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1954 Ins. L.J. 151 (1954)
Forces Shaping the Insurance Contract

handle is hein.journals/inslj16 and id is 151 raw text is: Forces Shaping the Insurance Contract
By FRIEDRICH KESSLER, Professor ol Law, Yale Law School

The following six papers were
presented at the University of
Chicago Law School Conference
on Insurance, January 15, 1954
N THE PREFACE of a well-known case-
book on insurance which appeared 30
years ago we find a sentence with which I
would like to open my report on the forces
shaping the insurance contract: What do
they know of the law of the insurance con-
tract, the' author asks, who only the law
of contract know.'
There are, to be sure, still numerous cases
which inform us that an insurance policy is
no different from any other contract.' It
owes its existence to the meeting of the

minds of the contracting parties. Since it is
a written document, the fundamental prin-
ciple of the security of transactions and
the integrity of contracts demands that,
should it become the basis of litigation, a
court of law must act on the agreement as
it is. It cannot strike out or change any
part so as 1o vary or contradict a statement
in the written ag'recment.  The function
of a court is thus limited to the interpretation
of its ambiguous terms only. ' The insured
cannot, for instance, enforce his claim by
testifying that he did not read the contract
or that he did not understand the meaning
of technical terms. Having signed the appli-
cation or having accepted and retained the
policy, he and, for that matter, the bene-
ficiary are bound by statements and terms
that it contains.' After all, in the language

Woodruff, Selection of Cases on the Law of
Insurance (2d Ed., 1924), p. 5, quoted by Pound,
in Satz v.' Massachusetts Bonding c Insurance
Company, 243 N. Y. 385, 153 N. E. 844, 846
(1926). I am  indebted for this reference to
Schultz, The Special Nature of the Insurance
Contract:  A  Few   Suggestions for Further
Study, 15 Law and Contemporary Problems
376 (1950). Grateful acknowledgment is made
to Thomas Aros, Yale Law School, second-year
class, for his most discerning help..
-Drilling v. New York Life Insurance Com-
pany, 234 N. Y. 234, 137 N. E. 314 (1922); Swen-
tusky v. Prudential Insurance Company, 116
Conn. 526, 165 Atl. 686 (1933). The deplorable
state of complexity and confusion which char-
acterizes the law of insurance is in large meas-
ure due to the mistake of ignoring the simple
truth that an insurance policy is a contract.
Ohio Farmers Insurance Company v. Cochran,
104 Ohio St. 427, 135 N. E. 537 (1922).
3 Barett v. Union Mutual Fire Insurance Com-
pany, 7 Cush. (Mass.) 175 (1851); State ex rel.
Conference on Insurance

American Fire Insurance Company v. Ellison,
269 Mo. 410, 190 S. W. 879 (1916).
4 Bergholm v. Peoria Life Insurance Company,
284 U. S. 489 (1922); Vance on Insurance (An-
derson Ed., 1951), p. 808.
5Ryan v. World Mutual Life Insurance Com-
pany, 41 Conn. 168 (1874): Russo v. Metropoli-
tan Life Insurance Company, 1 Life Cases 206,
125 Conn. 132, 3 Atil. (2d) 844 (1939); Dewees
v. Manhattan Insurance Company, 35 N. J. L.
366 (1872): Spain, The Effect of the Failure
of the Insured to Read His Policy, L. S. 1948
American Life Convention 109; Vance, cited
at footnote 4, at pp. 257, 808: Anderson, What
Constitutes the Policy Contract, in The Life
Insurance Policy Contract (8th Ed., Krueger
and Waggoner, 1953). A limitation upon the
agent's authority contained in the policy only
(and not in the application), although operative
as to dealings subsequent to the delivery of the
policy, has no retroactive effect. Bible v. John
Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company, 256
(Continued on following page)

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