158 N.Y.S. 834 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1916
On February 13, 1911, the defendant issued a’policy of insurance for $204 upon the life of one Regina Nec, a young' Austrian woman living with her husband in Buffalo. It was what is known as an “industrial policy,” the premium of 10 cents being payable weekly. The printed form of the policy makes the “amount of benefit” payable to the executors or administrators of the insured, unless payment is made by the company to a relative or certain other persons “equitably entitled to the same by reason of having incurred expense on behalf of the insured.”
The insured could neither read nor write. Her husband was a laborer; and after a child was born to them it was decided that they would go back to Austria, probably for a visit. To raise the money to go, the insured assigned her policy to her friend, the plaintiff, who bought for the insured, her husband, and child transportation to their former home. They were advised by the agent of the company that this assignment was permissible, and there was some evidence that this instruction was given by the superintendents of the company to agents, and was communicated to prospective insurers when they were solicited to take out these policies. The testimony taken by the stenographer has not been furnished on this motion, and I am stating the evidence from my own minutes, taken on the trial, and from memory.
After receiving the assignment, plaintiff paid the premiums for several months, until or after the death of the insured, which occurred at her old home in Austria. The husband and child apparently have remained in that country. The plaintiff duly filed with the company proof of the death of the insured, made out on the form furnished by the defendant. This was accompanied by the written assignment of the policy to plaintiff. The company shortly afterward, with full knowledge of the facts, audited the claim and forwarded checks to one of its superintendents in Buffalo, to be delivered to the plaintiff. The policy was stamped “Paid.” The checks were not delivered to the plaintiff by the superintendent.
After a long interval the checks were returned by the superintendent to the company, and eventually a check was drawn and sent on by the company, payable to the public administrator, before a claim for the sum payable by the terms of the policy was made by him. The husband and next of kin of the insured did not reside in Buffalo, and were making no claim, and it may be that the act of the public administrator in making a claim was inspired by some overofficious local superintendent of the defendant. The checks were delivered to the public administrator, and no effort was made by the defendant to compensate the plaintiff in any way, either for the money she had advanced when she took the assignment, or for the premiums she had paid.
The principal defense to this action is that by its terms the policy could not be assigned. Article 3 of “provisions” is in part as follows:
“Policy, When Void.—This policy shall be void * * * if the policy bo assigned or otherwise parted with/’
“facility of Payment.—The company may make any payment provided for in this policy to any relative by blood or connection by marriage of the insured, or to any other person appearing to said company to be equitably entitled to the same by reason of having incurred expense on behalf of the insured, for ills or her burial, or if the insured be more than fifteen years of age at the date of this policy, for any other purpose, and the production by the company of a receipt signed by any or either of said persons or of other sufficient proof of such payment to any or either of them, shall be conclusive evidence that such benefits have been paid to the person or persons entitled thereto, and that all claims under this policy have been fully satisfied.”
These industrial policies are for small amounts and have small weekly premiums. They are sold usually to laboring people of small means. One great purpose of the “facility of payment” provision" must be to afford a ready method of raising money for the benefit of the insured, to pay funeral expenses at the time of death, or to furnish medical assistance or some other relief in the last illness, or to have the policy an asset in the hands of the insured in any emergency
Under the terms of the policy there are several possible payees: First, the executor or administrator; second, any relative by blood or connection by marriage; third, any other person equitably entitled to the same by having incurred expense for her burial, or, if the insured is more than 15 years of age, for any other purpose. Who is entitled to select the beneficiary? Always it is the insured, so long as the selection falls within any permissible class. The company should have no right to select a beneficiary, particularly if it contravenes the expressed wish of the insured. The option contained in the policy should be exercised by the company only where the insured has failed to make a choice.
“It is manifestly the duty of the insurance company to pay the amount due upon the policy to the real owner of it, or to whomsoever may have acquired a paramount lien upon it or money payable under it according to its terms.
Applying that doctrine to the facts here, we find that the plaintiff is entitled to receive payment. In Heffernan v. Prudential Insurance Co., 88 Misc. Rep. 93, 150 N. Y. Supp. 644, where in an action on a similar policy the Appellate Term held that the plaintiff’s complaint should have been dismissed, different questions were presented, and the facts were apparently entirely different from those disclosed here.
In reaching the conclusion that I have, I have not regarded it necessary to discuss one significant memorandum, made apparently in the office of the company on the face of the form of the proof of death. This comes under the head of “Synopsis of Claim Department Examination.” The memorandum is as follows:
“Draw two checks, one for $104.00, to be indorsed and returned, and one for the balance to claimant.”
A legitimate inquiry might perhaps be made as to why the larger check was to be indorsed by the claimant and returned to the company. Was the company, under its alleged option, selecting itself as the principal beneficiary ?
The motion to set aside the verdict and for a dismissal of the complaint must be denied, and the plaintiff may enter judgment.