34 A. 148 | R.I. | 1896
This is a bill for an account. The case shows the following facts: The complainant was the holder of a policy of insurance for ten thousand dollars, issued on his life by the Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York. The policy was a twenty year endowment, maturing January 1, 1886, the premiums on which were payable quarterly and in full during the first ten years of the policy. The last premium was due on October 1, 1876. On March 6, 1873, the complainant assigned the policy to John T. Mauran, formerly of Providence, deceased, as collateral security for his endorsement of Manton's note for three thousand dollars, payable in four months. On August 20, 1875, Mauran, having received other securities from Manton for other indebtedness, gave to Manton a receipt reciting that he held this policy as security for his endorsement of Manton's notes for three thousand dollars. On August 6, 1876, the complainant assigned the policy, subject to the prior assignment to Mauran, to Martin C. Stokes, defendant's intestate, as collateral security for a note for $3,212.07 made by Manton, payable to the order of Stokes on demand. Neither of these assignments contained any provision authorizing a surrender or sale of the policy. The policy was delivered by Manton to Mauran at the time of its assignment to him on March 6, 1873, and remained in his possession until it passed into the hands of his guardian. Manton continued to pay the premiums on the policy until April 1, 1876, and the three remaining premiums were paid by Mauran, though the complainant claims that one at least of these was subsequently repaid by him to Mauran. The note for the endorsement of which the assignment to Mauran was given was made prior to the assignment to Mauran, and by an agreement between Manton and Mauran was to be renewed until January 1, 1878. But the last renewal was made February 22, 1876, and the note given on that renewal became due June 25, 1876, after Manton had ceased to pay the premiums on the policy, and was taken up by Mauran. *407 On July 9, 1878, Henry C. Cranston was appointed guardian of Mauran, and the policy and the overdue note came into his hands as guardian. Cranston, as guardian, in 1881, proposed to the company to surrender the policy for its cash value, but was met by the objection that notice of the assignment to Stokes had been given to the company, and the assignment to him entered on the books of the company, before the assignment to Mauran, and consequently the company could not pay the value of the policy to him unless Stokes should release his claim or join in the receipt. Cranston applied to Stokes to sign the receipt, which Stokes did. The full surrender value of the policy, $8,079.50, was thereupon, to wit, on May 18, 1881, paid to Cranston as guardian, who, after deducting from it the premiums paid by Mauran, amounting with interest to $772.35, paid to Stokes $3,771.43 of the residue on account of the note held by him, and retained for himself, as guardian, on account of the note taken up by Mauran, $3,535.72. No demand by Stokes for the payment of the note held by him had been made on Manton prior to the surrender of the policy. Nor was any notice given to Manton, either by Cranston as guardian or by Stokes, of an intention to surrender the policy, and Manton was not apprised of the surrender until about six months later, when he heard of it from the company.
The surrender of the policy to the company for its cash value was equivalent to a sale of it to the company. Without raising any objection to it on any other ground, we are of the opinion that the action was unauthorized, because no notice of an intention to surrender was given to Manton by either Cranston or Stokes, so that he might have a reasonable opportunity to redeem the policy. And, further, so far as Stokes was concerned, Manton was in no default, no demand on him for the payment of Stokes' note having been made. Dewey v. Bowman,
This suit is against the administrator on the estate of Stokes alone, and the point is taken that the bill ought not *408
to be maintained because Stokes, in signing the receipt, did nothing more than he might have been compelled to do by Cranston as guardian, since the assignment to Stokes was subject to the prior assignment to Mauran. We do not think the point is tenable. It is by no means clear that the court would have felt warranted in decreeing a surrender of the policy, for at the time of the surrender all the premiums had been paid, so that it was in fact a paid up policy having less than five years to run. Neither of the assignments authorized a surrender or sale of the policy, and it was adequate security for the premiums which Mauran had paid and for the indebtedness for which it was pledged. Whitteker v.The Charleston Gas Co.,
We are of the opinion that the complainant is entitled to an account.