278 Pa. 300 | Pa. | 1924
Opinion by
In 1918 the Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York, defendant, insured the life of Archie J. Taylor of Somerset County for $5,000, the policy naming “his executors, administrators or assigns” as the beneficiary. In 1921 Mr. Taylor exercised the right reserved to him in the policy of changing the beneficiary to “the insured’s creditor, Janet Boyd McKinley, if living, if not, to the insured’s estate”; reserving to himself the right
As to the merits of the respective claims it is not necessary to express an opinion, for, as a matter of practice, it was error to decide that question in this preliminary proceeding. The case is ruled by Schmidt Brewing Company v. Pittsburgh Life & Trust Co., 256 Pa. 363, where Mr. Justice Mestrezat, speaking for the court, says, “The proceeding was instituted under section 4 of the Act of March 11, 1836, P. L. 76, which provides, inter alia, as follows: ‘The defendant in any action which shall be brought in the said court for the recovery of money,..... .which shall have come lawfully to his hands or possession^íñág^at any time after the declaration filed, and before plea pleaded, by a suggestion to be filed of record, disclaim all interest in the subject-matter of such action, and offer to bring the same into court, ......and if he shall also allege, under oath or affirma
The same rule applies on an application for a sheriff’s interpleader. Delivering the opinion of the court in Book v. Sharpe, 189 Pa. 44, Mr. Justice Mitchell, says (p. 47): “An interpleader is for the protection of the\ stakeholder, and the only requisite to entitle him to suclr protection is that he shall be in danger of attack from. two quarters without fault of Ms own. A sheriff is liable to a suit by plaintiff in an execution if he refuses to levy and it should turn out that the goods were subject to the execution. On the other hand he is exposed to suit by the owner if he does levy on goods not so sub
The intent of the statutes is to protect a defendant, who is a mere stakeholder, from the risk of a double liability and also from the expense of litigation. That, in the opinion of the court, he might- ultimately escape the former, is no ground for refusing the interpleader. It is not questioned that defendant brought itself within the terms of the statute and the relief prayed for should have been granted.
Counsel for both sides treated the Act of 1836 as here applicable, and for the purpose of the case we have so considered it, although aside from the statute the issue prayed for should have been awarded under the common law.
The order discharging the rule for an interpleader was an abuse of judicial discretion and is reversed with a procedendo.