Brigham v. Home Life Insurance

131 Mass. 319 | Mass. | 1881

Morton, J.

The policy issued by the defendant company insures the life of William Scollan “ in the amount of thirty-six hundred dollars, for the term of six years with endowment without participation in profits.” By it the insurer “promises and agrees to and with William Scollan to pay the sum assured at its office in this city to him on the thirteenth day of October 1884, or to his children,” [naming them,] “ share and share alike, or to the survivors or survivor of them within sixty days after due notice and proof of loss and interest, satisfactory to the company, in accordance with the terms of this contract.” The first clause is an absolute promise to pay the sum assured to Scollan on October 13, 1884, if he complies with the terms of the contract. If he lives to that time, he, or his assignee, will have the exclusive right to collect the amount. The promise in the last clause, to pay to his children, was clearly intended to be an alternative promise, and to apply only in case he should die before the day when payment was to be made to him. The *320promise is to pay to the children “ within sixty days after due qotice and proof of loss,” that is, after proof of the death of the insured. Construed in its connection with the absolute promise to pay Scollan at the termination of the policy, it admits of no sensible interpretation except that it is an alternative promise to pay to the children in case Scollan shall die before October 13, 1884.

This being the true construction of the contract, it is clear that Scollan had a valuable interest in this contract of insurance, which passed to his assignee in bankruptcy. The assignment in bankruptcy conveyed to the assignee “all the estate, real and personal, of the bankrupt, with all his deeds, books and papers relating thereto,” with certain exceptions not material to this case. U. S. Rev. Sts. §§ ,5044-5046. Leonard v. Nye, 125 Mass. 455. Belcher v. Burnett, 126 Mass. 230. All the interest which Scollan had in this policy of insurance, therefore, passed to and vested in his assignee, subject to the same contingencies in his hands as in the hands of the bankrupt. After the assignment, Scollan had no control or power of disposition over it, and his attempted surrender and discharge of it to the defendant was inoperative and void. It still remains the property of his assignee, the plaintiff, and he is entitled to the possession of it. Scollan had the exclusive right to the possession of the policy as the evidence of his contract, both against the company and against his children, as long as he lived, and this right passed to the plaintiff. We are not called upon to consider whether the plaintiff has the right to assign this policy without the assent of the company; he has at least the right to its possession for the purpose of enabling him to collect the amount insured when it becomes payable, if Scollan shall then be living.

The remaining question is whether this court has jurisdiction in equity to compel the delivery of the policy to the plaintiff. The bill states, and the evidence shows, that the.policy is secreted and withheld by the company, so that it cannot be replevied. The plaintiff has a right to the securities belonging to the estate of the bankrupt. If his only right is to collect the sum insured when it becomes payable, he is entitled to the policy as evidence, and the want of it may cause embarrassment and possible danger of failure in a suit at law. He has no plain, adequate *321and complete remedy at law which will fully protect and guard his rights, and is therefore entitled to maintain this bill. Sears v. Carrier, 4 Allen, 339. Pierce v. Lamson, 5 Allen, 60.

Decree affirmed.