39 Misc. 2d 18 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1963
At a time when the testator maintained a checking account and a thrift account with a trust company he executed and delivered to the trust company his promissory note in the amount of $17,000. As security for the payment of the note the testator assigned a policy of the Prudential Life Insurance Company and a policy of the National Life Insurance Company in each of which his wife was named as beneficiary. By the terms of the note the bank balances on deposit to the credit of the testator constituted further security. It also was agreed that such security would apply to subsequently incurred obligations of the testator. Two weeks later the testator executed and delivered to the trust company another promissory note in the amount of $10,000.
Upon the testator’s death his indebtedness on the two notes, amounting to $27,351.40, was satisfied by the trust company from the proceeds of the insurance policies. At this time there was a balance of $3,027.11 in the testator’s checking account and a balance of $5,209 in his thrift account. The latter account was subject to a pledge, concededly prior to the claim of the trust company, and the sum of $3,250 was paid from the proceeds of the thrift account to this secured creditor. The representative of the testator’s estate holds the net balance of these bank accounts totaling $4,986.11.
It is the claim of the testator’s widow, as beneficiary of the insurance policies, that she is subrogated to the rights of the trust company and is entitled to reimbursement from the estate of the amounts by which the insurance proceeds were diminished in the satisfaction of the debt due to the trust company. This contention is supported by authority (Walzer v. Walzer, 3 N Y 2d 8) and is challenged here only because it is the position of the widow that she has a prior claim to the bank balances. The estate is insolvent and, by reason of this fact, application of the principle of subrogation will prevent the full payment of creditors ’ claims.
The concept of placing life insurance proceeds beyond the reach of the insured’s creditors is not new in the law and, while some suggestion has been made in this proceeding that section 166 of the Insurance Law might be applicable, the record is barren of proof in support of that intimation.
Although there is no dearth of decisions holding that an insurance beneficiary is entitled to recover from an estate the amount deducted from insurance proceeds by a lending institution (Walzer v. Walzer, supra; Friedlander v. Scheer, 281 App. Div. 808, affg. 1 Misc 2d 899; Matter of Stafford, 278 App. Div. 612, affg. 98 N. Y. S. 2d 714; Matter of Cummings, 200 Misc. 467;
An early decision which has played a major role in the development of the theory upon which the cited cases rest is Barbin v. Moore (85 N. H. 362; Ann. 83 A. L. R. 77). In that case a policy of life insurance was pledged by the insured for the payment of a debt which also was secured by a mortgage on real property. There, as here, the insurance was resorted to for the payment of the debt and the estate was unable to pay the insured’s general creditors in full. The claim of the beneficiaries was not asserted as a creditor of the estate but upon the basis that a fund belonging to the beneficiaries by subrogation came into the hands of the estate representative. It was held that this position was sound and the beneficiaries had the privilege of electing to pursue the security or to proceed as successors to the lender’s general claim against the estate.
It would seem that the rationale of Barbin v. Moore (supra) is consistent with the reasoning of the decisions in this jurisdiction and that an extension of such reasoning to meet the facts of the instant case would require the conclusion that the insurance beneficiary, as a subrogee of the lending bank, is entitled to enforce her claim against the bank accounts. There is nothing to indicate that the insured had any contrary intent (cf. Matter of Kelley, 251 App. Div. 847, affg. 160 Misc. 421). Insofar as the bank balances in the hands of the administrator may be inadequate to satisfy the widow’s claim her position as to any unpaid balance is that of a general creditor.