90 N.J. Eq. 78 | New York Court of Chancery | 1918
The question in this case is, Who is entitled to the proceeds of life insurance policies, the beneficiary named in the policies or the assignee of the insured? The proceeds are in court. The facts stipulated by counsel are:
The New York Life Insurance Company, at the instance of William O. Anderson, issued to him two policies in each of which it
“Promises to pay at the Home Office of the Company in the City of New York, upon receipt at said Home Office of due proof of the death of AVilliam O. Anderson, herein called the insured, Five thousand dollars, less any indebtedness hereon, to the Company and any unpaid portion of the premium for the then current policy year, to Dona, wife of the Insured, beneficiary, with right of revocation.”
Two pertinent clauses of the policies are: .
“Change of Beneficiary. When the right of revocation has been reserved, or in case of the death of any beneficiary under either a revocable or irrevocable designation, the Insured, if there be no existing assignment of the Policy, made as herein provided, may, while the Policy is in force, designate a new beneficiary with or without reserving right of revocation by filing written notice thereof at the Home Office of the Company, accompanied by the Policy for suitable endorsement thereon. Such change shall take effect upon the endorsement of the same on the Policy by the Company. If any beneficiary shall die before the Insured the interest of such beneficiary shall vest in the Insured.”
“Assignment. Any assignment of this Policy must be filed with the Company at its Home Office. The Company assumes no responsibility as to the validity of any assignment.”
Anderson owned and operated a corporation, and to secure for it a line of discount to the amount of $10,000 assigned the
The bank’s claim to the proceeds is rested upon the theory that the insured by reserving the right of revocation retained the absolute ownership of the policies and the right to dispose of them by assignment, and that that right is recognized by the clauses above stated.. On the other hand, the beneficiary, admitting that the insured had the power to deprive her of her interest, contends that her right remains undisturbed because the power was not exercised in the manner provided by the “Change of Beneficiary” clause; that the assignment was not an appointment of a new beneficiary under this provision, and that the bank took by it only the increments of the policies and the contingent rights of the insured if he outlived the beneficiary.
Sullivan v. Maroney, 76 N. J. Eq. 104; affirmed, 77 N. J. Eq. 565, is, in its legal aspect, on all fours with this case and is controlling unless some differentiating elements demand the application of other principles. In that case the insurance on the life qf Mrs. Cahill was payable to her children, if living, and if not, then to her personal representatives. The. insurance was effected and paid for by the assignee under an agreement that the policy was to be assigned.to her by the insured, which was done. The right to revoke the beneficiaries was not in terms reserved, but the policy afforded that privilege and provided for assignments by clauses substantially like those above quoted. There, as here, the right of the beneficiaries was conditional and defeasible. Cooley Briefs Ins. 3755. Vice-Chancellor- Garrison, in awarding the proceeds to the beneficiaries, rested his decision upon well-established principles, viz.: That in an ordinary life policy the interest of the beneficiary is vested and cannot be divested without his consent; that where a policy reserves the right to the insured to change the beneficiary and prescribes the method, the interest of the named beneficiary can be defeated only by pursuing that method; and that an assignment of the policy by the insured is not a compliance with the requirements for effect
The text in 14 R. C. L. § 171, that “it would seem clear that the insured may assign the policy where he has reserved the right to change the beneficiary,” is not supported by the note nor the cases cited. In the two Kentucky cases referred to the "insured reserved the right to assign the policy as well as to change the beneficiary.
The doctrine of the text-books and decisions, that the insured retains control of the policy and may dispose of it at will, where the right to change the beneficiary is reserved, will be found upon an examination of the cases to be subject to the qualification that the power may be exercised within the prescribed limits of the contract only. The extent of this power is perhaps best illustrated by the rule defining the beneficiary’s interest in such circumstances, as laid clown in the note and cases referred to in 14 R. C. L. § 171, thus: “Where, however, the right to change the beneficiary is reserved by the terms of the policy to the insured the beneficiary takes subject to this provision, and his title to the policy may be defeated Ty the terms of the contract-naming him a beneficiary. It is a condition of the contract and his right is therefore subject to it.’ ”
The bank calls attention to the fact that in the assignment of the policy in the Sullivan Case, the assignment was of the right,
The point is also made that in the policies with which we are dealing the right of revocation was expressly reserved, whereas ■in the cited case the “Change of Beneficiary” clause was stipulated as a privilege. The formal reservation does no.t, in my opinion, enlarge the insured’s control over the policy. Rather, it limits the privilege and forms one of the conditions under which the right to change the beneficiary may lie exercised in the manner provided hv “Change of Beneficiary” clause.
And so as to the “Assignment” clause and the reference to assignments in the “Change of Beneficiary” clause. They do not by implication reserve dominion over the policy in the insured. The former comprehends only such assignments as either the insured or the beneficiary may make of their respective interests. In the latter the reference to assignments means simply that when there is an outstanding one by the insured his' right to revoke is not to he exercised without the assent of the assignee. In other words, he is not permitted to substitute one or more beneficiaries whose expectancy of life is better than the named beneficiary, to the detriment of the assignee, without his consent. Circumstances have persuaded courts to variously interpret the condition of the clause “if there he no existing assignment of the policy,” but I can attribute to it, in this case, no other function.
I am unable to distinguish this case from that of Sullivan v. Maroney, in principle, and am, therefore, authoritatively bound to advise a decree in favor of the complainant. This result does not effectuate the intention of the parties to the assignment whose obvious purpose was, as it was in the Sullivan Case, to transfer the entire property in the policy. But it must he borne in mind that the relations of the parties to the policies are purely contractual and alterable only according to their terms, and, as the available means for effectuating the intention were not employed, it is not within the power of the court to supply the deficiency. The duty of the court is to construe instruments, not to make them.
A decree will be advised awarding the proceeds of the policies to the beneficiary.