159 N.Y.S. 284 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1916
On April 1, 1913, defendant company issued to Frank Yon Ertfelda its policy of life insurance, whereby, in consideration of a weekly payment of twenty cents, it insured his life for the sum of $244, payable at death. The insured died on December twenty-sixth of the same year. Plaintiff, claiming to be an assignee of the policy, brings this action to recover its amount. He has recovered on the theory that he is the owner of the policy. In his complaint, however, he alleged: “That shortly after the issuing of said policy, with the knowledge and consent of the defendant, the policy was transferred by the insured to the plaintiff, as security for money owing by the insured to the plaintiff and in consideration of the plaintiff paying the weekly premiums thereon; that said policy was duly trans
Defendant, by its answer, admitted issuing the policy, put in issue the other allegations, and alleged as an affirmative defense that Von Ertfelda had falsely represented and warranted in his application that he had never used liquors to excess, whereas for a number of years he had been a confirmed user of liquor and drank to excess; and for a third defense, that plaintiff had, for a valuable consideration, released defendant from liability under the policy; and for a fourth defense, that plaintiff is without legal capacity to sue and is not a proper party to this action.
The case was tried before the City Court of Utica.
Plaintiff, as a witness, gave evidence of a transaction between himself and the insured in May, 1913, in which after some conversation the policy and premium receipt book were delivered to plaintiff and plaintiff paid the overdue premiums and agreed to pay future premiums and to pay the funeral expenses of insured. A paper was executed at this time by insured to plaintiff in the nature of an order on the insurance company to pay the proceeds of the policy to plaintiff.
If plaintiff’s case rested on this paper alone it would not be sufficient to vest title to the policy in plaintiff, but if the parties intended that plaintiff should become the owner of the policy, we think what was said and done at this time was sufficient to effectuate such intent. The City Court has, in effect, decided that there was such an intent and that plaintiff acquired title to the policy, and the County Court has found no error in this decision. We cannot say that it has not sufficient support in the evidence.
At the time of the alleged assignment of the policy, insured was indebted to plaintiff to the amount of forty or fifty dollars. This was increased before the death of insured to one hundred and twenty-six dollars. Plaintiff incurred an expense of sixty dollars for insured’s funeral expenses, and plaintiff
After the death of insured plaintiff delivered the policy and the premium receipt book to an agent of defendant and made claim for the amount of the policy. Some days later defendant’s agent called at plaintiff’s saloon and said he had some money for plaintiff and requested plaintiff to sign his name to a paper, which plaintiff did without reading it, supposing, as he says, that he was to receive the full amount of the policy. After he had signed, however, the agent laid down upon the bar seven dollars and twenty cents, being the amount of premiums which plaintiff had paid. This plaintiff refused to accept, but the agent left the money there and took the paper which plaintiff had signed away with him. This paper, it seems, was a check for seven dollars and twenty cents to plaintiff’s order, and plaintiff’s signature was written under the following indorsement on the back of the check: “This check is in full payment of claim under policy or policies mentioned thereon, and the payee accepts it as such by endorsement below. Ho other receipt required.”
The question principally litigated in the City Court was as to whether insured had been in the habit of using liquor to excess before he took out this policy. It appeared that plaintiff kept a saloon and that the insured had been employed more or less about the saloon in cleaning it out.
The City Court decided this issue in favor of plaintiff, and the County Court has affirmed it as a fair question of fact, and, we think, rightly so. The learned county judge has written an opinion in which he holds, and, we think, correctly, that there was also a question of fact for the City Court as to the validity of the release which plaintiff signed upon the back of the check, in view of the circumstances under which plaintiff’s signature to that paper was obtained, We think that question was rightly decided in favor of plaintiff, especially in view of the fact that plaintiff’s testimony as to how that signature was obtained was in no way contradicted. Ho point is made that plaintiff was bound to tender back the seven dollars and twenty cents before bringing1 this action.
The policy by its terms is payable “ to the executors or admin
The question is whether, in view of this form of policy which is new with this company, there can be a valid assignment of the policy.
We find but one authority in this State upon the question, which is the case of Heffernan v. Prudential Ins. Co. (88 Misc. Rep. 93). This was an Appellate Term case in the First Department on appeal from the City Court of New York. The defendant in that case had not pleaded the assignment of the policy alleged in the complaint as a ground of forfeiture, but had moved to dismiss the complaint at the conclusion of the plaintiff’s case upon that ground. This motion was reserved and later denied and judgment was given in favor of the plaintiff upon two grounds: First. That defendant was estopped from availing itself of the clause against assignment by acceptance of the premiums paid by plaintiff after defendant had become apprised of the assignment; and, second, that the avoiding of the contract by breach of the condition against assignment was a matter of special defense and could not be availed of unless pleaded. On appeal it was held that this decision was erroneous inasmuch, as there was no proof that defendant had received payment of premiums from the plaintiff or that any payments had been, in fact, made after defendant had knowledge of the assignment. As to the question of pleading it was held that while the defendant could not offer affirmative proof of a breach of a condition subsequent without pleading it, that rule did not apply to a case where the facts relied upon as a defense are pleaded and proved by the plaintiff as a part of plaintiff’s case, and the conclusion reached
In the cases cited in the opinion of the learned county judge to show that a life insurance policy is assignable, namely, Steinback v. Diepenbrock (158 N. Y. 24); McGlynn v. Curry (82 App. Div. 431); Griffin v. Prudential Ins. Co. (43 id. 499) and McNevins v. Prudential Ins. Co. (57 Misc. Rep. 608), no such question was presented because there was no clause in the policies making them void in case of an assignment.
In the Griffin case there was a condition that the policy should not be assigned unless in writing, but there was no condition that an assignment not in writing should render the policy void, and the court held that a failure to comply with the condition would not defeat the vesting of the legal title in the assignee and cited Marcus v. St. Louis Mutual Life Ins. Co. (68 N. Y. 625) as authority for this proposition. The head note to that case is: “ A policy of life insurance contained a clause declaring that it could be assigned only on the written approval of the company; it did not declare that a violation of the provision would avoid the policy. In an action thereon, held (Miller, J., dissenting), that a violation of this provision did hot involve a forfeiture; and that an assignee could enforce the policy, although the insurer had not consented to the assignment.”
We are aware of no principle or authority by which the clause forfeiting the policy in case of its assignment can be condemned as invalid, but we think we need not examine the question further, as we think the forfeiture, if there was one, was waived.
It is contended that the forfeiture clause was waived by the receipt of premiums from plaintiff after the assignment. But it does not appear that defendant had knowledge of the alleged assignment or that the premiums subsequently paid were, in fact, paid by plaintiff in person or to defendant’s knowledge. It may be, as plaintiff’s counsel asserts, that the Mr. Leach who was present at plaintiff’s saloon at the time the alleged
Assuming that it was not necessary for defendant to plead the alleged forfeiture in its answer, inasmuch as the facts appeared sufficiently from the complaint, we think it can and should be held that defendant waived the forfeiture by recognizing a liability under the policy to plaintiff when it paid plaintiff seven dollars and twenty cents after the death of the insured, accepted from plaintiff the policy and premium book and undertook to secure from plaintiff a receipt or release discharging defendant from further liability on the policy. Very little is required to waive a forfeiture under a life insurance contract after the capital fact of the death of the insured. Any act of the insurer after knowledge of the facts which treats the contract as still in force is usually held by the courts to constitute a waiver of forfeiture. The seven dollars and twenty cents was paid by defendant to plaintiff under the policy and not otherwise, and necessarily recognized that the policy was, to some extent at least, in force as an existing contract. The payment must have been made to plaintiff as assignee, for the indorsement on the back of the check which plaintiff was required to sign states: “This check is in full payment of claim under policy or policies mentioned thereon and the payee accepts it as such by endorsement below. No other receipt required.”
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
All concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.