development of the constructive trust over 200 years from its original use in
the context of fiduciary relationships, through to Pettkus v. Becker, supra,
where the Court moved to the modern approach with the constructive trust as a
remedy for unjust enrichment. He identified that Pettkus v. Becker, supra,
set out a two-step approach. First, the Court determines whether a claim for
unjust enrichment is established, and then, secondly, examines whether in the
circumstances a constructive trust is the appropriate remedy to redress that
unjust enrichment. In Hunter Engineering Co. v. Syncrude Canada Ltd., a
constructive trust was refused, not on the basis that it would not have been
available between the parties (though in my view it may not have been
appropriate), but rather on the basis that the claim for unjust enrichment had
not been made out, so no remedial question arose.
In Pettkus v.
Becker, [1980] 2 S.C.R. 834, at p. 847, Dickson J. (as he then was)
stressed that "[t]he principle of unjust enrichment lies at the heart of
the constructive trust".
In this case, no
claim of unjust enrichment has been made out. It cannot be said that but for
Gerald's act, Mary's estate would have recovered the money. The wrongdoer does
not benefit from his own wrong, nor is the insurer in breach of its duty to
Mary. It is simply complying with the express terms of the contract.
Moreover, there is no property in the hands of the wrongdoer upon which a trust
can be fastened. By virtue of public policy the provision for payment in the
insurance policy is unenforceable and no money is payable to the wrongdoer.
The effect of a constructive trust would be to first require payment to the
wrongdoer and then impress the money with a trust in favour of the estate. A
constructive trust cannot be used to bring property into existence by
determining the liability of the insurer to pay. The situation would be
different, if, as in Cleaver, the insurance money were payable to the
estate to be held in trust for the beneficiary. Public policy would step in to
prevent the execution of the trust leaving the proceeds in the hands of the
estate. But where, as here, there is no provision for payment to the estate, a
constructive trust cannot be used to rewrite the contract which clearly and
explicitly provides that the insured "agrees to pay the Sum Insured at its
Head Office to the beneficiary."
I agree with my
colleague that s. 171 of the Insurance Act, R.S.O. 1980, c. 218, has no
application to the facts of this case.
In the result I
would dismiss the appeal with costs.
The reasons of
Gonthier and Cory JJ. were delivered by
//Cory J.//
Cory
J. (dissenting) -- Two
questions must be resolved in this appeal. First, and most importantly, where
a joint policy of insurance with the proceeds payable to the survivor is issued
to a couple, does the murder of the wife by the husband absolve the insurance
company from paying anything under the policy? Second, if the insurance
company must pay, then is the accidental benefit clause applicable as a result
of the murder?
Factual Background
Gerald Brissette
and Mary Brissette were married and living in Windsor, Ontario. In 1980, when
Gerald was 32 and Mary 31, the couple purchased a life insurance policy from
Pitts Life Insurance Company (now Westbury Life Insurance Company). The policy
was issued on June 18, 1980. The insurance was said to be joint, five-year and
convertible level term insurance. The expiry date was June 16, 1985 with a
provision for renewal for a further five- year term on that date. The sum
insured was $200,000 which was payable to the survivor. The premium was fixed
at $712 per annum.
Two years and two
months later, Gerald Brissette murdered his wife. There is no question that,
at the time of death, the policy was in effect and none of the conversion
clauses had been exercised by either Gerald or Mary. The wife had, by her
will, appointed her husband as executor and prime beneficiary of her estate.
The appellant Bernard Bezaire was named as the alternate executor.
The husband in his
capacity as a beneficiary and executor made a claim against the insurance
company for the proceeds of the life insurance policy. The statement of claim
sought judgment for the amount of the policy, including the accidental
benefit. It went on to allege that in the event that Gerald Brissette was not
personally entitled to the proceeds, the estate of his late wife was entitled
to them. The husband was subsequently convicted of his wife's murder by a Michigan
court and all avenues of appeal from his conviction have been exhausted.
During the course of his criminal proceedings, the husband renounced his
appointment as executor and trustee of his wife's estate and surrendered to
Bernard Bezaire any rights he may have had under the policy. An order was then
made that the claim initiated against the insurance company by the husband in
May, 1986 be continued with Bernard Bezaire as executor.
In March, 1989, the
respondent insurance company brought a motion for summary judgment seeking the
dismissal of the appellant's claim. The appellant brought a cross-motion for a
declaration that the estate was entitled to payment of the insurance proceeds
including the accidental death benefits.
Judgments Below
Supreme Court of Ontario (1989), 69 O.R. (2d) 215
Chilcott J. first
considered whether the wife's estate was entitled to the insurance proceeds.
He reviewed the decision in Demeter v. Dominion Life Assurance Co. (1981),
33 O.R. (2d) 839 (H.C.), aff'd (1982), 35 O.R. (2d) 560 (C.A.), but
distinguished it on the ground that, here the wife, unlike Mrs. Demeter, was
indeed a party to the insurance contract since she was a joint owner of the
policy and therefore she (or her executor) had a legal interest in the policy
and in its proceeds.
The judge of first
instance then considered the decision in Cleaver v. Mutual Reserve Fund Life
Association, [1892] 1 Q.B. 147. He determined that it was applicable to
this case. He found that Bernard Bezaire, as executor of Mary Brissette's
estate, was a party to the contract. As a result, he could enforce the
insurance contract without raising public policy concerns.
With regard to the
second issue, Chilcott J. determined, based on the decision of Horwitz v.
Loyal Protective Insurance Co., [1932] O.R. 467, that the murder of Mary
Brissette constituted death by accidental means. He noted that although the
act causing the injury was not accidental as regards the person inflicting the
injury, it was accidental so far as the murdered victim was concerned.
He also applied the
doctrine of contra proferentem resolving any doubt as to the meaning and
scope of the contract against the party who inserted it.
Ontario Court of Appeal (1990), 74 O.R. (2d) 1
Finlayson J.A., for
the court, expressed the opinion that the question as to whether Mary
Brissette's estate could recover turned upon the proper interpretation of the
insurance contract. He found that the judge of the first instance had erred in
finding that Mary Brissette had a legal interest in the Westbury policy and its
proceeds. He expressed the view that the case was governed by Demeter, supra,
and that the decision in Cleaver, supra, did not apply.
Finlayson J.A. then
considered the argument that s. 171 of the Insurance Act, R.S.O. 1980,
c. 218, could be applied so as to designate Mary Brissette's estate as the
alternate beneficiary. That section provides that where a beneficiary
predeceases the person whose life is insured, and no disposition of the share
of the deceased beneficiary in the insurance money is provided in the contract
or by a declaration, the share is payable to the personal representative of the
deceased beneficiary. Finlayson J.A. rejected this argument on two grounds.
First, the insurance policy named the survivor of Gerald Brissette or Mary
Brissette as the beneficiary. By definition, the survivor can never be the
estate of the first to die. Second, s. 171 cannot be relied on to create on
"implied designation" of the wife's estate as the alternate
beneficiary.
He held that on a
proper construction of the contract the beneficiary of the policy was the
survivor of Gerald and Mary Brissette or the survivor's designated
beneficiary. The husband as the survivor was incapable of making a claim. He
concluded that neither could anyone else claim through the husband. In the
result the appeal was allowed.
Analysis
Entitlement to the Insurance Proceeds
What then is the
effect of Gerald Brissette's conviction for the murder of his wife on the
liability of Westbury Life Insurance Company to pay under the insurance
policy? The answer to this question will turn upon the interpretation of the
contract itself and on the applicable public policy principles.
1.The
Contract
(a)Interpretation
of an Insurance Contract
A policy of
insurance constitutes a contract. Yet there are some significant differences
between a contract for insurance and an ordinary commercial contract. It must
be remembered that the policy itself is drawn by the insurance company. It is
the company that chooses the language which sets out the terms and conditions
of the policy. That language is not always a model of clarity which can be
readily understood by lay persons. The policy is not negotiated between the
parties. Rather it is submitted to a potential policy holder on a
take-it-or-leave-it basis, with, I am sure, an emphasis by the insurance
company representative on benefits that the purchaser will receive. Further,
the insurance company will enter into a great number of contracts for insurance
while the insured will but rarely enter into such a contract. The sole
obligation resting upon the insured is to pay the premiums as they fall due.
Life insurance
policies impose upon the insurance company the obligation to pay the stipulated
sum upon the death of the insured. It should be remembered that it is the
insurance companies that have ready access to actuaries and the actuarial
statistics which enable them to calculate their risk effectively. It is on
this basis that they can assess and fix the premium to be paid by the insured
that will permit them to meet their obligations and to profit from the
transactions. How then should these contracts of insurance be interpreted?
(i)The
American Approach
In the United
States, a doctrine of "reasonable expectations" has been applied in
the interpretation of the insurance contracts. Generally, the aim of that
doctrine is to make certain that insurance policies provide the coverage which
the insured can reasonably expect to receive. There the courts have
essentially applied three variations of the doctrine. In the first variation,
the doctrine is applied wherever there is an ambiguity in the policy of
insurance, so that ambiguities are resolved in favour of the insured in order
to satisfy his or her reasonable expectation. See National Union Fire
Insurance Co. v. Reno's Executive Air, Inc., 682 P.2d 1380 (1984). The
American courts have reasoned that insurance policies are contracts of
"adhesion" and therefore ambiguities contained in them should be
resolved in favour of the insured. A contract of "adhesion" has been
defined as a written contract with the following characteristics:
1.
Drafted by one party to the transaction;
2.
On a form regularly used by the drafter;
3.
Presented to the adherent on a take-it-or-leave-it basis;
4.
One in which the adherent enters into relatively few such transactions as
compared with the drafting party;
5.
One in which the principal obligation of the adherent is the payment of money.
See Leitner, in
"Enforcing the Consumer's `Reasonable Expectations' in Interpreting
Insurance Contracts: A Doctrine in Search of Coherent Definition" (1988),
38 F.I.C.C. Quarterly 379, at pp. 379-80.
The second
application of the doctrine operates to provide that the insured is entitled to
all the coverage that might reasonably be expected to be provided under the
policy. Only an unequivocal plain and clear manifestation of the company's
intent to exclude coverage will defeat that expectation.
The third
application of the principle is even broader and more controversial than the
second. It was originally advocated by Professor Keeton who stated:
The
objectively reasonable expectations of applicants and intended beneficiaries
regarding the terms of insurance contracts will be honored even though
painstaking study of the policy provisions would have negated those
expectations.
(R. Keeton, "Insurance Law Rights
at Variance with Policy Provisions" (1970), 83 Harv. L. Rev. 961,
at p. 967.)
In a thoughtful
article, "Insurance Law: The Doctrine of Reasonable Expectations"
(1988), 37 Drake L. Rev. 741, at pp. 746-47, Holz sets out the pros and
cons of this last approach:
. .
. the reasonable expectations of a policyholder, having an ordinary degree of
familiarity with the policy coverage, should be given effect for three
reasons: (1) policy forms are long and complex and cannot be understood
without detailed study; (2) rarely do policyholders read their policies
carefully enough to acquire such understanding; (3) most insurance transactions
are final before a policyholder has a chance to see the detailed policy terms.
The Keeton doctrine has been criticized on the grounds that: (1) if there is
to be any predictability and uniformity of decisions, the courts need to
establish more precise guidelines for the doctrine; (2) the analysis fails to
consider the well-established rule of adhering to express contract language;
(3) it would allow recovery to insureds who fail to read and understand their
policies despite clear and unambiguous policy language; (4) the insurer would
no longer be able to rely on the terms of a written insurance policy.
I have set out the
American approaches not with any intention of slavishly following any of them
but as an indication of how far some jurisdictions have gone to give effect to
the reasonable expectations of the insured and the reasoning that lead to the
adoption of that approach.
(ii)The
Canadian Approach
It has been held
that the reasonable intention of the parties must be taken into account in the
interpretation of the policy. Generally it would be expected that the
intention of the parties entering into a life insurance contract would be that
the insurance company would pay out the sum stipulated by the policy upon the
death of the insured party, provided that the death was not within one of the
listed exceptions to the policy. The principle that the reasonable intention
of the parties must be taken into account in the interpretation of insurance
contracts was set out by this court in Consolidated-Bathurst Export Ltd. v.
Mutual Boiler and Machinery Insurance Co., [1980] 1 S.C.R. 888. In that
case, Estey J. wrote at pp. 901-2:
. .
. the normal rules of construction lead a court to search for an
interpretation which, from the whole of the contract, would appear to promote
or advance the true intent of the parties at the time of entry into the
contract. Consequently, literal meaning should not be applied where to do
so would bring about an unrealistic result or a result which would not be
contemplated in the commercial atmosphere in which the insurance was
contracted. Where words may bear two constructions, the more reasonable
one, that which produces a fair result, must certainly be taken as the
interpretation which would promote the intention of the parties.
Similarly, an interpretation which defeats the intention of the parties and
their objective in entering into the commercial transaction in the first place
should be discarded in favour of an interpretation of the policy which promotes
a sensible commercial result. It is trite to observe that an interpretation
of an ambiguous contractual provision which would render the endeavour on the
part of the insured to obtain insurance protection nugatory, should be avoided.
Said another way, the courts should be loath to support a construction which
would either enable the insurer to pocket the premium without risk or the
insured to achieve a recovery which could neither be sensibly sought nor
anticipated at the time of the contract. [Emphasis added]
That same case also
stressed the principle that any ambiguities found in the insurance contract
should be construed in favour of the insured. At p. 899 the following
appears:
. .
. it is trite to say that where an ambiguity is found to exist in the
terminology employed in the contract, such terminology shall be construed
against the insurance carrier as being the author, or at least the party in
control of the contents of the contract.
In Wigle v.
Allstate Insurance Co. of Canada (1984), 49 O.R. (2d) 101 (leave to appeal
to S.C.C. refused, [1985] 1 S.C.R. v), the Ontario Court of Appeal considered
the principles that should be applied to an interpretation of a standard policy
of insurance. There the majority of the court adopted some but certainly not
all of the rules that have been applied in the United States to the interpretation
of an insurance contract. It was said that the basic rules which should apply
are as follows, at p. 117:
1.The
court should look at the words in the contract to determine if there is
ambiguity;
2.the
court should ascertain the intention of the parties concerning specific
provisions by reference to the language of the entire contract;
3.the
court should construe ambiguities found in the insurance contract in favour of
the insured, and
4.the
court should limit the construction in favour of the insured by
"reasonableness". . . .
In my view, it is
just and appropriate that the rules referred to in those cases be applied in
interpreting insurance contracts.
(b)The
Aspect of Public Policy
It is trite to say
that a wrongdoer cannot profit from his or her wrongdoing. This principle is
clearly applicable to contracts of insurance. See Cleaver v. Mutual Reserve
Fund Life Association, supra. The insurance policy in that case was
owned by the husband who insured his own life with the proceeds of the policy
payable to his wife if she were living at the time of his death and if she were
not, to his legal representatives. The wife was subsequently convicted of
murdering her husband. The English Court of Appeal found that the proceeds of
the policy should go to the husband's estate. It was noted that the right to
recover on the policy vests in the owner/deceased and "it is only when it
is a question as to the application of the money by them that considerations of
public policy arise" (at p. 149). Lord Esher wrote at pp. 151-52:
The
contract is with the husband, and with nobody else. The wife is no party to
it. Apart from the statute, the right to sue on such a contract would clearly
pass to the legal personal representatives of the husband. The promise is one
which could only take effect upon his death, and therefore it must be meant to
be enforced by them. The condition on which the money is to become payable is
the death of James Maybrick. There is no exception in case of his death by the
crime of any other person, not even by the crime of the wife. Therefore the
condition expressed by the policy, as that on which the money is to become
payable, has been fulfilled. Consequently, so far, and if no question of
public policy came in, there would be no defence to an action against the
defendants by the executors of James Maybrick.
It should be noted
that the reasoning there was tied to the operation of s. 11 of the Married
Women's Property Act, 1882 (U.K.), 45 & 46 Vict., c. 75. The
effect of that section was that the husband's estate would hold the insurance
proceeds in trust for the wife/beneficiary. It was held that where the objects
of the trust could not be performed by reason of public policy, then the
proceeds would form part of the estate.
Lord Esher M. R.
stressed that, although a wrongdoer cannot profit from his or her crime,
neither should an insurance company be allowed to abrogate its responsibilities
under a contract by invoking a rule of public policy. At pages 151-53 he
wrote:
No
doubt there is a rule that, if a contract be made contrary to public policy, or
if the performance of a contract would be contrary to public policy,
performance cannot be enforced either at law or in equity; but when people
vouch that rule to excuse themselves from the performance of a contract, in
respect of which they have received the full consideration, and when all that
remains to be done under the contract is for them to pay money, the application
of the rule ought to be narrowly watched, and ought not to be carried a step
further than the protection of the public requires.
.
. .
. .
. and, if the matter can be dealt with so that such person should not be
benefited, I do not see any reason why the defendants in such a case should be
allowed to say, though they might have received premiums perhaps for thirty
years and still retained the same, that public policy forbade their paying the
sum of money which they had contracted to pay.
At page 160 of the same case, Fry L.J.
said:
. .
. it appears to me that the crime of one person may prevent that person from
the assertion of what would otherwise be a right, and may accelerate or
beneficially affect the rights of third persons, but can never prejudice or
injuriously affect those rights.
These reasons
correctly observe that the doctrine of public policy should be narrowly applied
and should not be used as an excuse by an insurance company to avoid its
obligations under its policies. See also Standard Life Assur. Co. v.
Trudeau (1900), 31 S.C.R. 376.
(c)Constructive
Trust
An eminently fair
and sensible solution to the legal problem as to what should be done with the
proceeds of a life insurance policy in a situation such as the present case was
set out in Equitable Life Assur. Soc. of United States v. Weightman, 160
P. 629 (Okla. 1916). The facts of that case are strikingly similar to those of
the case at bar. The insurance policy jointly insured both the husband and the
wife and the beneficiary was to be the survivor of them. No alternative
beneficiary was named. The wife killed the husband and the wrongdoer was
barred from taking the benefits of the policy.
There the court
held that a trust arose in favour of the estate of the insured. By virtue of
that trust, the representative of the insured was entitled to recover the
benefits of the policy. In reaching this decision, the court concluded that
the policy in question was in the nature of two separate policies upon the life
of each of the insured. With respect to an individual policy, the court cited
several leading authorities and concluded at p. 634:
. .
. if the insured be murdered by his beneficiary, or if for any other reason the
beneficiary be disqualified, the policy and the law not specifically providing
an alternative beneficiary, a resulting or constructive trust arises by
operation of law, by which the benefits of the policy vest in the insured, or
his estate in event of his death.
.
. .
We
cannot reason ourselves away from the rights of the assured. The insurer
assumed the risk of death, without any reservation, and death has occurred.
The company received every consideration for its unreserved risk, received them
from [the husband], who has done no wrong and has received no return. If such
rights exist, the law does not strike down the rights of an innocent person,
but finds a way, if one there be, to sustain these rights.
In that same case,
the court dealt in an appropriate way with the rather far-fetched argument of
the insurance company that a beneficiary might be incited to commit murder
knowing that if he or she was unable to collect the benefit, it would still be
payable to some other person in whose welfare he or she was interested. The
court rejected this argument and set out with approval (at p. 635) a quotation
from a decision in Supreme Lodge Knights & Ladies of Honor v. Menkhausen,
70 N.E. 567 (1904), at p. 568:
Human
experience teaches us that those willing to commit murder and assume the risk
of punishment for the benefit of others are so few in number that consideration
thereof becomes well-nigh inconsequential.
A contrary
conclusion was reached in Spicer v. New York Life Ins. Co., 268 F. 500
(1920). In that case the administrator of the wife's estate was claiming the
proceeds of a joint insurance policy following the conviction of the husband
for murdering the wife. The Circuit Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit was not
convinced that the decision in Weightman would govern the payment of
the proceeds of the insurance policy in issue. Rather, the court emphasized
that the law of Alabama did not interpret such contracts in a way that would
make the insurer liable to the personal representative of the deceased in a situation
where the policy provides that the proceeds are payable to the survivor.
It is significant
that the reasoning in Weightman was referred to with approval in the
text The Law of Trusts, Vol. 5 (4th ed. 1989), by Scott and Fratcher.
At p. 495 of that text, the following appears:
{SS}
494.3. Joint Life insurance policies. Where a policy of insurance is taken out on the
lives of two persons, the proceeds payable on the death of one to the survivor
and one of them murders the other, it has been held that the murderer is not
entitled to the proceeds of the policy but can be compelled to surrender them
to the estate of the decedent. Had it not been for the murder, the victim
might have survived the murderer, in which case he would have been entitled to the
proceeds of the policy. The murderer by his criminal act has made himself the
survivor, which he might not otherwise have been, and he should not be
permitted to profit thereby.
The same text goes
on to point out situations in which the insurance company would be relieved of
liability. For example, where the murder of the insured by the beneficiary is
specified as an excepted risk in the policy, there would be no liability on the
insurance company. Similarly, where the contract is fraudulent in its
inception, no liability would rest on the insurance company. Lastly, in the
situation where the murderer was the sole owner and beneficiary of the policy
and no one but the beneficiary, or someone claiming through the beneficiary,
had any interest in the policy, then the insurance company would be under no
obligation to pay. It is interesting to observe that the decision in Demeter
v. Dominion Life Assurance Co., supra, stands as an example of the
application in Canada of this last category.
Support for the use
of the doctrine of constructive trust can be found in an article written by
Professor Youdan, entitled "Acquisition of Property by Killing"
(1973), 89 L.Q. Rev. 235. In that article the author points out that
the use of the constructive trust to prevent the unjust enrichment of the
wrongdoer reduces or eliminates the element of confusion involved in deciding
who is entitled to the proceeds of the policy. The beneficiary of the
constructive trust, he explains, is the person who, in the eyes of equity, has
the best right to the proceeds. He sets out these principles for making this
determination, at pp. 257-58:
. .
. where there are circumstances showing that a particular person has a better
equity than anybody else the property should be given to that person but
otherwise it should be given to the estate of the victim for lack of "any
other suitable recipient," and in all cases the wrongdoer or anyone . . .
claiming through him should be excluded.
.
. .
Where
the wrongdoer is beneficiary under the victim's life insurance the proceeds of
the policy will in the normal case be held for the estate of the victim but if
there is an alternative beneficiary then he should gain the proceeds and
similarly if there is evidence that the victim would have changed the
beneficiary then that second person should benefit and gain the proceeds.
In my view, this expresses an
eminently fair and reasonable approach.
2.Summary
(a)Interpretation
of Insurance Contracts
The following are
general principles of interpretation which apply to contracts of insurance,
particularly those of a standard nature such as life insurance policies:
(1)the
court should search for an interpretation which, by reference to the language
of the entire contract, would appear to promote the true and reasonable
intention of the parties at the time of entering into the contract;
(2)the
court should look at the words of the contract to determine if there is an
ambiguity; and
(3)the
court should construe any ambiguity found in the insurance contract in favour
of the insured.
(b)Public
Policy
The doctrine of
public policy should apply to insurance contracts to ensure that a wrongdoer
will not profit from his or her wrongdoing. Nevertheless, that rule should be
narrowly construed and should not ordinarily be utilized by an insurance
company to avoid payment of its obligations.
3.Application
of the Principles to this Case
(a)Interpretation
of the Contract as a Whole
The policy provided
that the insurance company "hereby insures the life of Gerald Brissette
and Mary Brissette herein called the Insured, and agrees to pay the Sum Insured
at its Head Office to the beneficiary in accordance with this policy of
insurance, the particulars of which are as follows". The beneficiary was
"The Survivor". The "Sum Insured" was $200,000. Included
among the general provisions of the policy was the following:
(m)
This policy does not insure against death as a result of suicide of the Insured
(whether the Insured be sane or insane), should the death of the Insured occur
within two years from the date of issue, or within two years from the date of
any reinstatement of this policy; provided that in such an event, the Company
will pay in one sum an amount equal to the premiums paid under this policy.
The contract did
not contain any specific exemption from payment of the sum insured as a result
of the murder of either of the joint owners of the policy by the other.
However, it was very specific with regard to the exemption pertaining to
suicide. Further, the policy explicitly stated the exemptions with regard to
the double indemnity provision for accidental death. Those exemptions
included:
(b)
Committing, attempting or provoking an assault or criminal offence;
(c)
Insurrection, war or hostilities of any kind or any act incident thereto,
whether or not the life insured was actually participating therein;
(d)
Participating in any riot or civil commotion;
Moreover, the General Provisions of
the policy provided:
(n)
Accidental Death Benefits shall not be payable for any loss: (1) if the
Insured is affected by alcohol or drugs to the extent as to cause or contribute
to the accident, (2) due to travel or flight in any aircraft, (a) while the
Insured is a pilot or member of the crew or (b) while the aircraft is operated
for instructional testing or training purposes, or (c) while being flown for
the purpose of descending from the aircraft by parachute or (d) while
travelling or flying as a passenger or otherwise in any aircraft of a military,
naval or air force.
What then can be
learned from this contract as to the reasonable and true intention of the
parties? From the point of view of the wife and husband, they were purchasing
insurance that would provide proceeds if one of them died during the term of
the policy. They paid the not insubstantial premiums ($712 per annum
commencing in June of 1980) in order to obtain this life insurance coverage.
So far as the insurance company was concerned, it was receiving premiums for
which it agreed to pay the sum insured upon the death of one of the insured.
The insurance
company undoubtedly drafted the policy and fixed the premiums based on
actuarial statistics pertaining to the lives of the young couple (31 and 32
years of age). The actuarial assessment of the risk would have taken into
account death from all causes. The assessment would include the
unfortunately significant incidents of spousal killings. Contrary to the
contentions of the insurer, it would seem ridiculous to assume that, in the
absence of a specific exempting clause, the insurance company intended that
this type of death would constitute an exemption for payment of the sum
insured. It did not matter to the insurance company how the parties died
except in so far as one of the exemption clauses might apply. At the same
time, it would be equally far-fetched to assume that either spouse contemplated
death as a result of being murdered by the other.
Whether it is
called the reasonable intention or the reasonable expectation of the parties,
the result is the same. In simple terms, the husband and wife paid for
insurance coverage. Both the husband and the wife "owned" the policy
as joint owners. They were jointly liable for the payment of the premiums.
The parties to the policy intended that the sum insured under the policy would
be paid upon the death of one of the insured. The wife predeceased the
husband. Setting aside for the moment any consideration of public policy, it
can properly be assumed that the reasonable intention of the parties, gleaned
from the contract as a whole, was that the sum insured should be paid to the
husband.
(b)Ambiguity
Looking at the
policy as a whole it is apparent that ambiguity exists. The policy does not
cover the situation of one spouse's murdering the other. The absence of such a
provision is particularly significant in light of the care the insurer has
taken in other portions of the policy to stipulate the suicide exemption clause
and the other specific exemption provisions pertaining to accidental death.
(c)Construing
the Ambiguities in Favour of the Insured
It is right and
just to interpret the ambiguities in favour of the insured. It is the
insurance company which draws up a contract of insurance. It is the company
which determines the clauses which will go into a standard form of contract.
It is that standard form of contract which is offered to the people in all
walks of life on a take-it-or-leave-it basis. It is open to the insurance
company to revise its policies whenever it deems it appropriate. Little
sympathy can be bestowed upon the insurance companies if, in these
circumstances, ambiguities occur. Here, the policy specifically provided that
the sum insured would be paid to the survivor of the joint owners of the
policy. It follows that the monies would be paid to the murdering spouse.
Public policy, however, prevents that result.
(d)Application
of the Principles of Public Policy
Again, it is trite
to say that the husband cannot benefit from his crime of murder. This
principle of public policy should be strictly interpreted. The insurance
company entered into a contract to pay the sum insured in the event of the
death of one of the spouses. That event has occurred and payment should be
made by the insurer. There is no reason for the insurance company to now
benefit from the public policy doctrine. That principle evolved from the
natural repugnance of society to permitting a wrongdoer to benefit from his or
her crime. It was never intended that it would be utilized by insurers to
avoid contractual obligations. If the doctrine of public policy is not to
benefit the insurer, what then should be the result?
(e)Constructive
Trust
At this point, it is
clear that the reasonable intention of the parties, derived from the wording of
the policy as a whole, indicates that the proceeds were to be paid upon the
death of the survivor of the joint owners. However, since that death was
occasioned by the murder of one joint owner by the other, it would be contrary
to public policy to permit the survivor to benefit from his or her criminal
act. That same public policy should not operate to permit the insurance
company to escape liability for payment of the funds which it had undertaken to
make. If it wished to avoid payment, the insurer should have provided an
exemption from payment where one spouse murdered the other.
It follows then
that the proceeds should be paid by the insurance company. In order to comply
with the principles of public policy, the survivor must hold those funds as
trustee for the administrator of the estate of the murdered spouse. This is an
approach that is eminently fair and reasonable. It ensures the performance of
the contract in compliance with the real intent of the parties. That should be
the result in this case unless there is a legal impediment to that solution.
The Ontario Court
of Appeal in their decision placed great reliance upon the decision of Demeter
v. Dominion Life Assurance Co., supra. There, it was held that an
estate must have a "legal or beneficial interest in the policies or their
proceeds" in order to be able to claim them. However, the factual
situation is very different from this case. In Demeter the murderer was
the sole owner and the only named beneficiary of the insurance policy on
his wife who was his victim. There was nothing to connect the life insured
(the deceased wife) or her daughter, through the estate, to the policy of
insurance. The court held that it would be "stretching equitable
principles beyond recognizable limits" to grant the estate of the wife an
interest in the proceeds of the insurance policy in those circumstances.
However, in this
case, Mary Brissette had both a legal and beneficial interest in the
policy. She was the co-owner of the policy. She was equally responsible with
her husband for the payment of the premium and equally entitled to the benefits
of the policy. She was properly described as an owner and was, in fact, an
owner of the policy of insurance. It follows that her estate has an interest
in the policy and thus a firm foundation upon which to base a claim for the
proceeds of the policy.
It makes little
sense to say, in all the majesty of the law, that if an individual is the sole
owner of a contract of insurance then the principle enunciated in Cleaver
will apply so that the insurance policy proceeds will be paid to the estate of
the deceased while in the case of a jointly owned policy of insurance the
insurer will escape liability. To take such a position says little for common
sense and less for any sense of justice.
In the absence of a
specific term excluding coverage in this situation, the resulting ambiguity
should be resolved in favour of the insured. By means of the constructive
trust the proceeds should be paid to the executor of the estate of the deceased
wife. That is the basis upon which I would resolve the issue as to the payment
of the proceeds of the insurance policy.
(f)Does
Section 171 of the Insurance Act Apply?
The alternative
argument of the appellant was that if the constructive trust doctrine did not
apply, then public policy should deem the survivor to have predeceased the
murder victim. Since there would then be no surviving beneficiary, it was said
that s. 171 of the Insurance Act, R.S.O. 1980, c. 218, would require
that the proceeds of the policy should be paid to the insured wife or to her
estate. That section provides:
171.
-- (1) Where a
beneficiary predeceases the person whose life is insured, and no disposition of
the share of the deceased beneficiary in the insurance money is provided in the
contract or by a declaration, the share is payable,
.
. .
(c)if
there is no surviving beneficiary, to the insured or his personal
representative.
That submission
cannot be accepted. On this issue, I agree with the reasoning of Finlayson
J.A. To give effect to this alternative argument would not only distort the
meaning of the contract but would also require that an almost perverse meaning
be given to the section. This is in contrast to the constructive trust
solution which not only gives effect to the words of the contract but also
imposes a trust to deal with the consequences of public policy.
The Double Indemnity Provision for
Accidental Death
The second issue to
be determined is whether the death of the insured was "accidental"
within the meaning of that word as used in the insurance contract. If the
death was accidental, then that would trigger the double indemnity clause in
the contract. It is the contention of the appellant that the murder was
"accidental" as it was unintended by the insured even though it was
the result specifically intended by the murderer. On the other hand, the
respondent submits that the term "accidental" should not be
determined from the point of view of the victim but rather in light of the
relationship between the insurer and the insured.
The trial judge
relied on the decision in Horwitz v. Loyal Protective Insurance Co., supra,
and found that the wife's death was by "accidental means". In the Horwitz
case, the insured was shot and killed by a third person and the issue was
whether the death was by "accidental means". Logie J., in Horwitz,
found that the injuries received by the insured were unexpected and fortuitous
so far as he was concerned and were caused directly by violent, accidental and
external means. The Court of Appeal found it unnecessary to deal with the
issue in light of their dismissal of the appellant's claim under the policy.
The policy provides
that accidental death benefits will be paid if the death of the life insured
occurred:
directly
and independently of all other causes, as the result of bodily injury caused
solely be external, violent and accidental means.
The contract sets out various
exceptions to the accidental death payment which did not include the present
situation.
In Mutual of
Omaha Insurance Co. v. Stats, [1978] 2 S.C.R. 1153, it was held that the
question as to whether the death occurred by "accidental means"
should be resolved by utilizing the ordinary meaning of the words
"accident" or "accidental" and applying them in the context
to the circumstances giving rise to the death. At pages 1163-64, the position
is set out in this way:
A
variety of dictionary definitions have been attempted and text writers have
used very astute and logical analyses of what would constitute an accident, but
remembering that it is an ordinary word to be interpreted in the ordinary
language of the people, I ask myself what word would any one of the witnesses
of this occurrence use in describing the occurrence.
The resolution of
the question of whether the wife's death in this case was by "accidental
means" should take into account the fact that her killing was an
intentional act which resulted in a conviction for murder. More importantly,
it was committed by one of the parties to the insurance policy. It is this
which distinguishes the case at bar from the decision in Horwitz, supra,
where the injuries were caused by a third party. Where a party to the contract
deliberately murders the insured, the death cannot be said to be by
"accidental means". It therefore cannot bring into play the double
indemnity clause.
Disposition
For the reasons set
out above, I would allow the appeal and direct that the executor of the
deceased wife is entitled to the sum insured under the insurance policy by the
application of the doctrine of constructive trust. On the second issue, the
executor is not entitled to the accidental death benefits. The appeal is
therefore allowed with costs throughout.
Appeal dismissed, Gonthier
and Cory JJ. dissenting.
Solicitors for the
appellants: Gignac, Sutts, Windsor.
Solicitors for the
respondent: Fellowes, McNeil, Toronto.