Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada v. Wells Fargo Bank NA (080669) (Statewide) , 238 N.J. 157 ( 2019 )


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  •                                        SYLLABUS
    This syllabus is not part of the Court’s opinion. It has been prepared by the Office of the
    Clerk for the convenience of the reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the
    Court. In the interest of brevity, portions of an opinion may not have been summarized.
    Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A.
    (A-49-17) (080669)
    Argued January 29, 2019 -- Decided June 4, 2019
    RABNER, C.J., writing for the Court.
    In New Jersey and elsewhere, no one can procure insurance on a stranger’s life
    and receive the benefits of the policy. Betting on a human life in that way, with the hope
    that the person will die soon, not only raises moral concerns but also invites foul play.
    For those reasons, state law allows a policy to be procured only if the benefits are payable
    to someone with an “insurable interest” in the person whose life is insured. N.J.S.A.
    17B:24-1.1(b).
    In April 2007, Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada received an application
    for a $5 million insurance policy on the life of Nancy Bergman. The application listed a
    trust as the sole owner and beneficiary of the policy. Ms. Bergman’s grandson signed as
    trustee. The other members of the trust were all investors, and all strangers to Ms.
    Bergman. The investors paid most if not all of the policy’s premiums.
    Sun Life received an inspection report that listed Ms. Bergman’s annual income as
    more than $600,000 and her overall net worth at $9.235 million. In reality, her income
    was about $3000 a month, and her estate was later valued at between $100,000 and
    $250,000. Although Ms. Bergman represented that she had no other life insurance
    policies, five policies were taken out on her life in 2007, for a total of $37 million.
    Sun Life issued the policy on July 13, 2007. At the time, the trust was the sole
    owner and beneficiary. The policy had an incontestability clause that barred Sun Life
    from challenging the policy -- other than for non-payment of premiums -- after it had
    been “in force during the lifetime of the Insured” for two years. About five weeks after
    the policy was issued, the grandson resigned as trustee and appointed the investors as
    successor co-trustees. The trust agreement was amended so that most of the policy’s
    benefits would go to the investors, who were also empowered to sell the policy.
    More than two years later, the trust sold the policy and the investors received
    nearly all of the proceeds from the sale. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. eventually obtained the
    policy in a bankruptcy settlement and continued to pay the premiums.
    1
    After Nancy Bergman passed away in 2014, Wells Fargo sought to collect the
    policy’s death benefit. Sun Life investigated the claim, uncovered the discrepancies
    noted above, and declined to pay. Instead, Sun Life sought a declaratory judgment that
    the policy was void ab initio, or from the beginning. Wells Fargo counterclaimed for
    breach of contract and sought the policy’s $5 million face value; if the court voided the
    policy, Wells Fargo sought a refund of the premiums it paid.
    The United States District Court for the District of New Jersey partially granted
    Sun Life’s motion for summary judgment. The court found that New Jersey law applied
    and concluded “that this was a STOLI [(stranger-originated life insurance)] transaction
    lacking insurable interest in violation of [the State’s] public policy. . . . As such, it should
    be declared void ab initio.” The court also granted Wells Fargo’s motion to recover its
    premium payments, reasoning that “Wells Fargo is not to blame for the fraud here” and
    that “[a]llowing Sun Life to retain the premiums would be a windfall to the company.”
    Both parties appealed. Finding no dispositive New Jersey case law, the United
    States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit certified two questions of law to this Court:
    1. Does a life insurance policy that is procured with the intent to benefit persons
    without an insurable interest in the life of the insured violate the public policy
    of New Jersey, and if so, is that policy void ab initio?
    2. If such a policy is void ab initio, is a later purchaser of the policy, who was not
    involved in the illegal conduct, entitled to a refund of any premium payments
    that they made on the policy?
    HELD: The Court answers both parts of the first certified question in the affirmative: a
    life insurance policy procured with the intent to benefit persons without an insurable
    interest in the life of the insured does violate the public policy of New Jersey, and such a
    policy is void at the outset. In response to the second question, a party may be entitled to
    a refund of premium payments it made on the policy, depending on the circumstances.
    1. The Court reviews the history of wagering concerns associated with life insurance and
    the development of the insurable interest requirement in response to those concerns. In
    New Jersey, the Legislature adopted the current insurable interest requirement in 1968.
    The Legislature expressly imposed an insurable interest requirement and thus superseded
    dated case law holding that a policy could be valid without an insurable interest. N.J.S.A.
    17B:24-1.1(a) outlines situations in which an individual has an insurable interest, as well
    as circumstances under which a corporation or a nonprofit or charitable entity has an
    insurable interest in the lives of its employees, officers, or others. Critical to the
    questions presented in this case, section (b) of N.J.S.A. 17B:24-1.1 bars procurement of a
    life insurance policy payable to someone who lacks an insurable interest in the life of the
    insured. (pp. 8-13)
    2
    2. Just as all New Jersey insurance policies must be based on an insurable interest, they
    must also contain an incontestability clause. See N.J.S.A. 17B:25-4 (“There shall be a
    provision that the policy . . . shall be incontestable, except for nonpayment of premiums,
    after it has been in force during the lifetime of the insured for a period of 2 years from its
    date of issue.”). Incontestability clauses, however, are not a bar to all defenses. A
    majority of courts have held that the lack of an insurable interest can be asserted as a
    defense even after a policy has become incontestable. As the Delaware Supreme Court
    has explained, “if a life insurance policy lacks an insurable interest at inception, it is void
    ab initio because it violates . . . clear public policy against wagering. It follows,
    therefore, that if no insurance policy ever legally came into effect, then neither did any of
    its provisions, including the statutorily required incontestability clause.” PHL Variable
    Ins. Co. v. Price Dawe 2006 Ins. Tr., 
    28 A.3d 1059
    , 1067-68 (Del. 2011). (pp. 14-16)
    3. Although life insurance policies must be payable to a person with an insurable interest
    when they are procured, policies can be sold later on -- including to individuals who
    would not have been able to buy the policy originally because they lacked an insurable
    interest. In New Jersey, life insurance policies may be sold subject to the regulatory
    scheme outlined in the Viatical Settlements Act, N.J.S.A. 17B:30B-1 to -17. Aside from
    limited exceptions, the law bars policyholders from entering into a viatical or life
    settlement contract -- and thus transferring the policy benefit to a stranger -- for two years
    from the date the policy was issued. N.J.S.A. 17B:30B-10(a). STOLI policies are a
    subset of life settlements in which a life settlement broker persuades a senior citizen to
    take out a life insurance policy for a cash payment or some other current benefit arranged
    with a life settlement company. Generally, an investor funds a STOLI policy from the
    outset, which makes it possible to obtain a policy with a high face value. STOLI
    arrangements thus present a significant legal problem: the investors have no insurable
    interest in the life of the insured. As a result, the transactions pose questions in light of
    New Jersey’s policy against wagering, which finds expression in the State Constitution
    and in statutory provisions. (pp. 16-22)
    4. The first part of question one asks whether “a life insurance policy that is procured
    with the intent to benefit persons without an insurable interest in the life of the insured
    violate[s] the public policy of New Jersey.” Consider a policy that strangers financed or
    caused to be procured for Mary’s life. When the policy is issued, Mary’s daughter is the
    named beneficiary or the trustee of an irrevocable trust that owns the policy. The trust
    thus has an insurable interest at the time the contract for the policy is made. But the
    strangers actually have a side agreement with Mary or her daughter to transfer control of
    the trust, the beneficial interest in the policy, or ownership of the policy, at a later time.
    In short, the outside investors who funded the policy effectively control it from the start.
    It would elevate form over substance to suggest that the policy satisfies the insurable
    interest requirement. The policy is a cover for a wager on Mary’s life by a stranger. It
    therefore violates public policy. STOLIs commonly involve life insurance policies
    procured and financed by investors -- strangers -- who have no insurable interest in the
    3
    life of the insured yet, from the outset, are the ultimate intended beneficiaries of the
    policy. That type of arrangement runs afoul of New Jersey’s insurable interest
    requirement and counters the principle underlying the requirement: the individual with
    an insurable interest must have an interest in the continued life of the insured rather than
    in his early death. The Court explains why, contrary to Wells Fargo’s assertions, sections
    (c) and (d) of the insurable interest statute do not call for a different result and notes that
    an incontestability provision does not bar a challenge to a STOLI policy. (pp. 23-28)
    5. Imagine Mary’s daughter procured the above policy, paid the premiums for a few
    months, and then transferred her role as trustee, or the ownership or beneficial interest in
    the policy, to strangers in exchange for reimbursement and compensation. Suppose as
    well that Mary’s daughter intended to do so from the start. That arrangement likewise
    might be little more than a cover for a wager on Mary’s life, and it raises questions about
    the manner in which the policy was procured. A number of considerations could affect
    the validity of the policy: the nature and timing of any discussions between the purchaser
    and the strangers; the reasons for the transfer; and the amount of time the policy was
    held; among other factors. Courts cannot devise a bright-line rule for the type of
    transaction this second hypothetical presents. The area is best addressed by the
    Legislature and the Division of Banking and Insurance (DOBI). (pp. 28-30)
    6. Thirty states have enacted anti-STOLI legislation to date. Two model acts have been
    designed to stop STOLIs. Anti-STOLI legislation has been proposed multiple times in
    New Jersey. From 2009 through 2014, ten bills were introduced. None were passed or
    enacted. Despite suggestions by Wells Fargo, it is difficult to discern the Legislature’s
    intent from bills it has not passed. (pp. 30-32)
    7. According to DOBI, absent an insurable interest, a life insurance policy is a “pure
    gamble” in violation of N.J.S.A. 17B:24-1.1 and “the anti-gambling provisions of both
    the New Jersey Constitution and New Jersey statutes.” DOBI’s views are entitled to
    considerable weight in this area, which falls within its field of expertise. (pp. 32-33)
    8. The Court reviews cases from other jurisdictions that have considered similar
    questions. Notably, three jurisdictions that found that STOLI policies passed muster
    under the states’ then-existing laws -- all three have since adopted anti-STOLI legislation
    -- interpreted statutory provisions that either limited the duration of an insurable interest
    requirement to when the policy took effect or explicitly permitted the immediate transfer
    of policies. New Jersey statutory law does not permit the immediate transfer of a life
    insurance policy to people or entities that lack an insurable interest. (pp. 33-41)
    9. The Court stresses that it does not suggest that life settlements in general are contrary
    to public policy. Valid life insurance policies are assets that can be sold. An established
    secondary market exists for the sale of valid policies -- at least two years after they are
    issued or earlier in certain cases -- to investors who lack an insurable interest. (pp. 41-42)
    4
    10. The first certified question poses a supplemental inquiry: If the policy procured
    violates New Jersey’s public policy, is it void ab initio? When an insurance policy
    violates public policy, it is as though the policy never came into existence. The policy
    would be void from the outset. (pp. 42-43)
    11. The second certified question asks, “If such a policy is void ab initio, is a later
    purchaser of the policy, who was not involved in the illegal conduct, entitled to a refund
    of any premium payments that they made on the policy?” The traditional rule -- that
    courts leave the parties to a void contract as they are rather than assist an illegal contract
    -- has evolved over time. Under the more modern view, equitable factors can be
    considered to determine the proper remedy. The Court reviews several decisions in
    which such factors were considered by courts assessing STOLI policies and observes that
    the fact-sensitive approach adopted in those cases is sound. To decide the appropriate
    remedy, trial courts should develop a record and balance the relevant equitable factors.
    Those factors include a party’s level of culpability, its participation in or knowledge of
    the illicit scheme, and its failure to notice red flags. Depending on the circumstances, a
    party may be entitled to a refund of premium payments it made on a void STOLI policy,
    particularly a later purchaser who was not involved in any illicit conduct. The Court
    notes that the District Court considered equitable principles and fashioned a compromise
    award but does not comment on the award itself. (pp. 43-48)
    JUSTICES LaVECCHIA, PATTERSON, FERNANDEZ-VINA, SOLOMON, and
    TIMPONE join in CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER’s opinion. JUSTICE ALBIN did
    not participate.
    5
    SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    A-49 September Term 2017
    080669
    Sun Life Assurance
    Company of Canada,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    Wells Fargo Bank, N.A.,
    as Securities Intermediary,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    On certification of questions of law from the
    United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit.
    Argued                       Decided
    January 29, 2019               June 4, 2019
    Julius A. Rousseau, III, of the New York and North
    Carolina bars, admitted pro hac vice, argued the cause for
    appellant (Arent Fox, attorneys; Julius A. Rousseau, III,
    and Eric Biderman, on the briefs).
    Charles J. Vinicombe argued the cause for respondent
    (Cozen O’Connor, attorneys; Charles J. Vinicombe,
    Michael J. Miller, and Sarah E. Kalman, on the briefs).
    Raymond R. Chance, III, Assistant Attorney General,
    argued the cause for amicus curiae State of New Jersey
    Department of Banking and Insurance (Gurbir S. Grewal,
    Attorney General, attorney; Melissa H. Raksa, Assistant
    Attorney General, of counsel; and James A. Carey, Jr.,
    1
    Deputy Attorney General, and Adam B. Masef, Deputy
    Attorney General, on the brief).
    Joseph D. Jean submitted a brief on behalf of amicus
    curiae Institutional Longevity Markets Association
    (Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman, attorneys).
    Michael M. Rosensaft submitted a brief on behalf of
    amicus curiae Life Insurance Settlement Association
    (Katten Muchin Rosenman, attorneys).
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER delivered the opinion of the Court.
    In New Jersey and elsewhere, no one can procure a life insurance policy
    on a stranger’s life and receive the benefits of the policy. Betting on a human
    life in that way, with the hope that the person will die soon, not only raises
    moral concerns but also invites foul play. For those reasons, state law allows a
    policy to be procured only if the benefits are payable to someone with an
    “insurable interest” in the person whose life is insured. N.J.S.A. 17B:24 -
    1.1(b). The beneficiary can be the insured herself, a close relative, a person,
    corporation, or charity with certain financial ties to the insured, or select
    others. N.J.S.A. 17B:24-1.1(a).
    This case arises out of certified questions of law from the United States
    Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit. We consider whether the swift transfer
    of control over a life insurance policy and its benefit, from a named
    2
    beneficiary who had an insurable interest to investors who did not, satisfies
    New Jersey’s insurable interest requirement.
    Here, a group of investors paid for a life insurance policy through a
    trust. The insured was a stranger to them. When the policy was issued, the
    insured’s grandson was the beneficiary. About five weeks later, the trust was
    amended and the strangers who invested in the policy became its beneficiaries.
    In short, the insurable interest requirement appeared to have been satisfied at
    the moment the policy was purchased, but the plan from the start was to
    transfer the benefits to strangers soon after the policy was issued.
    The policy in question is known as a “STOLI” -- a stranger-originated
    life insurance policy. Because such policies can be predatory and may involve
    fraud, other states have adopted legislation that bars them. We now consider
    STOLI policies as a matter of first impression.
    We find that STOLI policies run afoul of New Jersey’s insurable interest
    requirement and are against public policy. It would elevate form over
    substance to conclude that feigned compliance with the insurable interest
    statute -- as technically exists at the outset of a STOLI transaction -- satisfies
    the law. Such an approach would upend the very protections the statute was
    designed to confer and would effectively allow strangers to wager on human
    lives.
    3
    In response to the certified questions, we find that STOLI policies are
    against public policy and are void ab initio, that is, from the beginning. We
    also note that a party may be entitled to a refund of premium payments
    depending on the circumstances. Among other relevant factors, courts should
    consider a later purchaser’s participation in and knowledge of the original
    illicit scheme.
    I.
    We draw the following facts from the opinions of the Third Circuit and
    the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey.
    A.
    In April 2007, Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada received an
    application for a $5 million insurance policy on the life of Nancy Bergman.
    The application listed the Nancy Bergman Irrevocable Trust dated 4/6/2007 as
    the sole owner and beneficiary of the policy. Nancy Bergman signed the
    application as the grantor of the trust, and her grandson, Nachman Bergman,
    signed as trustee. The trust had four additional members. All of them were
    investors, and all were strangers to Ms. Bergman. The investors deposited
    money into the trust account to pay most if not all of the policy’s premiums.
    The original trust agreement provided that any proceeds of the policy would be
    paid to Nachman Bergman.
    4
    Ms. Bergman was a retired middle school teacher. Sun Life received an
    inspection report that listed her annual income as more than $600,000 and her
    overall net worth at $9.235 million. In reality, her income was about $3000 a
    month from Social Security and a pension, and her estate was later valued at
    between $100,000 and $250,000.
    Although Ms. Bergman represented that she had no other life insurance
    policies, five policies were taken out on her life in 2007 from various
    insurance companies, including Sun Life, for a total of $37 million.
    Sun Life issued the $5 million policy in question on July 13, 2007. At
    the time, the trust was the sole owner and beneficiary. The policy had an
    incontestability clause that barred Sun Life from challenging the policy --
    other than for non-payment of premiums -- after it had been “in force during
    the lifetime of the Insured” for two years.
    On August 21, 2007, about five weeks after the policy was issued,
    Nachman Bergman resigned as trustee and appointed the four investors as
    successor co-trustees. The trust agreement was amended so that most of the
    policy’s benefits would go to the investors; they were also empowered to sell
    the policy on their own.
    More than two years later, in December 2009, the trust sold the policy to
    SLG Life Settlements, LLC, for $700,000. The investors received nearly all of
    5
    the proceeds from the sale. Afterward, a company named LTAP acquired the
    policy for a brief period, and Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. obtained it in a
    bankruptcy settlement in or about 2011. Wells Fargo continued to pay the
    premiums. It claims to have paid $1,928,726 through a combination of direct
    premium payments and loans to LTAP to pay premiums.
    B.
    After Nancy Bergman passed away in 2014 at age 89, Wells Fargo
    sought to collect the policy’s death benefit. Sun Life investigated the claim,
    uncovered the discrepancies noted above, and declined to pay. Instead, Sun
    Life filed an action in the District Court and sought a declaratory judgment
    that the policy was void ab initio as part of a STOLI scheme. Wells Fargo
    counterclaimed for breach of contract and sought the policy’s $5 million face
    value; if the court voided the policy, Wells Fargo sought a refund of the
    premiums it paid and funded.
    The District Court partially granted Sun Life’s motion for summary
    judgment. The court found that New Jersey law applied and concluded “that
    this was a STOLI transaction lacking insurable interest in violation of [the
    State’s] public policy. . . . As such, it should be declared void ab initio.” The
    court also granted Wells Fargo’s motion to recover its premium payments.
    The court reasoned that “Wells Fargo is not to blame for the fraud here” and
    6
    that “[a]llowing Sun Life to retain the premiums would be a windfall to the
    company.”
    Wells Fargo appealed the determination that the policy was void, and
    Sun Life cross-appealed the order to refund the premiums.
    The Third Circuit noted that “[n]o New Jersey state court has
    considered” the issues at the heart of this case: “whether STOLI arrangements
    violate the public policy of New Jersey, and if they do, whether the affected
    insurance policies are rendered void ab initio.” The circuit court also observed
    that “[i]f the Policy is declared void ab initio, then the nature of the remedy
    available to the parties is another unresolved question of New Jersey law.”
    To resolve those “difficult question[s] of New Jersey public policy” and
    law, the Third Circuit certified two questions of law to this Court:
    (1) Does a life insurance policy that is procured with
    the intent to benefit persons without an insurable
    interest in the life of the insured violate the public
    policy of New Jersey, and if so, is that policy void ab
    initio?
    (2) If such a policy is void ab initio, is a later purchaser
    of the policy, who was not involved in the illegal
    conduct, entitled to a refund of any premium payments
    that they made on the policy?
    We accepted both questions pursuant to Rule 2:12A-5. 
    236 N.J. 581
    (2018). We also granted leave to appear as amici curiae to the Department of
    7
    Banking and Insurance (DOBI), the Institutional Longevity Markets
    Association (ILMA), and the Life Insurance Settlement Association (LISA).
    II.
    To provide context for the discussion that follows, we review at the
    outset certain relevant statutes and concepts.
    A.
    Life insurance is “[a]n agreement between an insurance company and the
    policyholder to pay a specified amount to a designated beneficiary on the
    insured’s death.” Black’s Law Dictionary 1010 (9th ed. 2009); see also
    N.J.S.A. 17B:17-3. The Life and Health Insurance Code, at Title 17B of the
    New Jersey Statutes, regulates this area of law today.1
    Life insurance has been around for more than 500 years. From its
    earliest days, there have been concerns about who can purchase a policy on the
    life of another. See Geoffrey Clark, Betting on Lives: The Culture of Life
    Insurance in England, 1695-1775 13-14 (1999). In 1419, for example, the
    Venetian Senate outlawed wagers on the Pope’s life and nullified many
    speculative bets about “how long the reigning pope would live.” Id. at 14.
    Elsewhere in Europe in the fifteenth through seventeenth centuries, “[t]he
    1
    States have the authority to regulate insurance under the McCarran-Ferguson
    Act. 
    15 U.S.C. § 1012
    ; see also Johnson & Johnson v. Dir., Div. of Taxation,
    
    30 N.J. Tax 479
    , 494 (2018).
    8
    frequent association of life insurance with gambling and other disreputable
    practices prompted governments to prohibit its practice without exception.”
    Id. at 14-15.
    In England, life insurance “was legally unrestricted [until] well into the
    eighteenth century.” Id. at 17. By then, it had “bec[o]me so much a mode of
    gambling (for people took the liberty of insuring any one’s life, without
    hesitation, whether connected with him, or not, . . . ) that it at last became a
    subject of Parliamentary discussion.” Id. at 22 (quoting James Allan Park, A
    System of the Law of Marine Insurances 490 (1787)). From those discussions,
    “the first appreciable regulation of life insurance” emerged, along with the
    concept that the policyholder must have “a financial interest (a so-called
    ‘insurable interest’) in [the] life or event” to be insured. Ibid. Section One of
    the Life Assurance Act of 1774 provided that
    no insurance shall be made by any person or persons,
    bodies politick or corporate, on the life or lives of any
    person, or persons, or on any other event or events
    whatsoever, wherein the person or persons for whose
    use, benefit, or on whose account such policy or
    policies shall be made, shall have no interest, or by way
    of gaming or wagering.
    [14 Geo. 3 (1774 c. 48), https://www.legislation.
    gov.uk/apgb/Geo3/14/48?view=plain.]
    A contract without an insurable interest would be “null and void.” Ibid. “The
    goal of the 1774 Act . . . was to allow people to get the benefits of life
    9
    insurance while eliminating the betting on human life it encouraged.” Susan
    Lorde Martin, Life Settlements: The Death Wish Industry, 
    64 Syracuse L. Rev. 91
    , 94-95 (2014).
    The same limitation -- the insurable interest requirement -- was adopted
    in the United States as well. See Peter Nash Swisher, The Insurable Interest
    Requirement for Life Insurance: A Critical Reassessment, 
    53 Drake L. Rev. 477
    , 482-83 (2005). By the nineteenth century, even in states where insurable
    interest statutes had not yet been enacted, “in most cases either the English
    statutes [were] considered as operative, or the older common law [was]
    followed.” Conn. Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Schaefer, 
    94 U.S. 457
    , 460 (1877). As
    a result, the Supreme Court explained, “[a] man cannot take out insurance on
    the life of a total stranger, nor on that of one who is not so connected with him
    as to make the continuance of the life a matter of some real interest to him.”
    
    Ibid.
    The existence of an insurable interest distinguished valid life insurance
    policies from “mere wager policies.” 
    Ibid.
     The Court later addressed the
    complexity and importance of the requirement in Warnock v. Davis, 
    104 U.S. 775
    , 779 (1882). As the Court explained,
    [i]t is not easy to define with precision what will in all
    cases constitute an insurable interest, so as to take the
    contract out of the class of wager policies. . . . But in
    all cases there must be a reasonable ground, founded
    10
    upon the relations of the parties to each other, either
    pecuniary or of blood or affinity, to expect some benefit
    or advantage from the continuance of the life of the
    assured. Otherwise the contract is a mere wager, by
    which the party taking the policy is directly interested
    in the early death of the assured. Such policies have a
    tendency to create a desire for the event. They are,
    therefore, independently of any statute on the subject,
    condemned, as being against public policy.
    [Ibid. (emphases added).]
    In New Jersey, the Legislature adopted the current insurable interest
    requirement in 1968. L. 1968, c. 318, § 1. More than a century earlier, the
    pre-1948 New Jersey Supreme Court 2 opined that a policy would be valid
    without such an interest, Trenton Mut. Life & Fire Ins. Co. v. Johnson, 
    24 N.J.L. 576
    , 584 (Sup. Ct. 1854), even though it found the policyholder did
    have an insurable interest in the life of the insured, 
    id. at 582, 586-87
    .
    Because New Jersey did not have a statute similar to England’s Life Assurance
    Act of 1774, the court based its decision on its view of the common law. The
    court found no insurable interest requirement under the common law. 
    Id. at 583-84
    . The United States Supreme Court, however, reached a different
    2
    Prior to the 1948 Constitution, the New Jersey Supreme Court was an
    intermediate appellate court; its rulings were subject to review by the Court of
    Errors and Appeals, the State’s highest court at the time. Carla Vivian Bello &
    Arthur T. Vanderbilt II, New Jersey’s Judicial Revolution: A Political Miracle
    32 (1997); William M. Clevenger, The Courts of New Jersey: Their Origin,
    Composition and Jurisdiction 29-32 (1903).
    11
    conclusion in 1877. See Schaefer, 
    94 U.S. at 460
     (noting that “the law of
    England prior to the Revolution of 1688” was that policies without an
    insurable interest were “void, as against public policy”).
    The current statutory scheme appears at N.J.S.A. 17B:24-1.1. The
    Legislature expressly imposed an insurable interest requirement and thus
    superseded dated case law like Johnson. See United States v. Texas, 
    507 U.S. 529
    , 534 (1993) (noting that a statute can “abrogate a common-law principle”
    if it “‘speak[s] directly’ to the question addressed by the common law”
    (quoting Mobil Oil Corp. v. Higginbotham, 
    436 U.S. 618
    , 625 (1978))); see
    also Fu v. Fu, 
    160 N.J. 108
    , 121 (1999).
    N.J.S.A. 17B:24-1.1(a) outlines three situations in which an individual
    has an insurable interest:
    (1) An individual has an insurable interest in his own
    life, health and bodily safety.
    (2) An individual has an insurable interest in the life,
    health and bodily safety of another individual if he has
    an expectation of pecuniary advantage through the
    continued life, health and bodily safety of that
    individual and consequent loss by reason of his death
    or disability.
    (3) An individual has an insurable interest in the life,
    health and bodily safety of another individual to whom
    he is closely related by blood or by law and in whom he
    has a substantial interest engendered by love and
    affection. An individual liable for the support of a child
    12
    or former wife or husband may procure a policy of
    insurance on that child or former wife or husband.
    The statute also specifies circumstances under which a corporation, N.J.S.A.
    17B:24-1.1(a)(4), or a nonprofit or charitable entity, 
    id.
     § (a)(5), has an
    insurable interest in the lives of its employees, officers, or others.
    Critical to the questions presented in this case, section (b) of N.J.S.A.
    17B:24-1.1 bars procurement of a life insurance policy payable to someone
    who lacks an insurable interest in the life of the insured:
    No person shall procure or cause to be procured any
    insurance contract upon the life, health or bodily safety
    of another individual unless the benefits under that
    contract are payable to the individual insured or his
    personal representative, or to a person having, at the
    time when that contract was made, an insurable interest
    in the individual insured.
    Sections (c) and (d) of N.J.S.A. 17B:24-1.1 address violations of the
    insurable interest statute from different perspectives. Specifically, N.J.S.A.
    17B:24-1.1(c) allows “the individual insured, or his executor or administrator”
    to “maintain an action to recover” any benefits paid “under any contract made
    in violation of” the insurable interest requirement. And N.J.S.A. 17B:24 -
    1.1(d) protects an insurer’s good faith reliance “upon all statements,
    declarations and representations made by an applicant for insurance relating to
    the insurable interest of the applicant.” No published opinions by this Court or
    the Appellate Division interpret New Jersey’s insurable interest statute.
    13
    B.
    Just as all New Jersey insurance policies must be based on an insurable
    interest, they must also contain an incontestability clause. See N.J.S.A.
    17B:25-4 (“There shall be a provision that the policy . . . shall be
    incontestable, except for nonpayment of premiums, after it has been in force
    during the lifetime of the insured for a period of 2 years from its date of
    issue.”). Forty-three states require incontestability clauses in life insurance
    policies, and they are “found in almost all policies.” 2 Harnett & Lesnick, The
    Law of Life and Health Insurance § 5.07 (Matthew Bender, rev. ed. 2018).
    New Jersey was in line with standard industry practice when it adopted a two-
    year period after which policies cannot be contested except for nonpayment of
    premiums. See id. § 5.07(2); see also N.J.S.A. 17B:25-4.
    Like statutes of limitations, incontestability clauses create incentives for
    insurers to challenge questionable policies in a timely manner, rather than
    continue to collect premiums and complain “only when called upon to pay.”
    See Harrison v. Provident Relief Ass’n of Wash., D.C., 
    126 S.E. 696
    , 701 (Va.
    1925); see also 17 Couch on Insurance § 240:5 (3d ed. 2018).
    Incontestability clauses, however, are not a bar to all defenses. See 2
    Harnett & Lesnick § 5.07(5) (cataloguing common defenses and decisions on
    both sides of the incontestability issue). For example, “it has generally been
    14
    held that an insurance policy violative of public policy or good morals cannot
    be enforced simply because the incontestability period has run.” Tulipano v.
    U.S. Life Ins. Co., 
    57 N.J. Super. 269
    , 277 (App. Div. 1959) (collecting cases);
    see also Martin, Life Settlements, 64 Syracuse L. Rev. at 104 (“[T]he
    Delaware Supreme Court, and a majority of other courts that have decided
    cases on the inviolability of incontestability clauses, held that the
    incontestability period is contingent on the existence of a valid contract.”
    (footnote omitted)).
    A majority of courts have held that the lack of an insurable interest can
    be asserted as a defense even after a policy has become incontestable. See,
    e.g., PHL Variable Ins. Co. v. Price Dawe 2006 Ins. Tr., 
    28 A.3d 1059
    , 1067-
    68 (Del. 2011); Beard v. Am. Agency Life Ins. Co., 
    550 A.2d 677
    , 691 (Md.
    1988); see also 17 Couch on Insurance § 240:82 (“The majority of
    jurisdictions follow the view that an incontestable clause does not prohibit
    insurers from resisting payment on the ground that the policy was issued to
    one having no insurable interest -- such a defense may be raised despite the
    fact that the period of contestability has expired.”); 8 New Appleman on
    Insurance Law Library Edition § 83.09 (2018) (“Nearly every jurisdiction that
    has addressed the issue holds that a policy lacking an insurable interest is void
    15
    and is not rendered valid by an incontestability provision.”). As the Delaware
    Supreme Court has explained,
    if a life insurance policy lacks an insurable interest at
    inception, it is void ab initio because it violates
    Delaware’s clear public policy against wagering. It
    follows, therefore, that if no insurance policy ever
    legally came into effect, then neither did any of its
    provisions, including the statutorily required
    incontestability clause. . . .       As a result, the
    incontestability provision does not bar an insurer from
    asserting a claim on the basis of a lack of insurable
    interest.
    [Price Dawe, 
    28 A.3d at 1067-68
     (footnotes omitted).]
    C.
    Although life insurance policies must be payable to a person with an
    insurable interest when they are procured, policies can be sold later on --
    including to individuals who would not have been able to buy the policy
    originally because they lacked an insurable interest. As Justice Oliver Wendell
    Holmes, Jr., wrote in Grigsby v. Russell, 
    222 U.S. 149
    , 156 (1911), “[s]o far as
    reasonable safety permits, it is desirable to give to life policies the ordinary
    characteristics of property. . . . To deny the right to sell except to persons
    having [an insurable] interest is to diminish appreciably the value of the
    contract in the owner’s hands.”
    In New Jersey, life insurance policies may be sold subject to the
    regulatory scheme outlined in the Viatical Settlements Act, N.J.S.A. 17B:30B-
    16
    1 to -17. In general, a viatical settlement is “[a] transaction in which a
    terminally or chronically ill person sells the benefits of a life-insurance policy
    to a third party” at a discounted value “in return for a lump-sum cash
    payment.” Black’s Law Dictionary 1497 (9th ed. 2009). The seller or insured
    is called the “viator.” 
    Ibid.
    “The viatical settlements industry was born in the 1980s in response to
    the AIDS crisis.” Life Partners, Inc. v. Morrison, 
    484 F.3d 284
    , 287 (4th Cir.
    2007). Particularly in the early days of the crisis, when “victims usually died
    within months of diagnosis,” many AIDS sufferers needed money for
    treatment. 
    Ibid.
     Because of their short life expectancies, “investors were
    willing to purchase . . . life insurance policies.” 
    Ibid.
     The market for viatical
    settlements later expanded to include policies for the elderly and people with
    diseases other than AIDS. 
    Id. at 287-88
    .
    The imbalance in power between people in desperate need of funds and
    more sophisticated investors willing to buy life insurance policies led to the
    regulation of viatical settlements. See 
    id. at 288
    . The New Jersey Legislature
    passed a viatical settlements law in 1999, L. 1999, c. 211, “to protect
    particularly vulnerable persons from aggressive or fraudulent business tactics,”
    Governor’s Statement on Signing S. 1515 (Sept. 17, 1999). The Legislature
    repealed the law in 2005 and replaced it with “a broader regulatory scheme” --
    17
    the Viatical Settlements Act, L. 2005, c. 229. See Sponsor’s Statement to S.
    1940 37 (Oct. 4, 2004).
    The Act defines a “viatical settlement contract” as
    a written agreement establishing the terms under which
    compensation or anything of value will be paid, which
    compensation or value is less than the expected death
    benefit of the policy, in return for the viator’s
    assignment, transfer, sale, devise or bequest of the
    death benefit or ownership of any portion of the
    policy. . . . A viatical settlement contract includes an
    agreement with a viator to transfer ownership or change
    the beneficiary designation at a later date regardless of
    the date that compensation is paid to the viator.
    [N.J.S.A. 17B:30B-2.]
    The definition also includes financing agreements but expressly excludes
    “written agreement[s] between a viator and a person having an insurable
    interest in the insured’s life.” 
    Ibid.
    A key provision of the Act limits the potential for abuse. Aside from
    limited exceptions, the law bars policyholders from entering into a viatical
    settlement contract -- and thus transferring the policy benefit to a stranger --
    for two years from the date the policy was issued. N.J.S.A. 17B:30B-10(a).
    The statute reads as follows:
    a. It is a violation of this act for any person to enter
    into a viatical settlement contract within a two-year
    period commencing with the date of issuance of the
    insurance policy unless the viator certifies [that] . . . :
    18
    (1) The policy was issued upon the viator’s
    exercise of conversion rights arising out of a
    group or individual life insurance policy. . . ;
    (2) The viator submits independent evidence to
    the viatical settlement provider that within the
    two-year period: (a) the viator or insured was
    terminally ill or chronically ill; or (b) the viator
    or insured disposed of his ownership interests in
    a closely held corporation [subject to certain
    limitations]; or (c) both.
    [Ibid.]
    Thus, under section 10(a), a policyholder may not “assign[], transfer, s[ell],
    devise or beque[ath] . . . the death benefit or ownership of any portion of the
    policy” to someone without an insurable interest in the life of the insured,
    N.J.S.A. 17B:30B-2, for a period of two years, unless the policyholder
    exercised conversion rights, 
    id.
     § 10(a)(1), or the policyholder or insured was
    terminally or chronically ill, disposed of ownership interests in a closely held
    corporation, or both, id. § 10(a)(2).
    Over time, and as the market expanded, “the industry changed its name
    and description from ‘viatical settlements’ to ‘life settlements.’” Susan Lorde
    Martin, Betting on the Lives of Strangers: Life Settlements, STOLI, and
    Securitization, 
    13 U. Pa. J. Bus. L. 173
    , 185-87 (2010). STOLI policies --
    once again, short for stranger-originated life insurance policies -- are a subset
    of life settlements.
    19
    In a traditional life settlement, “investors purchase existing life
    insurance policies from insureds who no longer need the insurance to protect
    their families in the event of their deaths.” Id. at 187. In a STOLI
    arrangement, by contrast, “a life settlement broker persuades a senior
    citizen . . . to take out a life insurance policy” -- not to protect the person’s
    family but for a cash payment or some other current benefit arranged with a
    life settlement company. Ibid. A key “difference between non-STOLI and
    STOLI policies,” as the Second Circuit has explained, “is simply one of timing
    and certainty; whereas a non-STOLI policy might someday be resold to an
    investor, a STOLI policy is intended for resale” before it is issued. United
    States v. Binday, 
    804 F.3d 558
    , 565 (2d Cir. 2015).
    Generally, an investor funds a STOLI policy from the outset, which
    makes it possible to obtain a policy with a high face value. See Martin,
    Betting on the Lives of Strangers, 13 U. Pa. J. Bus. L. at 188. The investor
    may lend the insured “the money to pay the premiums for” the period of
    incontestability, typically two years. Ibid. It is also common for an insured to
    buy the policy in the name of a trust and name a “spouse or other loved one as
    the trust beneficiary.” Ibid. In such arrangements,
    [i]f the insured dies within [the contestability] period,
    his spouse, as beneficiary of the insurance trust, will get
    the death benefit (the free insurance), pay back the loan
    plus interest from the proceeds, and often pay the
    20
    broker up to fifty percent of the benefit received. If the
    insured lives beyond two years or the contestability
    period, then the life settlement company buys the
    beneficial interest in the insurance trust, paying the
    insured a lump sum percent of the face value of the
    policy . . . . The life settlement company or its investors
    will continue to pay the premiums on the policy, and
    when the insured dies, they will get the death benefit.
    Clearly, the sooner the insured dies, the greater the
    company’s profit.
    [Ibid. (footnotes omitted).]
    STOLI arrangements thus present a significant legal problem: the
    investors have “no insurable interest in the life of the insured.” Ibid. As a
    result, the transactions pose questions in light of New Jersey’s policy against
    wagering. See Binday, 804 F.3d at 565 (“A STOLI policy is one obtained by
    the insured for the purpose of resale to an investor with no insurable interest in
    the life of the insured -- essentially, it is a bet on a stranger’s life.”); see also
    Grigsby, 
    222 U.S. at 156
     (noting that “cases in which a person having an
    interest lends himself to one without any as a cloak to what is in its inception a
    wager have no similarity to those where an honest contract is sold in good
    faith”).
    D.
    New Jersey’s anti-wagering policy is anchored in Article 4, Section 7,
    Paragraph 2 of the State Constitution, which bars the Legislature from
    authorizing gambling on its own aside from specific exceptions. Under
    21
    subsections (A) through (F), the Legislature can authorize particular games of
    chance run by charitable, religious, and certain other groups; state lotteries;
    gambling in Atlantic City; and other specified kinds of wagering. See N.J.
    Const. art. IV, § 7, ¶ 2. Voter approval is required for gambling of any other
    kind, see ibid., including wagers on a stranger’s life.
    The Legislature, in turn, directly barred gambling. See N.J.S.A. 2A:40-1
    (declaring gaming transactions unlawful); N.J.S.A. 2A:40-3 (declaring void all
    agreements that violate N.J.S.A. 2A:40-1).
    The above provisions are relevant expressions of public policy that
    inform our analysis of the statutes at the center of this appeal. Moreover, the
    insurable interest requirement is consistent with and helps enforce the
    Constitution’s prohibition on gambling. By ensuring full compliance with the
    insurable interest statute, we can avoid an outcome that might run afoul of the
    Constitution.
    III.
    Sun Life relies heavily on New Jersey’s anti-wagering provisions and
    argues that the policy in question is nothing more than a wager because it
    lacked an insurable interest. As a result, Sun Life contends, the policy never
    took effect and may now be challenged because the incontestability clause
    likewise never took effect.
    22
    Wells Fargo counters that allowing the sale of life insurance policies is
    also a matter of public policy -- one that the Legislature has regulated through
    the insurable interest statute and the Viatical Settlements Act. Wells Fargo
    asserts that the policy in this case fully complied with the insurable interest
    requirement at the policy’s inception, and that, even if it did violate the
    Viatical Settlements Act, it could be challenged on that basis only for a period
    of two years.
    We consider those arguments in the context of the Third Circuit’s first
    question.
    A.
    The first part of question one asks whether “a life insurance policy that
    is procured with the intent to benefit persons without an insurable interest in
    the life of the insured violate[s] the public policy of New Jersey.”
    If a third party without an insurable interest procures or causes an
    insurance policy to be procured in a way that feigns compliance with the
    insurable interest requirement, the policy is a cover for a wager on the life of
    another and violates New Jersey’s public policy. In such a case, the plain
    23
    language reading of the statute that Wells Fargo advances can lead to absurd
    results.3
    1.
    Consider a policy that strangers financed or caused to be procured for
    Mary’s life. When the policy is issued, Mary’s daughter is the named
    beneficiary or the trustee of an irrevocable trust that owns the policy. The
    trust thus has an insurable interest at the time the contract for the policy is
    made. See N.J.S.A. 17B:24-1.1(a). But the strangers actually have a side
    agreement with Mary or her daughter to transfer control of the trust, the
    beneficial interest in the policy, or ownership of the policy, at a later time. In
    short, the outside investors who funded the policy effectively control it from
    the start.
    If the investors cause the daughter to transfer her interest to them a
    month, a day, or an hour after the policy is issued, it would elevate form over
    substance to suggest that the policy satisfies the insurable interest requirement.
    At most, there is only feigned compliance with the requirement that an
    3
    Statutes cannot “be construed to lead to absurd results. All rules of
    construction are subordinate to that obvious proposition.” State v.
    Provenzano, 
    34 N.J. 318
    , 322 (1961). “[W]hen ‘a literal interpretation would
    create a manifestly absurd result, contrary to public policy,’ courts may
    consider the law’s overall purpose for direction.” Sussex Commons Assocs.,
    LLC v. Rutgers, 
    210 N.J. 531
    , 541 (2012) (quoting Hubbard ex rel. Hubbard v.
    Reed, 
    168 N.J. 387
    , 392 (2001)).
    24
    insurable interest exist “at the time when [the] contract was made.” See
    N.J.S.A. 17B:24-1.1(b). In reality, Mary and her daughter satisfy the
    requirement in name alone. The policy is a cover for a wager on Mary’s life
    by a stranger. It therefore violates public policy.
    STOLIs commonly involve life insurance policies procured and financed
    by investors -- strangers -- who have no insurable interest in the life of the
    insured yet, from the outset, are the ultimate intended beneficiaries of the
    policy. In other words, in a classic STOLI situation, a stranger who hopes the
    insured will die soon causes the policy to be procured and collects the death
    benefit. That type of arrangement runs afoul of New Jersey’s insurable
    interest requirement and the statute’s purpose. It also counters the principle
    underlying the requirement: the individual with an insurable interest “must
    have an interest in the continued life of the insured rather than in his early
    death.” Ohio Nat’l Life Assurance Corp. v. Davis, 
    803 F.3d 904
    , 907 (7th Cir.
    2015); see also Warnock, 
    104 U.S. at 779
     (noting that because of “the relations
    of the parties,” someone with an insurable interest “expect[s] some benefit or
    advantage from the continuance of the life of the assured” (emphasis added)).
    Contrary to Wells Fargo’s assertions, sections (c) and (d) of the
    insurable interest statute do not call for a different result. N.J.S.A. 17B:24-
    1.1(c) addresses the recovery of moneys already paid under a contract that
    25
    violates the insurable interest requirement. It creates a cause of action for the
    insured or her estate after a death benefit has been paid. Section (d) insulates
    insurers from liability when they rely on an applicant’s statements about her
    insurable interest. Neither section allows for enforcement of a policy that
    lacks an insurable interest. Nor do the sections contain language that suggests
    they are the exclusive remedies when the absence of an insurable interest
    arises after two years.
    Sections (a)(4) and (a)(5) of N.J.S.A. 17B:24-1.1 also inform the
    meaning and scope of the insurable interest requirement. Section (a)(4)
    expressly allows corporations to insure their directors, officers, employees,
    and others. Section (a)(5) similarly enables nonprofit or charitable entities to
    insure their directors and others, including their supporters. Under (a)(5), a
    director, supporter, or other insured must either sign the application for
    insurance, which names the charitable entity as the owner and beneficiary, or
    “subsequently transfer ownership of the insurance to the entity.”
    Those detailed sections were added to the insurable interest statute in
    1991. L. 1991, c. 369. The Sponsor’s Statement noted that “the principle of
    insurable interest was founded on the idea that the person purchasing the
    policy should have such a real and substantial interest in the property or person
    insured as would prevent the policy from being a mere wager on the insured
    26
    event.” Sponsor’s Statement to A. 4957 2 (L. 1991, c. 369). The statement
    added, however, that “[o]ver the years, many states have expanded the concept
    of insurable interest for the purpose of life and health insurance to reflect
    current trends in investment and the development of innovative insurance
    products,” and that the time had come to broaden New Jersey’s definition of
    insurable interest in part “to afford New Jersey residents greater access to the
    myriad policy and investment options already available in other states.” Id. at
    2-3.
    Notably, despite the pro-investment aim of the 1991 amendments, the
    Legislature did not modify or loosen the insurable interest requirement beyond
    the particular areas that sections (a)(4) and (a)(5) address. Both sections
    reveal that when the Legislature meant to expand the insurable interest
    requirement to allow transfers that would satisfy the requirement, the
    Legislature acted with precision and care.
    Finally, we note that an incontestability provision does not bar a
    challenge to a STOLI policy. As discussed earlier, insurance contracts that are
    contrary to public policy cannot be enforced despite an incontestability clause.
    See Tulipano, 
    57 N.J. Super. at 277
     (collecting cases); see also Martin, Life
    Settlements, 64 Syracuse L. Rev. at 104. If a policy never came into effect,
    neither did its incontestability clause; the clause thus cannot stand in the way
    27
    of a claim that the policy violated public policy because it lacked an insurable
    interest. See Price Dawe, 
    28 A.3d at 1067-68
    ; 17 Couch on Insurance
    § 240:82; 8 New Appleman on Insurance Law § 83.09.
    2.
    In the prior example, strangers funded the policy at the outset. Other
    situations might also raise concerns. Imagine, for example, that Mary’s
    daughter procured the above policy, paid the policy premiums for a few
    months, and then transferred her role as trustee, or the ownership or beneficial
    interest in the policy, to a group of strangers in exchange for full
    reimbursement and some compensation. Suppose as well that Mary’s daughter
    intended to do so from the start. That arrangement likewise might be little
    more than a cover for a wager on Mary’s life for the benefit of strangers, and it
    raises questions about the manner in which the policy was procured. The
    transfer could also result in a challenge under the Viatical Settlements Act,
    N.J.S.A. 17B:30B-13.
    A number of considerations could affect the validity of the policy: the
    nature and timing of any discussions between the purchaser and the strangers;
    the reasons for the transfer; and the amount of time the policy was held; among
    other factors.
    28
    If the purchaser and investors discussed an arrangement in advance, a
    third party without an insurable interest may have caused the policy to be
    procured -- even if no firm agreement had yet been finalized. See N.J.S.A.
    17B:24-1.1(b) (stating that “[n]o person shall procure or cause to be procured”
    a policy without an insurable interest) (emphasis added)).
    Wells Fargo and LISA both stress that the Legislature could have -- but
    did not -- impose a good faith intent requirement on the purchase of life
    insurance policies. Nonetheless, if a person with an insurable interest takes
    out a policy because he has an agreement to sell it to a third party, the
    transaction could be as much of an attempt to circumvent the insurable interest
    requirement as if a stranger had funded the policy at the outset. In either
    event, the aim of the insurable interest requirement would be thwarted.4
    Timing may also be a relevant factor. By way of comparison, the
    Viatical Settlements Act restricts for two years the sale of lawfully purchased
    policies to people who lack an insurable interest. N.J.S.A. 17B:30B-10(a).
    The Act addresses a different set of circumstances -- typically, the sale of a life
    insurance policy at a discount, by an elderly or ill person -- and the Legislature
    4
    But see PHL Variable Insurance Co. v. Bank of Utah, 
    780 F.3d 863
    , 865-66,
    868 (8th Cir. 2015) (upholding a policy purchased by a 74-year-old retiree,
    with guidance from an insurance agent, for the purpose of selling it on the
    secondary market, and noting that the insured held the policy for two years
    before he surrendered it to repay a loan).
    29
    imposed limits to guard against the abuse of vulnerable individuals. Likewise,
    in the related context of this matter, the less time the policy owner held the
    policy before transferring it to a stranger, the greater the likelihood the policy
    violates public policy.
    Courts cannot devise a bright-line rule for the type of transaction this
    second hypothetical presents. The area is best addressed by the Legislature
    and DOBI.
    B.
    Thirty states have enacted anti-STOLI legislation to date. See 
    Ariz. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 20-443.02
    (A); 
    Ark. Code Ann. §§ 23-81-802
    (7)(A)(i)(j), 23-81-
    816; 
    Cal. Ins. Code §§ 10113.1
    (g)(B), 10113.3(s); 
    Colo. Rev. Stat. § 10-7
    -
    708(2); Conn. Gen. Stat. § 38a-465j(a)(1), (a)(2)(A)(i)(X); 
    Fla. Stat. §§ 626.99289
    , 626.99291; 
    Ga. Code Ann. §§ 33-59-2
    (6)(A)(i)(X), 33-59-
    14(a)(1); Haw. Rev. Stat. § 431C-42(1)(A)(x); 
    Idaho Code § 41-1962
    (1); 215
    Ill. Comp. Stat. 159/50(a); 
    Ind. Code § 27-8-19.8
    -20.1; Iowa Code
    §§ 508E.2(6)(a)(3), 508E.15(1)(a); 
    Kan. Stat. Ann. §§ 40-5002
    (f)(5), 40-
    5012a(a)(1); 
    Ky. Rev. Stat. Ann. §§ 304.15-020
    (7)(a)(1)(k), 304.15-717(1)(d);
    Me. Stat. tit. 24-A, §§ 6802-A(6)(A)(3), 6818(1)(A); Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 175,
    § 223A(a), (b)(1)(i)(J); Minn. Stat. § 60A.0784(2); 
    N.H. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 408
    -D:12(I); 
    N.Y. Ins. Law § 7815
    (c) (McKinney); 
    N.D. Cent. Code §§ 30
    26.1-33.4-01(7)(a)(1)(j), 26.1-33.4-13(1)(a); 
    Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 3916.172
    ;
    
    Okla. Stat. tit. 36, §§ 4055.2
    (7)(e), 4055.13(A)(1); 
    Or. Rev. Stat. § 744.369
    (10); 
    27 R.I. Gen. Laws §§ 27-72-2
    (9)(i)(A)(X), 27-72-14(a)(1);
    
    Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 56-50-102
    (6)(A)(iii), 56-50-114(a)(1); Utah Code Ann.
    § 31A-36-113(2)(a)(iii); 
    Vt. Stat. Ann. tit. 8, § 3844
    (a)(2); 
    Wash. Rev. Code §§ 48.102.006
    (8)(a)(ii), 48.102.140(1)(a); 
    W. Va. Code §§ 33
    -13C-2(5)(F),
    33-13C-14(a)(1); 
    Wis. Stat. § 632.69
    (1)(g)(7), (15)(a); see also 
    Neb. Rev. Stat. § 44-1110
    (1)(c).
    Two model acts have been designed to stop STOLIs. One bars any
    person from “[e]nter[ing] into any practice or plan which involves STOLI[s].”
    National Conference of Insurance Legislators (NCOIL), Life Settlements
    Model Act §§ 2(H)(1)(a)(x), 13(A)(3), (readopted in March 2014), http://ncoil.
    org/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/AdoptedLifeSettlementsModel.pdf. The
    other generally bars viatical settlement agreements for five years, instead of
    two. See National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC), Viatical
    Settlements Model Act § 11 (July 2009), https://www.naic.org/store/free/
    MDL-697.pdf.
    Anti-STOLI legislation has been proposed multiple times in New Jersey.
    From 2009 through 2014, ten bills were introduced: S. 2747 (Apr. 27, 2009);
    A. 3991 (June 4, 2009); A. 4196 (Nov. 23, 2009); S. 487 (Jan. 12, 2010); A.
    31
    371 (Jan. 12, 2010); A. 376 (Jan. 12, 2010); A. 234 (Jan. 10, 2012); A. 237
    (Jan. 10, 2012); A. 1049 (Jan. 16, 2014); A. 1051 (Jan. 16, 2014). None were
    passed or enacted.
    Despite suggestions by Wells Fargo, it is difficult to discern the
    Legislature’s intent from bills it has not passed. See Grupe Dev. Co. v.
    Superior Court, 
    844 P.2d 545
    , 552 (Cal. 1993) (en banc); Entergy Gulf States,
    Inc. v. Summers, 
    282 S.W.3d 433
    , 443 (Tex. 2009). Some legislators may
    have thought that current law already barred STOLI policies under the
    insurable interest statute and that the proposed laws were unnecessary; others
    may have opposed the bills. Under the circumstances, we are unable to
    determine what the Legislature meant when it did not act on proposed
    legislation.
    C.
    The position of the Division of Banking and Insurance also offers a view
    of the State’s present public policy toward STOLI policies. DOBI’s amicus
    brief outlines the nature of a “STOLI scheme” and submits that “it is against
    the public policy of New Jersey for a third party to procure a life insurance
    policy from a life insurance company with the intent to benefit persons without
    an insurable interest in the insured.” “A policy procured under such
    circumstances,” DOBI explains, “violates the insurable interest requirement of
    32
    N.J.S.A. 17B:24-1.1.” Absent an insurable interest, according to DOBI, a life
    insurance policy is a “pure gamble” in violation of N.J.S.A. 17B:24-1.1 and
    “the anti-gambling provisions of both the New Jersey Constitution and New
    Jersey statutes.”
    DOBI’s views are entitled to considerable weight in this area, which
    falls within its field of expertise. See In re Election Law Enf’t Comm’n
    Advisory Op. No. 01-2008, 
    201 N.J. 254
    , 262 (2010); see also N.J.S.A. 17:1-1
    (charging DOBI “with the execution of all laws relative to insurance”).
    D.
    Other courts have considered similar questions under related state laws.
    In Davis, the Seventh Circuit found STOLI policies void at the outset
    under Illinois law. 803 F.3d at 907-09.5 The STOLI scheme in the case
    worked as follows: Defendant Davis persuaded people “to become the
    nominal . . . buyers of” life insurance policies in exchange for “small amounts
    of money.” Id. at 906. Along with another defendant who was an insurance
    agent, Davis “targeted elderly people because of their diminished life
    5
    The court based its decision on “the common law of Illinois” but noted that
    Illinois adopted anti-STOLI legislation after the relevant policies were issued.
    Id. at 909.
    33
    expectancies and African-Americans because the average life expectancy of an
    African-American is shorter than that of other Americans.” Ibid.
    Once a policy was issued, defendants had the insured place it in an
    irrevocable trust. Ibid. The trust was designated as the “policy’s owner and
    beneficiary,” and Davis, a lawyer, served as trustee. Ibid. At the start, trust
    documents also listed “either members of the insured’s family or the insured’s
    other trusts” as beneficiaries. Id. at 907. Weeks or months later, “Davis
    would have the nominal buyer of the policy . . . assign the beneficial interest in
    the trust (and therefore in the policy) to a company owned by [a third]
    defendant.” Ibid. That person “would make the initial premium payments . . .
    but then resell the beneficial interest in the trust to an investor who hoped that
    the insured would die soon” -- to be able to collect the proceeds of the policy.
    Ibid.
    Through those steps, “the defendants were trying to appear to comply
    with the” insurable interest requirement. Ibid. As the court observed, “one
    can’t take out a life insurance policy on a person unless one has an interest,
    financial or otherwise, in the life of the insured rather than in his early death. ”
    Id. at 908 (citing Grigsby, 
    222 U.S. at 155
    ). In the STOLI scheme in question,
    though, the circuit court found no such insurable interest:
    The insureds merely lent their names to the insurance
    applications, in exchange for modest compensation,
    34
    and the defendants forthwith transferred control over
    (effectively ownership of) the policies to themselves.
    The defendants, who had no interest in the insureds’
    lives (as distinct from their deaths), initiated, paid for,
    and controlled the policies from the outset.
    ....
    . . . The insureds’ family members . . . retained
    beneficial interests in the policies only briefly and
    never controlled the trusts. The insureds were the
    defendants’ puppets and the policies were bets by
    strangers on the insureds’ longevity.
    [Id. at 908-09.]
    In essence, the Seventh Circuit concluded that feigned compliance with the
    insurable interest requirement is not enough.
    The Supreme Court of Delaware reached a similar conclusion in Price
    Dawe, 
    28 A.3d 1059
    . In that case, the Price Dawe 2006 Insurance Trust
    purchased a $9 million life policy on Dawe’s life. 
    Id. at 1063
    . A family trust
    was the named beneficiary, and “Dawe was the beneficiary of the family
    trust.” 
    Ibid.
     PHL Variable Insurance Company (Phoenix) issued the policy.
    
    Ibid.
     About two months later, an unrelated private investor “formally
    purchased the beneficial interest of the Dawe Trust from the Family Trust.”
    
    Id. at 1064
    . When Dawe died some three years later, and two competing
    claims were made, Phoenix discovered the circumstances of the sale and
    35
    sought a declaratory judgment in United States District Court that the policy
    was void. 
    Id. at 1063-64
    .
    The Delaware Supreme Court accepted and answered three certified
    questions of law. The court first found that Phoenix could challenge the policy
    for lack of an insurable interest despite an incontestability clause. 
    Id. at 1065
    .
    The second question asked “whether the statutory insurable interest
    requirement is violated where the insured procures a life insurance policy with
    the intent to immediately transfer the benefit to an individual or entit y lacking
    an insurable interest.” 
    Id. at 1068
    . The court found that it is not, “so long as
    the insured procured or effected the policy and the policy is not a mere cover
    for a wager.” 
    Ibid.
    The court based its decision on various provisions of Delaware’s
    statutory code in light of the history and purpose of the insurable interest
    requirement. 
    Id. at 1071-76
     (discussing 
    Del. Code Ann. tit. 18, §§ 2704
    , 2705,
    2708, and 2720). The opinion thus focused principally on who “procured” the
    policy or “caused it to be procured,” and not on the insured’s subjective intent.
    Id. at 1075-76 (construing 
    Del. Code Ann. tit. 18, § 2704
    (a)). “To determine
    who procured the policy,” the court “look[ed] at who pa[id] the premiums.”
    Id. at 1075.
    36
    The court also addressed STOLI policies and noted they “lack an
    insurable interest and are thus an illegal wager on human life.” Id. at 1070.
    Delaware’s insurable interest statute at section 2704(a), the court explained,
    “requires more than just technical compliance at the time of issuance,” yet
    “STOLI schemes are created to feign technical compliance with” the law. Id.
    at 1074. “At issue is whether a third party having no insurable interest can use
    the insured as a means to procure a life insurance policy that the statute would
    otherwise prohibit. Our answer is no,” because of the insurable interest
    requirement. Ibid.
    The court applied the same line of thinking to a third question, which
    concerned the use of trusts to effect the transfer of a policy. See id. at 1076-
    78. The court observed that, “[i]n cases where a third party either directly or
    indirectly funds the premium payments as part of a pre-negotiated arrangement
    with the insured to immediately transfer ownership, the policy fails at its
    inception for lack of an insurable interest.” Id. at 1078.
    The United States District Court for the Eastern District of Tennessee
    used similar reasoning to void a STOLI policy purchased through a trust and
    funded by outsiders. Sun Life Assurance Co. v. Conestoga Tr. Servs., LLC,
    
    263 F. Supp. 3d 695
    , 697, 699 (E.D. Tenn. 2017). The policy had been issued
    before Tennessee’s anti-STOLI legislation took effect. 
    Id.
     at 701 n.3. The
    37
    District Court noted that “Tennessee courts have held for over one hundred
    years that life insurance taken out as a wager is void.” 
    Id. at 701
    . The court
    also found that “Tennessee prohibit[ed] STOLI policies through both statutory
    and common law.” 
    Ibid.
     The nominal use of a trust, the court explained, did
    not satisfy the state’s insurable interest requirement. 
    Id. at 702
    . The facts
    instead revealed a scheme that improperly used a named insured “as a conduit
    to acquire a policy” that investors “could not otherwise acquire.” 
    Ibid.
    Before the New York Legislature barred STOLI policies, the Court of
    Appeals of New York “h[e]ld that New York law permits a person to procure
    an insurance policy on his or her own life and immediately transfer it to one
    without an insurable interest in that life, even where the policy was obtained
    for just such a purpose.” Kramer v. Phoenix Life Ins. Co., 
    940 N.E.2d 535
    ,
    536-37, 539 n.5 (N.Y. 2010); see also 
    N.Y. Ins. Law § 7815
    (c) (McKinney).
    Kramer involved a challenge to “several insurance policies obtained by
    [a] decedent . . . on his own life, allegedly with the intent of immediately
    assigning the beneficial interests to investors who lacked an insurable interest
    in his life.” 940 N.E.2d at 537. In considering a question certified by the
    Second Circuit, the Court of Appeals explained that a specific provision in
    New York law upheld the policies:
    Any person of lawful age may on his own initiative
    procure or effect a contract of insurance upon his own
    38
    person for the benefit of any person, firm, association
    or corporation. Nothing herein shall be deemed to
    prohibit the immediate transfer or assignment of a
    contract so procured or effectuated.
    [Id. at 539 (emphasis added) (quoting 
    N.Y. Ins. Law § 3205
    (b)(1) (McKinney)).]
    New Jersey has no such statute.
    Florida’s insurable interest statute similarly states that an “insurable
    interest need not exist after the inception date of coverage.” 
    Fla. Stat. § 627.404
    (1). Relying on that statute, the Florida Supreme Court declined to
    find STOLI policies exempt from a two-year period of incontestability. Wells
    Fargo Bank, N.A. v. Pruco Life Ins. Co., 
    200 So. 3d 1202
    , 1205-06 (Fla.
    2016). Florida later enacted anti-STOLI legislation. 
    Fla. Stat. §§ 626.99289
    ,
    626.99291.
    California’s insurable interest statute also limits the duration of an
    insurable interest: “[A]n interest in the life or health of a person insured must
    exist when the insurance takes effect, but need not exist thereafter or when the
    loss occurs.” See 
    Cal. Ins. Code § 286
    . The United States District Court for
    the Central District of California relied on that provision in rejecting a
    challenge to several life insurance policies in Lincoln National Life Insurance
    Co. v. Gordon R.A. Fishman Irrevocable Life Trust, 
    638 F. Supp. 2d 1170
    ,
    1170-71, 1177, 1179 (C.D. Cal. 2009). Similar to a STOLI transaction,
    39
    policies were purchased through a trust, which borrowed $2.8 million to cover
    premiums and fees for two years; almost immediately, the policies were
    assigned to the lender as security. 
    Id. at 1174-76
    . The trust remained the
    owner of the policies. 
    Id. at 1179
    .
    The court observed that the “[d]efendants may have found a loophole in
    the law barring a STOLI finding.” 
    Ibid.
     Although the financing scheme
    “skirts close to the letter, and certainly can be viewed as violating the spirit, of
    the law . . . the law as it presently exists allows this kind of insurance
    arrangement.” 
    Ibid.
     Like New York and Florida, California has now enacted
    anti-STOLI legislation. See Cal. Ins. Code. §§ 10113.1(g)(B), 10113.3(s).
    New Jersey statutory law does not permit the immediate transfer of a life
    insurance policy to people or entities that lack an insurable interest. As noted
    above, policyholders who lawfully procure life insurance policies cannot
    transfer them through a viatical settlement agreement for two years, aside from
    limited exceptions. See N.J.S.A. 17B:30B-10(a).
    Nor does New Jersey have an analogue to Wis. Stat. 631.07(4), which
    provides that “[n]o insurance policy is invalid merely because the policyholder
    lacks insurable interest.” The Seventh Circuit relied on the statute when it
    declined to declare a policy void under Wisconsin law. Sun Life Assurance
    Co. of Can. v. U.S. Bank Nat’l Ass’n, 
    839 F.3d 654
    , 657-58 (7th Cir. 2016).
    40
    The circuit court noted that Wisconsin had “retain[ed] the common law
    principle forbidding the purchase of a life insurance policy by one who lacked
    an insurable interest” but had “changed the remedy from cancelling the policy
    to requiring the insurer to honor its promise,” by paying someone equitably
    entitled to the benefit. 
    Id. at 656
    .
    IV.
    To be clear, we do not suggest that life settlements in general are
    contrary to public policy. Valid life insurance policies are assets that can be
    sold. See Grigsby, 
    222 U.S. at 156
    . An established secondary market exists
    for the sale of valid policies -- at least two years after they are issued or earlier
    in certain cases, see N.J.S.A. 17B:30B-10(a) -- to investors who lack an
    insurable interest, see generally Peter Nash Swisher, Wagering on the Lives of
    Strangers: The Insurable Interest Requirement in the Life Insurance
    Secondary Market, 
    50 Tort Trial & Ins. Prac. L.J. 703
    , 724-29 (2015)
    (discussing the nationwide development and regulation of the secondary
    market). Today, billions of dollars worth of policies are sold annually in the
    secondary market. Lincoln Nat’l Life Ins. Co. v. Calhoun, 
    596 F. Supp. 2d 882
    , 885 (D.N.J. 2009).
    Typically, people procure and pay premiums on a policy to plan for the
    future, but circumstances may change years later in ways that are distinct from
    41
    the previous hypotheticals. Some policyholders may no longer need life
    insurance to protect a financially secure spouse or grown, self-supporting
    children; other insureds might need immediate cash for medical care or another
    urgent obligation. If the insureds stopped paying the premiums, they and their
    beneficiaries “would get nothing.” See Martin, Betting on the Lives of
    Strangers, 13 U. Pa. J. Bus. L. at 186. Instead, they can sell policies to
    strangers on the secondary market for a percentage of the policy’s face value.
    Provided the buyers continue to pay the premiums, they will eventually receive
    the death benefit. Ibid.
    Once again, policyholders in New Jersey, in certain cases, may also
    transfer a policy within two years, in accordance with the Viatical Settlements
    Act. N.J.S.A. 17B:30B-10(a).
    In any of those circumstances, buyers need not have an insurable interest
    in the life of the insured.
    V.
    The first certified question poses a supplemental inquiry: If the policy
    procured violates New Jersey’s public policy, is it void ab initio? Wells Fargo
    submits that when a fraud has been committed, “policies are merely voidable,
    not void” from the outset, under New Jersey law. According to Wells Fargo,
    42
    that means that an “insurer may waive, or be estopped to raise, the fraud.” Sun
    Life contends that a wagering policy is void ab initio.
    When an insurance policy violates public policy, it is as though the
    policy never came into existence. See D’Agostino v. Maldonaldo, 
    216 N.J. 168
    , 194 n.4 (2013) (“A void contract is ‘[a] contract that is of no legal effect,
    so that there is really no contract in existence at all. A contract may be void
    because it is technically defective, contrary to public policy, or illegal.”
    (quoting Black’s Law Dictionary 374 (9th ed. 2009))); see also Vasquez v.
    Glassboro Serv. Ass’n, Inc., 
    83 N.J. 86
    , 98 (1980) (“No contract can be
    sustained if it is inconsistent with the public interest or detrimental to the
    common good.”); Hebela v. Healthcare Ins. Co., 
    370 N.J. Super. 260
    , 270
    (App. Div. 2004) (“[O]ur courts will decline to enforce an insurance policy,
    like any other contract, if its enforcement would be contrary to public
    policy.”).6
    We note as well that “[t]he vast majority of courts today that have
    interpreted STOLI contracts have held that such contracts are void ab initio
    6
    Wells Fargo suggests that, because the fire insurance statute once stated that
    fire insurance policies would be void if the policyholder did not have sole and
    unconditional ownership of the property insured, see Flint Frozen Foods, Inc.
    v. Fireman’s Ins. Co. of Newark, 
    8 N.J. 606
    , 611-12 (1952), the Legislature
    could have expressly said life insurance policies lacking an insurable interest
    were void, had it so intended. That type of declaration is not needed if a
    policy violates public policy.
    43
    from their inception.” Swisher, Wagering on the Lives of Strangers, 50 Tort
    Trial & Ins. Prac. L.J. at 734.
    The policy would be void from the outset.
    VI.
    The second certified question asks, “If such a policy is void ab initio, is
    a later purchaser of the policy, who was not involved in the illegal conduct,
    entitled to a refund of any premium payments that they made on the policy?”
    Sun Life contends that it should be permitted to retain the premiums it
    collected because, “upon a determination that a policy is an illegal, void ab
    initio wagering policy” -- as distinct from a voidable policy that is rescinded --
    “New Jersey law requires that the court simply leave the parties where it finds
    them.” Wells Fargo argues that “if any insurance policy is canceled or
    rescinded in the State of New Jersey, the insurer must return the premium.”
    The traditional rule -- that courts leave the parties to a void contract as
    they are rather than assist an illegal contract -- has evolved over time.
    Williston discusses the more modern view and notes that equitable factors can
    be considered to determine the proper remedy:
    In some cases, rescission of an illegal transaction
    and recovery of consideration are allowed where the
    parties are said not to be in pari delicto.
    The typical case in which this rule is applied is
    when one party acts under compulsion of the other. The
    44
    doctrine originated in cases in which a creditor, by
    improper pressure, induced a debtor to enter into
    transactions fraudulent as to other creditors; now,
    generally, one who has been induced by fraud,
    coercion, or undue influence to convey property in
    fraud of creditors can rescind and recover it or its
    proceeds despite the illegality. In some other types of
    cases, the guilt of the parties is differentiated for other
    reasons, such as one party’s lack of knowledge of the
    other party’s illegal activities.
    Probably no more exact principle can be laid
    down than if a plaintiff, although culpable, has not been
    guilty of moral turpitude, and the loss the plaintiff will
    suffer by being denied relief is wholly out of proportion
    to the requirements either of public policy or of
    appropriate individual punishment, the plaintiff may be
    allowed to recover back the consideration paid for an
    illegal agreement.
    [8 Williston on Contracts § 19:80 (4th ed. 2019)
    (footnotes omitted).]
    Williston notes situations in which the above doctrine has been applied
    to permit recovery by the less culpable party: “the purchaser of the
    consideration paid for securities sold in violation of securities acts”; “a
    purchaser of poisonous intoxicating liquor or some other product that was
    illegally sold”; and “money lost at gaming.” Ibid. Williston adds that the
    principle has also “been extended by a number of courts to allow even
    affirmative recovery in limited settings” but notes that, “simply because the
    parties are not in equal fault, it does not mean that a court should automatically
    enforce the agreement at the behest of the less guilty party.” Ibid.
    45
    The Seventh Circuit applied a similarly nuanced approach in Davis after
    it found the STOLI contracts in question were void. 803 F.3d at 910-11. The
    court awarded the insurance company its attorney’s fees and the premiums
    paid by all defendants except one investor, Egbert. Id. at 911. “Being to
    blame for the illegal contracts,” the court reasoned, “the defendants have no
    right to recoup the premiums they paid to obtain them; allowing recoupment
    would, by reducing the cost, increase the likelihood of illegal activity.” Ibid.
    As to Egbert, however, the court noted that “[h]e caused no harm,” “was
    not involved in the conspiracy,” and “would not have paid the premiums” had
    he known the policy was void. Ibid. Under the circumstances, it would “have
    have been a windfall” for the company to keep the premiums he paid. Ibid.
    As a result, the court relied on an exception to the general rule -- to leave the
    parties where they are -- “for the case in which the party that made the
    payments is not to blame for the illegality.” Ibid. The court concluded that
    Egbert’s premium payments should be returned. Id. at 911-12.
    In Conestoga, the Eastern District of Tennessee found that the sixth
    assignee of a void STOLI policy was entitled to a refund of the premiums it
    paid. 263 F. Supp. 3d at 697, 704. The court stressed that the assignee was
    “not to blame for the fraud here” and based its holding on the “rule that an
    assignee who has paid premiums in good faith is entitled to recover premiums
    46
    paid if the policy is later declared void because of the misconduct of others.”
    Ibid. (collecting cases).
    The United States District Court for the District of Nevada likewise
    considered the relative culpability of the parties in a matter that involved a
    “textbook STOLI arrangement.” See Carton v. B & B Equities Grp., LLC, 
    827 F. Supp. 2d 1235
    , 1239-40, 1247 (D. Nev. 2011). The court noted “[t]he
    Insurers were the clear victims of the STOLI scheme.” 
    Id. at 1247
    . The
    original investors, in contrast, who “may have . . . been duped,” “were at least
    on inquiry notice of the illicit scheme.” 
    Ibid.
     The court pointed to several
    “red flags [that] should have placed” them on notice. 
    Ibid.
     “Because it would
    be unjust” to reward the investors under those circumstances, the court
    concluded they “failed to state a claim for unjust enrichment” and were not
    entitled to a refund of the premiums they funded. 
    Ibid.
    In the context of a void STOLI policy, the fact-sensitive approach
    outlined by Williston and adopted in the above cases is sound. To decide the
    appropriate remedy, trial courts should develop a record and balance the
    relevant equitable factors. Those factors include a party’s level of culpability,
    its participation in or knowledge of the illicit scheme, and its failure to notice
    red flags. Depending on the circumstances, a party may be entitled to a refund
    47
    of premium payments it made on a void STOLI policy, particularly a later
    purchaser who was not involved in any illicit conduct.
    We note that the District Court considered equitable principles and
    fashioned a compromise award based on the record before it. We do not
    comment on the award itself.
    VII.
    For the reasons set forth above, we answer both parts of the first
    certified question in the affirmative: a life insurance policy procured with the
    intent to benefit persons without an insurable interest in the life of the insured
    does violate the public policy of New Jersey, and such a policy is void at the
    outset. In response to the second question, we note that a party may be entitled
    to a refund of premium payments it made on the policy, depending on the
    circumstances.
    JUSTICES LaVECCHIA, PATTERSON, FERNANDEZ-VINA,
    SOLOMON, and TIMPONE join in CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER’s opinion.
    JUSTICE ALBIN did not participate.
    48