ALICE KRAMER, Rеspondent, v PHOENIX LIFE INSURANCE Co. et al., Defendants. LIFEMARK S.A., Intervenor-Appellant. (And Third-Party Actions.)
Court of Appeals of New York
Argued October 12, 2010; decided November 17, 2010
15 N.Y.3d 539 | 940 N.E.2d 535 | 914 N.Y.S.2d 709
ALICE KRAMER, Respondent, v PHOENIX LIFE INSURANCE Co. et al., Defendants. LIFEMARK S.A., Intervenor-Appellant. (And Third-Party Actions.)
Argued October 12, 2010; decided November 17, 2010
POINTS OF COUNSEL
Mayer Brown LLP (John J. Tharp, Jr., of the Illinois bar, admitted pro hac vice, Lawrence R. Hamilton, Katherine E. Agonis, Robert T. Howell and J. Bishop Grewell of counsel) and Mayer Brown LLP, New York City (Hector Gonzalez of counsel), for intervenor-appellant. I.
Dorsey & Whitney LLP, New York City (Patrick J. Feeley, Christopher G. Karagheuzoff, Joshua Colangelo-Bryan and Stephen M. Raab of counsel), for Phoеnix Life Insurance Company, defendant. I.
Drinker Biddle & Reath LLP (Michael J. Miller, of the Pennsylvania bar, admitted pro hac vice, Stephen C. Baker, of the Pennsylvania bar, admitted pro hac vice, Charles J. Vinicombe, of the Pennsylvania bar, admitted pro hac vice, and Katherine L. Villanueva of counsel) for Lincoln Life & Annuity Company of New York, defendant. I. New England Mut. Life Ins. Co. v Caruso (73 NY2d 74 [1989]) and New York law do not support a result that rewards wrongdoers. (Spear v Guardian Life Ins. Co. of Am., 112 AD2d 904; New England Mut. Life Ins. Co. v Doe, 93 NY2d 122; Columbian Natl. Life Ins. Co. v Hirsch, 267 NY 605; Ilyaich v Bankers Life Ins. Co. of N.Y., 47 AD3d 614; Reliastar Life Ins. Co. of N.Y. v Leopold, 192 Misc 2d 385; Life Prod. Clearing, LLC v Angel, 530 F Supp 2d 646; Coppell v Hall, 74 US 542; McMullen v Hoffman, 174 US 639; Riggs v Palmer, 115 NY 506; Szerdahelyi v Harris, 67 NY2d 42.) II. The Lincoln Life & Annuity Company of New York policy was procured in violation of New York insurable interest law. (Majewski v Broadalbin-Perth Cent. School Dist., 91 NY2d 577; Leader v Maroney, Ponzini & Spencer, 97 NY2d 95; Matter of Washington Post Co. v New York State Ins. Dept., 61 NY2d 557; Robert C. Herd & Co. v Krawill Machinery Corp., 359 US 297; Matter of Statewide Roofing v Eastern Suffolk Bd. of Coop. Educ. Servs., First Supervisory Dist. of Suffolk County, 173 Misc 2d 514; Matter of New York Pub. Interest Research Group Straphangers Campaign v Reuter, 293 AD2d 160; St. Vincent‘s Med. Ctr. of Richmond v Vincent E. Iorio, Inc., 78 Misc 2d 968; Matter of 121-129 Broаdway Realty v New York State Div. of HumanRights, 43 AD2d 754; Holmes v Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co., 40 Misc 2d 894, 19 AD2d 947; Herman v Provident Mut. Life Ins. Co. of Phila., 886 F2d 529.)
Friedman & Wittenstein, New York City (Andrew A. Wittenstein, Stuart I. Friedman and Rajeev E. Ananda of counsel), for Alice Kramer, respondent. I. A “good faith” standard has been an integral part of the insurable interest rule for over a century. (Warnock v Davis, 104 US 775; Olmsted v Keyes, 85 NY 593; Steinback v Diepenbrock, 158 NY 24; Grigsby v Russell, 222 US 149; Finne v Walker, 257 F 698; Travelers Ins. Co. v Reiziz, 13 F Supp 819; Life Prod. Clearing, LLC v Angel, 530 F Supp 2d 646; Herman v Provident Mut. Life Ins. Co. of Phila., 886 F2d 529.) II. The rules of statutory interpretation require that all parts of a statute be read together and that the intent of the Legislature is paramount. (People v Mobil Oil Corp., 48 NY2d 192; Abood v Hospital Ambulance Serv., 30 NY2d 295; People ex rel. City of New York v Hoar, 191 Misc 292; Life Prod. Clearing, LLC v Angel, 530 F Supp 2d 646; Matter of Hogan v Culkin, 18 NY2d 330; Park W. Vil. Assoc. v Chiyoko Nishoika, 187 Misc 2d 243; Long v State of New York, 7 NY3d 269; People v Santi, 3 NY3d 234; Williams v Williams, 23 NY2d 592; Matter of Allstate Ins. Co. v Libow, 106 AD2d 110.) III. The legislative history of
Hanley Conroy Bierstein Sheridan Fisher & Hayes, LLP, New York City (Andrea B. Bierstein of counsel), Susman Godfrey LLP (Rebecca S. Tinio and Arun S. Subramanian of counsеl) and Fein & Jakab (Peter Jakab of counsel) for Jonathan S. Berck and another, respondents.
Rosenfeld & Kaplan, LLP, New York City (Tab K. Rosenfeld and Steven M. Kaplan of counsel), for intervenor-respondents. I.
Proskauer Rose LLP, New York City (John E. Failla, William C. Komaroff and Nathan R. Lander of counsel), for Institutional Life Markets Association, amicus curiae. I. The certified question should be answered “no.” (Corder v Prudential Ins. Co., 42 Misc 2d 423; Gibson v Travelers Ins. Co., 183 Misc 678; Matter of Stein, 174 Misc 465; Matter of Crucible Materials Corp. v New York Power Auth., 13 NY3d 223; Matter of Washington Post Co. v New York State Ins. Dept., 61 NY2d 557; Matter of Schinasi, 277 NY 252; Hota v Camaj, 299 AD2d 453; Life Prod. Clearing, LLC v Angel, 530 F Supp 2d 646; Matter of Medical Socy. of State of N.Y. v State of N.Y. Dept. of Health, 83 NY2d 447; Matter of Chemical Specialties Mfrs. Assn. v Jorling, 85 NY2d 382.) II. New York‘s well-settled contestability rule should not be modified. (Wright v Mutual Benefit Life Assn. of Am., 118 NY 237; New England Mut. Life Ins. Co. v Caruso, 73 NY2d 74; New England Mut. Life Ins. Co. v Doe, 93 NY2d 122; Matter of Schinasi, 277 NY 252; Klostermann v Cuomo, 61 NY2d 525.)
Bracewell & Giuliani LLP, Houston, Texas (J. Brett Busby of counsel), and Edison, McDowell & Hetherington, LLP (David T. McDowell of counsel) for American Council of Life Insurers and another, amici curiaе. I. Stranger-originated life insurance (STOLI) transactions conceal a lack of insurable interest and create serious public policy problems. (Life Prod. Clearing, LLC v Angel, 530 F Supp 2d 646; American Gen. Life Ins. Co. v Schoenthal Family, LLC, 555 F3d 1331; Wuliger v Manufacturers Life Ins. Co., 567 F3d 787; Lincoln Natl. Life Ins. Co. v Calhoun, 596 F Supp 2d 882; Warnock v Davis, 104 US 775.) II.
OPINION OF THE COURT
CIPARICK, J.
The United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit has certified the following question for our consideration:
“Does New York Insuranсe Law §§ 3205 (b)(1) and (b)(2) prohibit an insured from procuring a policy on his own life and immediately transferring the policy to a person without an insurable interest in the insured‘s life, if the insured did not ever intend to provide insurance protection for a person with an insurable interest in the insured‘s life?”
We now answer in the negative and hold that New York law permits a person to procure an insurance policy on his or her own life and immediately transfer it to one without an insurable interest in that life, even where the policy was obtained for just such a purpose.
This litigation involves several insurance policies obtained by decedent Arthur Kramer, a prominent New York attorney, on his own life, allegedly with the intent of immediately assigning the beneficial interests to investors who lacked an insurable interest in his life. In May 2008, Arthur‘s widow, plaintiff Alice Kramer, as personal representative of her husband‘s estate, filed an amended complaint in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York seeking to have the death benefits from these insurance policies paid to her. She alleges that these policies, which collectively provide some $56,200,000 in coverage, violate New York‘s insurable interest rule because her husband obtained them without the intent of providing insurance for himself or anyone with an insurable interest in his life.
As alleged in the plaintiff‘s complaint, defendant Steven Lockwood, the principal of Lockwood Pension Services, Inc.
Arthur established a second trust in August 2005 (the August trust) and named a third adult child, Liza Kramer, as beneficiary. Hudson United Bank (Hudson) was named trustee,2 also succeeded by Berck. In July 2005, defendant Phoenix Life Insurance Co. (Phoenix) issued three insurance policies to fund the August trust, with a total death benefit of $28,000,000, and Liza likewise assigned her interest to Tall Tree. In November 2005, defendant Lincoln Life & Annuity Co. of New York (Lincoln) also issued a policy to the August trust with a death benefit of $10,000,000, and Liza assigned her interest to another stranger investor, defendant Life Products Clearing, LLC (Life Products). Intervenor Lifemark alleges that it purchased a Phoenix policy from the August trust in August 2007, just over two years after its issuance. Allegedly both trust agreements were prepared by counsel for Lockwood Pension, neither Arthur Kramer nor his children ever paid premiums on the policies, and the Kramer children were never “true beneficiaries” of the trusts after the policies were issued. Phoenix and Lincoln allege that Lockwood served as broker pursuant to an “Independent Producer Contract” he had with Phoenix and a “Broker Agreement” he had with Lincoln.
Following Arthur‘s death in January 2008, Alice refused to turn over copies of the death certificate to investors holding
District Court granted mоtions to dismiss many of the parties’ claims, but denied Lockwood‘s motion to dismiss the insurers’ claims against him. Relying primarily on District Court precedent, the court stated that, according to the alleged facts:
“Lockwood breached provisions of the New York Insurance Law in that he caused to be procured directly or through assignment or other means, a contract of insurance upon the life of the decedent [Kramer] for the benefit of strangers who did not have an insurable interest in his life at the time the policy was obtained” (Kramer, 653 F Supp 2d at 388 [internal quotation marks omitted]).
The court also permitted Alice, Life Products, and Berck‘s declaratory judgment claims, counterclaims, and cross claims to go forward.3
District Court certified its order to allow for an interlocutory appeаl to the Second Circuit pursuant to
New York‘s insurable interest requirement is codified in
“Any person of lawful age may on his own initiative procure or effect a contract of insurance upon his own person for the benefit of any person, firm, association or corporation. Nothing herein shall be deemed to prohibit the immediate transfer or assignment of a contract so procured or effectuated.”
“No person shall procure or cause to be procured, directly or by assignment or otherwise any contract of insurance upon the person of another unless the benefits under such contract are payable to the person insured or his personal representatives, or to a person having, at the time when such contract is made, an insurable interest in the person insured.”
An insurable interest is defined as, “in the casе of persons closely related by blood or by law, a substantial interest engendered by love and affection” or, for others, a “lawful and substantial economic interest in the continued life, health or
The insurable interest requirement at common law was designed to distinguish an insurance contract from a wager on someone‘s life (see Ruse v Mutual Benefit Life Ins. Co., 23 NY 516, 523 [1861] [“A policy, obtained by a party who has no interest in the subject of insurance, is a mere wager policy“]). From the first, an insurable interest was required only where a policy was “obtained by one person for his own benefit upon the life of another” (id.). This basic distinction between policies obtained on the life of another and those obtained on one‘s own life is reflected in the twin provisions of section 3205 (b) (1) and (2). As we have explained:
“When one insures his or her own life, the wagering aspect is overridden by the recognized social utility of the contract as an investment to benefit others. When a third party insures another‘s life, however, the contract does not have the same manifest utility and assumes more speculative characteristics which may subject it to the same general condemnation as wagers” (Caruso, 73 NY2d at 77-78).
Plaintiff and the insurers urge us to find that an individual who procures insurance on his own life with the intent of immediately assigning the policy to one without an insurable interest is subject to the insurable interest requirement articulated
The “starting point” for discerning statutory meaning is, of course, the language of the statute itself (see Roberts v Tishman Speyer Props., L.P., 13 NY3d 270, 286 [2009]). “[W]here the language of a statute is clear and unambiguous, courts must give effect to its plain meaning” (Matter of Crucible Materials Corp. v New York Power Auth., 13 NY3d 223, 229 [2009] [internal quotation marks omitted]).
Here,
It is equally plain that a contract “so procured or effectuated” may be “immediate[ly] transfer[red] or assign[ed]” (
There is simply no support in the statute for plaintiff and the insurers’ argument that a policy obtained by the insured with the intent of immediate assignment to a stranger is invalid. The statutory text contains no intent requirement; it does not attempt to prescribe the insured‘s motivations. To the contrary, it explicitly allows for “immediate transfer or assignment” (
The statutory mandate that a policy must be obtained on an insured‘s “own initiative” requires that the decision to obtain life insurance be knowing, voluntary, and actually initiated by the insured. In common parlance, to act on “one‘s own initiative” means to act “at one‘s own discretion: independently of outside influence or control” (Merriam-Webster‘s Collegiate Dictionary 602 [10th ed 1996]). The key point is that the policy must be obtained at the insured‘s discretion. As the dissent acknowlеdges, common sense dictates that some outside influence is acceptable—advice from a broker or pension planner, for example. The notion of obtaining insurance and the details of the insurance contract need not spring exclusively from the mind of the insured. Rather, the insured‘s decision must be free from nefarious influence or coercion.
Further, the insurable interest requirement of
Our reading of the statutory language is buttressed by the legislative history of
In light of the overwhelming textual and historical evidence that the Legislature intended to allow the immediate assignment of a policy by an insured to one lacking an insurable interest, we are not persuaded by plaintiff and the insurers’ argument that
Finally, we recognize the importance of the insurable interest doctrine in differentiating between insurance policies and mere wagers (see Caruso, 73 NY2d at 77-78), and that there is some tension between the law‘s distaste for wager policies and its sanctioning an insured‘s procurement of a policy on his or her own life for the purpose of selling it. It is not our role, however, to engraft an intent or good faith requirement onto a statute that so manifestly permits an insured to immediately and freely assign such a policy.
Accordingly, the certified question should be answered in the negative.
SMITH, J. (dissenting). I would answer the certified question with a qualified yes: My view of New York law is that where, as in this case, an insured purchases a policy on his own life for no other purpose than to facilitate a wager by someone with no insurable interest, the transaction is unlawful.
I
“Stranger-originated life insurance” is a new name for an old idea. Transactions not basically different from the one before us have been known, and condemned, by courts for more than a hundred years.
In 1872, a young man named Henry Crosser took out a policy on his own life. On the same day, Crosser entered a contract with something called the Scioto Trust Association, in which Crosser agreed to assign the policy to Scioto, and Scioto agreed to pay the premiums on it. It was agreed that at Crosser‘s death, Scioto would get 90% of the insurance proceeds. When Crosser died the following year, his administrator sued Scioto, claiming all the proceeds, and the United States Supreme Court, applying pre-Erie federal common law (see Erie R. Co. v Tompkins, 304 US 64 [1938]), held the Crosser-Scioto contract invalid. The Court said that what it called “wager policies” were “independently of any statute on the subject, condemned, as being against public policy” (Warnock v Davis, 104 US 775, 779 [1882]).
Warnock also stated a broader rule: “The assignment of a policy to a party not having an insurable interest is as objectionable as the taking out of a policy in his name” (104 US at 779). That rule was too broad. New York, as the Warnock court recognized, had already rejected it (see id. at 781-782, citing Saint John v American Mut. Life Ins. Co., 13 NY 31 [1855]), and a few decades later the United States Supreme Court rejected it also (Grigsby v Russell, 222 US 149 [1911]). In Grigsby, Justice Holmes explained that a contract taken out by a third party with no insurable interest in the insured‘s life is generally more problematic than an assignment by the insured to such a person:
“A contract of insurance upon a life in which the insured has no interest is a pure wager that gives the insured a sinister counter interest in having the life come to an end. . . .
“But when the question arises upon an assignment, it is assumed that the objection to the insurance as a wager is out of the case. . . . The danger that might arise from a general license to all to insure whom they like does not exist. Obviously it is a very different thing from granting such a general license,
to allow the holder of a valid insurance upon his own life to transfer it to оne whom he, the party most concerned, is not afraid to trust” (222 US at 154-155).
Grigsby thus established the general rule, consistent with the New York common law of that day and with our current statutory law (
But this rule of free assignability has always had an exception—an exception for cases like Warnock, and like this case, where the insured, at the moment he acquires the policy, is in substance acting for a third party who wants to bet on the insured‘s death. Justice Holmes explained the exception in Grigsby, and thus distinguished Warnock, but did not overrule its narrow holding:
“[C]ases in which a person having an interest lends himself to one withоut any, as a cloak to what is, in its inception, a wager, have no similarity to those where an honest contract is sold in good faith . . . .
“[Warnock v Davis] was one of the type just referred to, the policy having been taken out for the purpose of allowing a stranger association to pay the premiums and receive the greater part of the benefit, and having been assigned to it at once.” (222 US at 156.)
There are good reasons why the common law, as reflected in both Warnock and Grigsby, invalidated stranger-originated life insurance. Even if we ignore the possibility that the owner of the policy will be tempted to murder the insured, this kind of “insurance” has nothing to be said for it. It exists only to enable a bettor with superior knowledge of the insured‘s health to pick an insurance compаny‘s pocket.
In a sense, of course, all insurance is a bet, but for most of us who buy life insurance it is a bet we are happy to lose. We recognize that the insurance company is more likely than not to make a profit on the policy, receiving more in premiums than it will ever pay out in proceeds, and that is the result we hope for; we pay the premiums in order to protect against the risk that we will die sooner than expected. But stranger-originated life insurance does not protect against a risk; it does not make sense
When Grigsby was decided, New York common law had anticipated the federal common law, adopting not only the rule of Grigsby—that life insurance policies are, in general, freely assignable—but also the exception recognized in Grigsby—that the assignment cannot be used as a “cloak to what is, in its inception, a wager.” In Steinback v Diepenbrock (158 NY 24, 31 [1899]), answering an objection to the rule of free assignаbility, we observed:
“[I]t is said that if the payee of a policy be allowed to assign it, a safe and convenient method is provided by which a wagering contract can be safely made. The insured, instead of taking out a policy payable to a person having no insurable interest in his life, can take it out to himself and at once assign it to such person. But such an attempt would not prove successful, for a policy issued and assigned, under such circumstances, would be none the less a wagering policy because of the form of it. The intention of the parties procuring the policy would determine its character, which the courts would unhesitatingly declare in accordance with the facts, reading the policy and the assignment togethеr, as forming part of one transaction.”
Under New York common law, therefore, the purchasers of stranger-originated life insurance could not prevail in a case like this: the law would look through the form of the transaction, and “[t]he intention of the parties procuring the policy would determine its character.” It hardly seems open to doubt, on the facts before us, that the intention of the purchasers here was to bet on Arthur Kramer‘s death, and that Kramer‘s intention was to be compensated for helping them do so.
II
The majority holds, in effect, that
While statutes relating to the insurable interest requirement in New York date at least to 1892 (L 1892, ch 690, adding Insurance Law § 55), it is enough for present purposes to go back to 1984, when Insurance Law § 3205 (very similar to a predecessor statute, Insurance Law § 146) was enacted, containing the following language:
“(b) (1) Any person of lawful age may on his own initiative procure or effect a contract of insurance upon his own person for the benefit of any person, firm, association or corporation.
“(2) No person shall procure or cause to be procured, directly or by assignment or otherwise any contract of insurance upon the person of another unless the benefits under such contract аre payable to the person insured or his personal representatives, or to a person having, at the time when such contract is made, an insurable interest in the person insured.”
Thus the 1984 version of the statute protected the insured‘s right to buy a policy and name any beneficiary he or she liked, but otherwise prohibited life insurance where the beneficiary had no insurable interest. It did not specifically address the question of an assignment by the insured to a person lacking an insurable interest; it did not restate the long-standing common-law rule that, in general, life insurance contracts were freely assignable, even to such assignees.
This omission became a problem in 1991, when the United States Internal Revenue Service ruled that a plan to prоcure a policy on one‘s life with the intent to transfer the policy immediately to a charity would violate
“Any person of lawful age may on his own initiative procure or effect a contract of insurance upon his own person for the benefit of any person, firm, association or corporation. Nothing herein shall be deemed to prohibit the immediate transfer or assignment of a contract so procured or effectuated.”
The 1991 amendment gave statutory form to the long-established New York rule that life insurance contracts may be freely assigned, even to someone without an insurable interest. But there was also, as I have explained, a long-established exception to the rule: Assignability could not be used to cloak a third-party wagering transaction. I see no reason to think that the Legislature, in codifying the general rule, meant to abolish the exception. The majority opinion offers neither any reason for the Legislature to consider abolishing it, nor any evidence that the Legislature thought it was doing so. Indeed, nothing in the history of the statute suggests that the Legislature intended to alter the common law of insurable interest in any way: the sponsor‘s memorandum says its purpose was to “restate and clarify” it (id.).
As I read the 1991 amendment, it codified not only the free assignability rule, but also the anti-wagering exception to it—although I admit it could have expressed the exception much more clearly. The new second sentence of
The majority today rejects this analysis, and holds in substance that
The majority‘s negative answer to the Second Circuit‘s question, though I think it is wrong, may be of limited importance. Any harm done may have already been repaired by the 2009 enactment of a statutory prohibition on stranger-originated life insurance (see majority op at 549 n 5). The new statute may create its own problems; insurable interest rules, as our opinions in this case surely demonstrate, are tricky to handle. But I view thе new statute as an attempt to implement what I think has always been the public policy of New York to condemn wagers on the early death of an insured.
Chief Judge LIPPMAN and Judges GRAFFEO, READ and JONES concur with Judge CIPARICK; Judge SMITH dissents in a separate opinion in which Judge PIGOTT concurs.
Following certification of a question by the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit and acceptance of the question by this Court pursuant to
Notes
Notably, District Court determined that the insurers could not attempt to void the policies, as they had been issued over two years earlier and so are incontestible (see
We have considered Phoenix and Lincoln‘s arguments relating to the incontestability issue, but decline their request to expand the scope of the certified question. Thus, we are denying Alice and Lifemark‘s motions in this Court to strike the portions of the insurers’ briefs addressing whether the incontestability rule should apply here (15 NY3d 901 [2010] [decided today]).
“the assignment, transfer, sale, release, devise or bequest of any portion of:
“(A) the death benefit;
“(B) the ownership of the policy; or
“(C) any beneficial interest in the policy, or in a trust . . . that owns the policy” (see
In addition to regulating the life settlement industry (see
It also prohibits anyone from entering into a valid life settlement contract for two years following the issuance of a policy, with some exceptions (see
“Any person of lawful age may on his own initiative procure or effect a contract of insurance upon his own person for the benefit of any person, firm, association or corporation, but no person shall procure or cause to be procured, directly or by assignment or otherwise any contract of insurance upon the person of another unless the benefits under such contract are payable to the person insured or . . . to a person having, at the time when such contract is made, an insurable interest in the person insured” (L 1939, ch 882, adding Insurance Law § 146 [1]).
