39 S.W. 1097 | Tex. App. | 1897
The facts made to appear upon the trial of the case are, in substance, these:
1. Wilbert Irwin, Jr., while unmarried, applied for and obtained a policy in the Travelers Insurance Company, which provided an indemnity payable to himself in case he was injured by accident, and insuring his life against death by accident in the sum of $5000. The application directed that the policy should be written payable, in case of death, to J.W. Irwin, the sister of the applicant. The policy was written in accordance with the application, and obligated the insurance company, in case of death by accident, to pay $5000 to the sister, J.W. Irwin, who was a minor at the time the policy was procured and at the time of the trial of this case. The policy was delivered by the assured to one Tartt, to be by him held as trustee.
2. After the issuance of the policy, Wilbert Irwin, Jr., married the plaintiff in this suit, and was subsequently killed in a railroad accident. After his death suit was brought upon the policy by the guardian of the sister in the State of Wisconsin; the insurance company caused Mrs. Eva Irwin to be made a party defendant, and she was served with notice of the fact in Texas, where she then and now resides. This suit is brought by Mrs. Eva Irwin against the insurance company and J.W. Irwin, the beneficiary named in the policy, and she seeks to recover the title and possession of the policy, and to restrain the insurance company from paying the insurance to J.W. Irwin.
3. The policy contains this provision: "A copy of any assignment shall be given within thirty days to the company, which shall not be responsible for its validity." There is no provision in the policy, or the application for the policy, which reserves to the assured the right to change the beneficiary named therein, unless the above clause should be construed to have that effect. The trial below resulted in favor of the defendants, for whom the court directed the jury to find. The clause in the policy quoted is clearly not a reservation to the assured of the right to change the beneficiary. It relates to an assignment of the policy, and *686 must be considered as referring to an assignment by the owner of the beneficial interest, namely, the beneficiary therein named.
The question presented for our decision arises upon the exclusion of evidence offered by the plaintiff. The evidence tendered and rejected was to the effect that Wilbert Irwin, Jr., after his marriage, directed the insurance company to change the beneficiary in the policy from his sister, J.W. Irwin, to his wife, Mrs. Eva Irwin, and notified the trustee Tartt that he desired the policy held for the benefit of his wife. And further, that the policy was obtained from the trustee by the father of J.W. Irwin through the false representation that he wanted it for the benefit of Mrs. Eva Irwin, and that his daughter would not claim the benefit of it. Upon the rejection of this evidence arises the question, did the assured have the right to cause the beneficiary in the policy to be changed from his sister to his wife?
Upon this question there seems to be considerable conflict in authority. In 52 American Reports, 146, 147, in an editorial note following the case of Currier v. Insurance Company, Mr. Freeman recognizes this conflict as being irreconcilable, and cites a number of cases which he regards as conflicting upon the question. The editor himself expresses the view that those cases holding to the proposition that the assured, who takes out the policy, pays the premium, and retains possession of the policy, has the right to change the beneficiary, announce the correct doctrine. One of the cases cited as holding the contrary proposition, that the assured does not have the right to change the beneficiary after the issuance of the policy, is the case of Ricker v. Insurance Company, 27 Minnesota, 193. This case is a strong case, and clearly announces the doctrine that the moment the policy is issued the beneficiary named therein has a vested interest in the policy, which can not be changed by any act of the assured without the consent of such beneficiary.
Our Supreme Court, in the case of Splawn v. Chew,
In the case of Bank v. Hume,
In such case the right of the beneficiary named in the policy is treated as being as firmly fixed as if the contract had been entered into with the beneficiary himself. Without going into a discussion of the principles underlying this proposition, we feel constrained to adopt the line of authorities approved by our Supreme Court in the Splawn case, above mentioned.
The court below did not err in holding that the sister named as the beneficiary in the policy had a fixed interest in the contract of insurance, which could not be divested by the assured by subsequent direction to the company to change the beneficiary originally designated by him; and therefore it was not error to exclude the evidence tendered.
Finding no error committed upon the trial of the cause, the judgment of the court below is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Writ of error refused.
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