| Ky. Ct. App. | Jun 2, 1892

JUDGE PRYOR

delivered the opinion oe the court.

G-. Baylor Allen, being tbe owner of a farm in tbecounty of Sbelby, bad two policies of insurance on tbebuildings, tbe one issued'by tbe Home Insurance Company and tbe other by tbe Liverpool and London and *272Q-lobe Insurance Company. The two policies expired on the 20th of August, in the year 1885, and had been issued and the premiums paid for several years prior to the date at which the insurance terminated.

On the 26th of January, 1885, the insured, Baylor Allen, conveyed this land to his wife, Anna M. Allen, the deed being lodged for record on the next day. On the day the deed was filed with the clerk, Mrs. Merriwether, a creditor of Baylor Allen instituted an action against him for a large sum of money, and had an attachment levied on this land upon which the buildings stood, and in a few days thereafter, by an amended petition, assailed the conveyance to the wife for actual fraud.

On the 26th of March, 1885, the husband, by the consent of the insurance companies, assigned and transferred to his wife, Ann, all his right, title and interest in and to these policies, and in the month of June following, the ■property insured was destroyed by fire. On the hearing • of the case between Mrs. Merriwether as plaintiff and Allen and wife defendants, the conveyance to the wife was held fraudulent and the land subjected to the payment of her debt.

The defense in the court below was presented in several paragraphs: First — That Mrs. Allen had no insurable interest in the property.

Second — That the policies became void because it was ■stipulated that if the interest of the assured in the property be any other than the entire, unconditional and sole ^ownership thereof for the use and benefit of the assured,, the policy should be void.

Third — That the consent of the companies to the assign*273ment of the policies was procured by fraud in the concealment from them of facts material to the risk.

That one may have an insurable interest in property, although under a fraudulent conveyance, was held in the cases of Phoenix Insurance Co. v. Mitchell, 67 Ill., 43" court="Ill." date_filed="1873-01-15" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/phœnix-insurance-co-of-hartford-v-mitchell-6956466?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="6956466">67 Ill., 43, and in Lerow v. Wilmarth’s Trustee, 9 Allen, 382. These decisions proceed on the idea that such deeds are good inter partes and the title passes as to all except the creditors of the grantors.

The creditors may not assail the conveyance, and, besides, in a court of equity a conveyance by the husband to the wife might well be sustained upon the ground that it was based on both a legal and equitable consideration, and still be void as to creditors. A promise by the husband to convey his land in consideration of what moneys or estate he had theretofore reduced to possession and belonging to his wife would, if executed by a conveyance, be upheld in a court of equity; and while the facts might not avail the wife as against the creditors of the husband, as between the husband and wife the conveyance would be held valid.

It seems, however, in this case, from the answer of the defendants, and this is being considered upon the demurrer, that the wife and the husband failed to make known to the defendants the circumstances under which this transfer was made, and the fact that the creditor at that time had his -attachment levied on the property with a view of subjecting it to the payment of a large debt.

The attachment created a lien on the property. The husband was much involved, and the efiect of the assignment of the policy to the wife was to give to her, regard*274less of the claims of creditors, the benefit of this insurance in the event the property was destroyed.

It was a new contract between the companies and Mrs. Allen by which she became the assignee of the policies; and it was her duty, or that of the husband, when procuring the assignment, to make known to the insurers all the facts material to the risks.

“ Any change,” says Mr. May in his work on Insurance, “ in the state of health of the person or condition of the property to be insured, pending the negotiations, if such changes would naturally have any influence on the judgment of the insurers, must be made known, as the state of facts existing at the time of the completion of the contract will be deemed to have been the basis of the contract.” (Yol. 1, sec. 190.) Here is-not a mere renewal of the policy, but an assignment to a third person who becomes, if entitled to recover, the sole beneficiary to the exclusion of the husband and his creditors. The land upon which the buildings stand and the buildings are liable to the husband’s debts as against any claim of the wife, but to place the wife in a condition where she may have -a part of this realty against any creditor’s claim, the husband causes the policies to be assigned to the wife, when all the property, including the buildings, would not satisfy the demands of creditors. The only way then in which the wife can reap the benefit of the assignment is by the destruction of the property; and, while no such motive is attributed to the parties in this case, it is manifest that an insurance agent of ordinary business capacity upon such a state of fact presented to him would hesitate to issue a policy or consent to its assignment to the wife.

*275Whether the mere levy of an attachment constitutes such a lien as to affect an insurance obtained otherwise in good faith, is one of doubt, and we are inclined to think it would not. But in a case where the wife is the assignee of the policies and the debts of the husband are sufficient to take all the estate conveyed to the wife, and are in fact asserted against it when the policy is assigned to the wife, it seems to us a concealment of these facts, or a failure to disclose them, must prevent a recovery on the policy.

It was the duty of the insured to make full disclosure to the companies with which they were contracting of every fact material to the risk and that was unknown to the insurer. '

In our opinion the demurrer should have been overruled as to the third paragraph of the answer. The judgment in each case is reversed and remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.

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