Lead Opinion
I concur in the view that a fine should have been imposed on the judgment debtor to the extent of $291.40 and costs in connection with the policy No. 1,879,057. In my opinion, however, no punishment was justified in regard to the debtor’s dealings in connection with policy No. 789,413. The facts as to that policy are averred to be that prior to the making of the injunction order of August 9, 1915, that policy had been assigned to the insurance company to secure a loan of $1,548 due October 7, 1914. In August, 1914, the judgment debtor made a second assignment of the policy to his brother-in-law, Mr. Stern, to secure the payment of a loan of $1,000 to $2,000, made to him by Mr. iStern. In May, 1916, when the transaction alleged to be a contempt occurred, the surrender value of the policy, that is to say, its “ guaranteed reserve ” value, amounted to $2,064.53. In that month the company made a loan on the policy of $1,947.17, of which it retained $1,750.75
It is apparent from this recital of the financial status of the policy and the "loans which it secured that its guaranteed reserve value was at least $500 less than the loans which had been made upon it and to secure which the policy had been assigned by the judgment debtor, first, to the insurance company, and then, as a secondary assignment, to Mr. Stern. Its actual value to the judgment debtor in dollars and cents — if I may be permitted the use of the term — is minus $500.
I do not see how any disposal by the judgment debtor of an article already pledged for much more than its value can be said to be “ calculated ” to impair any right or remedy of a creditor. Many cases cited by respondent, to the effect that where the precise loss to the creditor has not been or cannot be shown a fine of $250 may nevertheless be imposed, are not in point; because in the instant case it affirmatively appears that the act of the debtor could not have injured the creditor since the article disposed of was utterly without value to the debtor or the creditor.
The respondent cites also a number of cases apparently to sustain a proposition which he does not clearly advance, but which I understand to be that any dealing by the debtor with property in which he is interested may be treated as a disposition of his property harmful to his creditors. The respondent’s error
It is claimed further, however, that it was the disposition made by him of the moneys received as the proceeds of the loan which constituted the contempt. It seems to me to be quite evident that this money was not received by him in his individual capacity, but solely as the agent or other fiduciary representative of the insurance company and Mr. Stem respectively to whom he was bound to account for every cent of it. The mere fact that the moneys may have come into his physical possession because the insurance company in a spirit of caution may have insisted on making a check payable either to his order or to the order of the three parties, including himself, who had signed the note, has no juridical significance. If the money which he received was not his money, but the money of the insurance company and Mr. Stern, it came into his hands merely as agent or other fiduciary and his disposal of them in the interest of his principal or .cestui que trust was not a violation of an injunction against the disposal by him of any of his property.
Guy, J., concurs.
Dissenting Opinion
The first question to be determined is whether the insurance policies, the disposition of a part of whose proceeds constituted the adjudged contempt, were exempt under section 52 of the Domestic Relations Law. The first policy, No. 789,413, was a tontine policy taken out by the judgment debtor and provided for payment to his wife, her executors, administrators or assigns. No claim is made or could be plausibly made that the policy was a contract between the insurance company and the wife. But appellant contends that under the decision in Whitehead v. New York Life Ins. Co., 102 N. Y. 143, the mere fact that the wife is the beneficiary is sufficient to make the policy the property of the wife. The case of Jacobs v. Strumwasser, 84 Misc. Rep. 28, is cited, where it was said: “ It is well established law that where a husband insures his life for the benefit of his wife by an ordinary life policy, the property of the policy vests at once in the beneficiary (Whitehead v. New York Life Ins. Co., 102 N. Y. 143), and it cannot be reached by creditors of the husband.” It is true that the reporter’s headnote in the Whitehead case so states the decision. Turning to the opinion, however, in the Whitehead case, we find that Judge Pinch said: “All three of the life insurance policies
Obviously, therefore, this case is no authority for the broad proposition that where a husband insures his life for the benefit of his wife, the property in the policy vests at once in the beneficiary. The statute provides: “A married woman may, in her own name, or in the name of a third person, with his consent, as her trustee, cause the life of her husband to be insured for a definite period, or for the term of his natural life,” and that in such case the policy belongs to her free from any claim of creditors, With the familiar exception of the premiums exceeding $500 and being paid
The second policy, No. 1,879,057, is also one between the insurance company and the- judgment debtor, with the wife named as beneficiary, and contains a provision allowing a change of beneficiary without the wife’s consent.
It is alleged that the wife paid the premiums and retained possession of this policy, but that is ‘' immaterial ” as Judge Gray said in the Bradshaw case. There are averments from which it might be inferred that, although this policy is on its face between the insurance company and the judgment debtor, it is really between the insurance company and the judgment debtor’s wife,.the claim being that the judgment
■Coming now to the question of the contempt it appears that while the injunction order was in force the judgment debtor procured a loan on policy No. 789,413 from the insurance company amounting to $1,947.18 for which a promissory note was jointly executed by the judgment debtor, his wife and one Morris Stern, a brother-in-law of the assured, and the policy was assigned to the company as collateral; further, that the judgment debtor procured a loan from the company of $770.42 on the other policy, for which a promissory note was executed by the judgment debtor and his wife, which he transferred to the company as collateral. The policy No. 789,413 had been previously assigned to the judgment debtor’s brother-in-law Stern for a loan of either $2,000 or $1,000, according to the view one takes of the conflicting evidence. This policy had no provision for the payment of a “ cash value ” until its expiration but it had a provision for the payment of what it called the " guaranteed reserve ” upon surrender.- At the time in question, the guaranteed reserve, reckoned as of October 7, 1916, amounted to $2,064.63. The proceeds of the loan of $1,947.18 were disposed of as follows, according to the judgment debtor: ‘ ‘ $1,548 was retained by the company to cover a former loan of
A different situation exists with reference to the
Order modified, and, as modified, affirmed.