In 1901 the Security Mutual Life Insurance Company wrote a policy for $2,000 on the life of John Á. McCormack. He was then a sound and healthy man; afterwards he was stricken with a fatal malady with which he suffered for several years and then died. On December 12, 1910, a quarter yearly premium became due and payable with thirty days’ grace. On November 12, 1910, a notice was sent out by the company and received by the assured whereby the company undertook to apprise the assured of his obligation to make a premium payment on December twelfth. Mrs. McCormack, the wife of the assured, the plaintiff herein, wrote a check on December fifth, for the amount due, put it in an envelope and directed the envelope to the company but omitted to mail it. On February 13, 1911, the company notified the assured by letter of his default and suggested that he arrange for a reinstatement of his policy. Mrs. McCormack visited the office of the local *35agent, Miss M. F. Hearley, the person named in the notice, for the purpose of inquiring into the matter. She was told by Miss Hearley that a reinstatement of the policy was necessary and that Mr. McCormack must certify that he was then in good health. Mrs. McCormack told the agent, so she says, that no such certificate could be made for her husband was then and had been for years in bad health. But the assured did ultimately sign such a certificate and was, in form, ’reinstated by "the company. He died January 2, 1912.
The defense to this action, brought on the policy, is that the policy was forfeited by the non-payment of the premium due December 12, 1910, and that the reinstatement was procured by fraud and false statements. And so we must first inquire whether there was a forfeiture.
Section 92 of the Insurance Law requires life insurance companies to send out to policyholders a notice that premiums are due. This section provides that no life insurance company shall declare any policy forfeited “unless a written or printed notice stating the amount of such premium, * * * due on such policy, the place where it shall be paid, and the person to whom the same is payable, shall have been duly addressed and mailed to the person whose life is insured * * * at least fifteen and not more than forty-five days prior to the day when the same is payable. The notice shall also state that unless such premium, * * - then due, shall be paid to the corporation, or to the duly appointed agent or person authorized to collect such premium by or before the day it falls due, the policy and all payments thereon will become forfeited and void except as to the right to a surrender value or paid-up policy as in this chapter provided.”
The notice which the company sent to the assured in this case reads:
“Security Mutual Life Insurance Company, Binghamton, N. Y.
“Dear Sir.— On or before Dec. 12th, 1910, A premium payment of Sixteen & Dollars, for the regular % yearly payment required to renew Policy No. 34629 on the life of John A. McCormack in this Company, will, if such policy be in force on that day, but not otherwise, become due and payable *36to the Comptroller of the Company at its office, Security Mutual Life Building, Binghamton, N. Y., and unless said premium shall be paid on or before said date, the policy and all payments made thereon will become forfeited and void, except that this notice shall not affect any right to paid-up or extended insurance, or to 30 days’ grace, if provided for in the policy contract.
“ The acceptance of any premium by the Company after the date when due is subject to the condition that the insured is in good health, and an expressed warranty upon the part of the holder of the policy to that effect, and shall not be construed as a waiver of the conditions of the policy as to future payments, nor as establishing a course of dealing between the Company and the holder of the Policy.
“The sending of this notice shall not be held to waive any forfeiture or lapse of the policy, if any previous payment has not been made.
“No agent, collector, or other person, except the President, Vice-President, Comptroller, or Secretary, has authority to receive payment of a premium after it becomes due, or to extend the time for- the payment of a premium, or to grant permits, or to make, alter, restore, or discharge policy contracts, or to waive any condition thereof.
“ Dated Binghamton, N. Y., Nov. 12th, 1910.
“ Eeturn this receipt with your remittance.
“CHAS. A. LaDUE, Secretary.
“ All premiums are due at the Office of the Company in the City of Binghamton, N. Y., but for the convenience of Policyholders payments may be made on or before the date when due to an authorized Collector in exchange for the company’s receipt therefor, signed by the Secretary, and countersigned by the Collector.
“ Payment may be made to M. F. Hearley, 80 State street, Albany, N. Y., Authorized Collector.
“ Pay now and Avoid Overlooking It.
“ M. F. H.”
It is unnecessary to analyze this notice. , It is sufficient to say that in our judgment it does not comply with the statute *37either literally or substantially; this is apparent on its face. Its form, its verbiage, its surplusage, its suggestions, intimations and advice, intermingled with the language of the statute, are all repugnant to directness and simplicity. The notice is intended to be, as the plaintiff’s attorney has well expressed it, a “ danger signal.” But the danger signal is here confused with a dozen other signals. There is no excuse for this; no necessity for it. If the insurance company wishes to convey this additional information to its policyholders it must do so at other times than when sending out premium notices arid on other papers. But it is urged that the plaintiff received the notice and attempted to act upon it, and, therefore, if it was in some degree defective, it served its purpose and the plaintiff was not harmed. But neither was the company harmed by the default in payment; it received the same amount of money and the same identical check which it would, have received if the premium had been paid when due. And we cannot be certain that the plaintiff was not harmed; the peculiar and ambiguous language of the notice may have lulled her somewhat into repose. She may not have been spurred on by fear of forfeiture as perhaps she would have been by the, simple, direct language of the statute. The law abhors the forfeiture of insurance policies on technical grounds and in order'to effect a forfeiture the statute must be strictly complied with. This court has already taken a position on this subject. (Flint v. Provident Life & Trust Co., 157 App. Div. 885, affg. 78 Misc. Rep. 673.) There is no reason to change that position now. The notice must be held to have been defective and insufficient to work a forfeiture.
Having reached the conclusion that the policy was never forfeited, it is not strictly necessary to make further examination of this case. It may not be unprofitable, however, to do so. Although the adjudicated cases in this State are by no means harmonious on the subject, the weight of authority is to the effect that agents of insurance companies cannot, by any statements which they may make, waive or alter the written conditions of policies. But that rule is not controlling here for the situation before us presents a different question. We are now to determine whether knowledge on the part of agents becomes *38knowledge on the part of the company. That is the question before us now. The jury has found in this case that two agents of the company •— a local agent and a “ field superintendent ” — had full knowledge of the condition of health of the insured at the time the policy was reinstated. The finding of the jury cannot be disturbed for it comports with the probabilities of the case and with common knowledge as to the methods of insurance agents. The field superintendent by his title of office as well as by his testimony appears to have been a representative of much importance in the company. His jurisdiction extended all over the United States. His duties were general and supervisory in character. If he knew of reasons why a person ought not to be reinstated it was his duty, so he tells us, to report such information to the company. Under these conditions it should be held that knowledge on the part of this agent was knowledge on the part of the company. If follows that the company, having full knowledge of the condition of health of the assured at the time it reinstated his policy, is estopped from setting up as a defense the false statements in his application for reinstatement. The company knew that Mr. McCormack was desperately sick. Notwithstanding this, with its eyes wide open, it reinstated his policy. It cannot now complain.
And there is still another feature of this case worthy of consideration. The process of reinstatement here consisted of the acceptance by the company of the original check drawn by the plaintiff for the payment of the premium and the delivery by the company of the original receipt to the plaintiff. No new written contract was executed. The “reinstatement” was a reissuance of the old policy. That is, the policy having ceased to exist as the company claimed, on December 12, 1910, it did not make out a new policy when it resumed relations with the plaintiff but issued the old policy over again and dated it, in effect, December 12, 1910. This must be so, otherwise the amount received by the company in premiums between December 12,1910, and about February 18, 1911, was money accepted and retained by .the company when there was no policy in existence. The' old policy, issued anew, was-to bear date December 12, 1910. This plan avoided all gaps and interims. That *39this was the distinct understanding of the parties is clearly apparent. This being so, the incontestability clause must be held to apply to the “reinstated ” policy with the same force and effect as it did to the original policy. This is equitable and just and has been sanctioned by the Court of Appeals. (Teeter v. United Life Insurance Association, 159 N. Y. 411.) Therefore, it follows that after one year from December 12, 1910, the policy was incontestable.
The judgment of the Trial Term should be reversed and judgment for the relief demanded in the complaint rendered for the plaintiff, with costs.
We disapprove of the finding of fact made by the trial court to the effect that the defendant duly rescinded the contract of insurance and reinstatement.
Woodward, J., concurred; Smith, P. J., dissented in opinion; Lyon, J., not sitting.