5 S.W.2d 957 | Tenn. | 1928
Despite the express provisions of our statutes (Shannon's Code, secs. 4030 and 4231) exempting the proceeds of life insurance so payable, it is conceded that the husband and father may, by assignment or by will, so dispose of such insurance as to defeat this exemption. Rison v. Wilkerson Co., 35 Tenn. (3 Sneed), 565; Williams v. Carson, 68 Tenn. (9 Bax.), 516; Gosling v.Caldwell, 69 Tenn. (1 Lea), 455; Tenn. Lodge v. Lard, 73 Tenn. (5 Lea), 721; Catholic Knights v. Kuhn,
In none of these earlier cases was there a question as to the purpose or intention of the insured to divert the funds from the statutory direction. It was held merely that he had the power so to do, either by assignment or will.
In Cooper v. Wright,
The claim of the complainant, sustained by the Chancellor, is that the instant case is controlled by the holding in UnionTrust Co. v. Cox,
In that case, recognizing the rule above noted that the assured may dispose by will of the proceeds of such funds, so as to defeat the otherwise applicable exemption, the Court construed the will before it as manifesting an intention to include the insurance funds in the testator's general estate and to make application of it to the payment of his debts. Having found that the language of that will indicated such an intention the holding properly followed.
Does the will in the instant case so do?
The four pertinent paragraphs read as follows:
"1. I direct that all my just debts and all expenses of administration be first paid, out of my moneys belonging to my estate.
"2. Out of the proceeds of any life insurance payable to my estate or to my executors, administrators, etc., and out of any other moneys or securities belonging to my estate, I give and bequeath unto my beloved wife, Amelia McTyeire Sperry the sum of $5000; to my son Maddin Leonard Sperry $4000; to my son John Ford Sperry $4000 and to my son, Louis Fletcher Sperry $2000. I have made the legacy to my son Louis $2000 less than to each of my other two sons for the reason that *48 I have heretofore advanced to him moneys in excess of $2000 for purposes other than for education and maintenance.
"3. All the rest and residue of my estate, both real and personal and mixed, I give, devise and bequeath to my beloved wife, Amelia McTyeire Sperry and to my sons, Maddin Leonard Sperry, John Ford Sperry and Louis Fletcher Sperry, in equal portions, share and share alike.
"4. I appoint my wife, Amelia McTyeire Sperry executrix of this will and direct that no bond or security be required of her."
By a codicil the amount bequeathed to Louis Fletcher Sperry was further reduced to $1000. The will was made in 1919. Mr. Sperry died in 1925, and his general estate has proven to be insolvent, although it is, we think, apparent that such a condition was not anticipated by the testator.
While recognizing the power of an assured to divert the fund and defeat the exemption from claims of creditors, quite uniformly and strongly our decisions have approved and impressed the policy of preserving such funds for the widow and children, declaring this to be the primary purpose of our statutes (Harvey, Admr., v. Harrison, supra) and emphasizing that no diversion will be recognized unless clearly the intention of the assured, expressed in apt words. Cooper v. Wright,
Looking to this will, we find that this testator, assuming his solvency in his first paragraph, directs that all his debts and "all expenses of administration shall *49 be first paid, out of any moneys belonging to my estate." This first paragraph stands alone and, apparently assuming that full and complete provision has thus been made for all his debts, he nowhere makes further reference to this subject, but proceeds, in a second and independent paragraph, to make provision for his wife and children and "adjust equitably" the distribution of a portion of his property between them. The opinion in the leading case of Williams v. Carson, supra, which adjudges the right of the husband to include his insurance in this equitable adjustment, contains no intimation that by so doing he will subject these funds to the claims of creditors, and deprive them of that priority which the law accords. In other words, the mere inclusion in the will of a reference to such funds, with a direction for their equitable distribution among those inwhose favor the statutory exemption runs, has never been held, without more, to let in creditor's claims. Apt words must be used indicating, not an intention only to equalize the funds among this preferred class, his wife and children, but an intention to apply the funds to debts and expenses of his estate.
It is true that the distribution provided for in this second paragraph is (a) not wholly confined to the proceeds of the insurance, and (b) aggregates a sum total in excess of this fund. This (a) quite evidently was in the expectation that "other moneys" belonging to his estate would remain for distribution, after the payment therefrom of all debts and expenses provided for in the preceding paragraph. While he thus dealt together, in a sense, with these special and general funds, the effect is to evidence an intention, not to apply the insurance funds to general estate purposes, but to apply and add *50 general estate funds to the insurance funds. Can it be consistently said that this effort to increase the provision for his wife and children is to be so construed as to deprive them of that to which they were already entitled?
It is (b) contended, in effect, that the departure from the equal distribution provided by the statute, as between the wife and children, evidences an intention to exercise the testator's right to dispose of these funds independently of the statute, and that he thus waived the statute and released the funds from its exempting protection. As stressed in Harvey, Admr., v.Harrison, supra, creditors can have no possible concern in this detail of just how, as between the wife and children, the fund shall be distributed, a "secondary" and "subordinate" provision of the statute. As well said, "the primary purpose of the act was to exempt life insurance from the claims of creditors. . . . The purpose of the act is clear and this must guide in its application. It was to enable a husband or father to provide a fund after his death for his family." Is his attempt to depart from the exact terms of this secondary and subordinate provision to be held to defeat the "primary purpose" of the Act? We think not.
Conceding that Union Trust Co. v. Cox, was correctly decided on its facts, the "disjointed and artificial" instrument therein construed differed in at least one determinative particular from that before us now. After providing for both debts and legacies from "my estate" without particularizing, this will concludes as follows: "My estate (as a whole), (regardless of prior transfers), to be divided as above directed, each one-third of my entire effects, including all insurance." That this testator had in mind having his insurance pass to *51 his executor, applicable to claims of creditors, as said by Mr. Justice BEARD, "is not left to inference alone from the general terms used; in the last clause, the testator declares his intention, we think, in unmistakable terms."
We are unable to find any such declaration of intention in the will of Mr. Sperry. The burden was on complainant to show clearly such an intent. We are therefore constrained to differ with the learned Chancellor, and the decree is reversed.
This language was not used in our opinion, nor is this an accurate interpretation of the language which was used, as appears by reference to the quotation from that opinion immediately following the foregoing statement in the petition to rehear. It will be observed that what was said was that our decisions have emphasized that "No diversion will be recognized, unless clearly the intention of the assured, expressed in apt words, Cooper v. Wright,
Correctly interpreted there is no conflict with the Cox case. As we said of that case, "the Court construed the will before it as manifesting an intention to include the insurance funds in the testator's general estate and to make application of it to the payment of his debts. Having found that the language of that will indicated such an intention, the holding properly followed." And we quoted from that opinion the statement that this intention, "is not left to inference alone from the general terms used; in the last clause, the testator declares his intention, we think, in unmistakable terms." If this had been true of the instant case a like result would have followed, but, we were "unable to find any such declaration of intention in the will of Mr. Sperry," and a different result followed.
There is nothing in the holding in the Cox case, or our other holdings, inconsistent with our holding in the original opinion herein, that no diversion of such funds will be recognized unless the clearly expressed intention of the assured; that it must not be "left to inference," but declared, as in the Cox case, "in unmistakable terms."
Counsel for petitioner has incorrectly limited the effect of the language complained of to a requirement that the *53 testator must "expressly and explicitly declare that said insurance shall be liable for his debts," whereas the context and the authorities cited and quoted from show, that it was an intention to divert the fund at all, to the general estate, or otherwise, which was under consideration. The petition is dismissed. *54