8 F.2d 735 | 5th Cir. | 1925
Each of the two bankrupts, who are the petitioners in this court, claimed as exempt certain insurance policies on his life, each of which policies was made payable to “American Trust & Savings Bank of Birmingham, Alabama, as trustee.” The 'trustee in bankruptcy claimed the cash surrender value of the several policies. Under each of the policies the insured had the right to change the beneficiary. By the terms of the instruments creating the trusts referred to, .the trust was operative only with respect to the proceeds payable at or after the death of the insured on policies of insurance on his life made payable to the trustee. Each of those instruments contained provisions to the following effect:
The trustee was empowered in its sole, uncontrolled discretion to use all or any part of the principal of the trust estate for the purpose of paying any debts or claims against the estate of the insured, or for the payment of taxes or other similar charges on the insured’s estate. Subject to that power the trustee was required to pay the net income from the trust estate to the insured’s wife, so long as she should remain his widow, and upon the decease or remarriage of the widow the trustee was required to pay over and distribute the trust estate in equal shares to the insured’s wife and his children then living, and the descendants then living of any deceased’s child; the wife taking only a child’s share, and the descendants of a deceased child taking per stirpes a child’s share.
Section 8277 of the Code of Alabama of 1923 contains the following:
“The husband or father may insure his life for the benefit of his wife, or for the 'benefit of his wife and children, or for the benefit of his child or children, and such insurance is exempt from liability for his debts or engagements, -or for his torts, or any penalty or damages recoverable of him, if the annual premium thereon do not exceed one thousand dollars; or if such premiums exceed one thousand dollars, then to the extent of the insurance which an annual premium of one thousand dollars would purchase as an ordinary life policy in a standard life insurance company.”
Each of the policies in question was so framed that benefits from it to the insured’s wife and children were dependent upon, not the contract of insurance, but the uncontrolled will of the trustee, to whom the insurance is made payable. A policy which may inure solely to the benefit of the insured’s creditors cannot properly be said to be for the benefit of his wife and children, within the meaning of the statute. Manifestly the statute was not intended to have the effect of enabling a debtor to have exempted to him insurance on his life which, in the event of his death without a change of beneficiaries having been made, might inure to the sole benefit of one or more of his creditors.
The petition is denied.