15 Mo. App. 68 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1884
delivered the opinion of the court.
Plaintiff alleges iu her petition that defendant, as her agent, collected for her from the New York Life Insurance Company §3,000, which he refuses to pay to her.
Defendant, after a general denial, specially denies that he collected the sum named as agent of plaintiff. For a further answer defendant says, that the firm of Adolphus Meier & Co., of which defendant is a member, received from plaintiff a check of the New York Life Insurance Company, to her order and by her indorsed, which check represented the proceeds of a policy on the life of her husband ; that the firm collected $2,837.58, the amount of the check, and holds the same, subject to charges and offsets, for the right owner. These charges are set out in an itemized account of insurance premiums paid from year to year, from the 29th of September, 1865, to September, 1881, inclusive, which with interest amounted to $1,575.26. The answer alleges that Thomas J. Meier, the husband of plaintiff, in 1852, insured his life in the New York Life Insurance Company, that neither he nor plaintiff could pay
There was a replication as to the new matter.
The cause was tried without a jury, and there was a finding and judgment for plaintiff for $3,024.83, that is, for the whole amount received from the insurance company and interest.
Plaintiff introduced testimony tending to show that, upon the death of her husband, she went to the office of the insurance company with her brother-in-law, the defendant, where she signed certain papers which she did not understand, being ignorant of business and not able to read Eng
Defendant introduced the agreement between Herman Meier and plaintiff as stated in the answer. He testified that his brother Thomas, being unable to pay the premiums upon the policy in question, which was for the benefit of his wife, Herman Meier paid them under this agreement until he failed and left town in 1865 ; the policy and agreement than came into the hands of defendant; but he does not recollect what was said or from whom he got them. Defendant paid the premiums from that time on, because his brother Thomas could not. Thomas was constantly indebted to defendant for advances made by defendant to him and his family to help them along.. These advances and all money paid to or for Thomas, including these premiums, were charged to Thomas on the books of Adolphus Meier
“I stated all the circumstances about it; that I had supported the family for twenty years, and if I counted the money up that I had given, it would be a large amount; and to show good feeling, I knew the dangers she would have in handling the money, and to get regular interest, I made the proposition that I would relieve her of the premiums and interest on it if she would leave the money under my control—[ did not say in any business—I would give her eight per cent, and then she would have a regular income; that there might be waste and speculation by her and her daughters, and it might be lost; that I paid the premiums with, a view of securing it for her old age. That she declined. Then I told her I was willing to pay the amount, deducting the premiums and interest I had paid. She could not refuse that, for she had no claim to it.
1. The contention of appellant is that, on the undisputed facts of the case as' they appear from the above testimony the plaintiff was entitled to recover only the balance after deducting the premiums and interest paid by defendant; and that the court erred in giving a declaration of law that “ the voluntary payment of premiums to keep up this policy gave defendant no legal right to reimbursement without an agreement to that effect by plaintiff.”
We are of opinion that the finding and judgment were warranted by the evidence, and that there is nothing to the prejudice of plaintiff in the refusal of the declarations of law asked by the defendant.
There is no evidence that plaintiff authorized the payment of the premiums by defendant, or knew or suspected that they were being paid by him. She swears she thought they were paid by her .husband’s money; and, for all that appears, she thinks so yet. Defendant does not state that either Herman or Thomas Meier asked him to pay the premiums. He kept the policy alive out of a natural concern for the interests of his brother’s family, who, he says, were, to a large extent, dependant upon him. There is no question of adopting the acts of an agent by ratification, because the money belongs to plaintiff, whether she ratifies or repudiates the action of defendant in paying these premiums. That act is done, and caunot be undone ; nor can its effects-upon the policy be impaired. The act of paying these premiums needs no validation. It does not appear how plaintiff can ratify as the acts of her agent, acts that were done by virtue of no agency, express or implied. One paying premiums on a life policy is not necessarily the agent of the person to whom the proceeds are payable on the death of the insured. If A sells B’s horse without any warrant from B, and B knowing all the circumstances
There is a policy of the law which, in the absence of any
If, contrary to the established doctrine that one can not be made the debtor of another by the mere act of the would-be creditor, and against the will, or without the co-operation, of the debtor, we are, in the case of life insurance contracts, to admit this proposed exception to the general rule, where are we to draw the line? Is the widow and beneficiary to take the fund subject to any claims of any and all persons who can show that they have lent money to the insured husband to pay his premiums, or paid them, or any of them at his request? If so, the beneficiary will take her money from the insurance company under circumstances of risk similar to those attaching to the purchase of stock without knowing what amount may have been paid upon it; and she may become liable for a larger amount in .premiums than she receives from the company. And by what rule are we to confine the right of recovery to a near relative of the deceased, or to limit it to pre
The evidence on behalf of the defendant goes to this, that a benevolent relative, recognizing a duty to aid the family of his brother, has kept up his brother’s policy of life insurance, hoping that, in the event of his brother’s death, his own burthen of aiding his brother’s family would be lessened. He had done this without any understanding or agreement with the beneficiary, and, so far as appears, without any special agreement with his brother, who was entitled to regard the yearly sums paid for premiums and charged to him yearly as paid, as a loan to be repaid by him out of his individual estate, and not as any lien upon the provision which he had attempted to make for his widow by insuring his life. After the death of the insured, this brother, who paid about half the premiums accruing during the existence of the policy, prudently proposes to retail! the proceeds coming from the insurance company, and which the widow has authorized him to collect for her, in order to secure a revenue for his brother’s family. The widow and sister-in-law and the children desire to manage their affairs in their own Way, and to receive the money coming to them, and the uncle then insists upon a fancied legal right, which he would not otherwise have asserted, to one-half of the insurance money on account of premiums paid by him to keep the policy alive. He seems to have no such legal right, and if there is any hardship here, it is the not uncommon case of a neglect of precautions which the law prescribes, and the trust in one’s own ideas of the sense of honor and justice entertained by those with whom one deals.
The law can not relieve Mr. Meier if, by his own acts, he has at his own expense put his sister-in-law in possession of a fund over which he has retained no control in himself, as trustee or otherwise. On his own testimony, the money seems to be 'hers. It might, or might not, be better for
^earned counsel for appellant has cited many cases, and seems to have diligently, but unsuccessfully, searched for anything in the books which will sustain his position that one who has paid premiums to keep alive a policy without the consent of the beneficiary and for the beneficiary, might claim a lien upon the fund after it became payable, or recover the premiums from the beneficiary, after the money was paid by the company. The case of Burridge v. Row (L. J. 2 Eq. 369), which learned counsel regards as a parallel case to the one at bar, does not seem to be in point. The case was this: W, on the marriage of his daughter, gave bond to the trustees of the marriage settlement conditioned to pay £5,000, at his death. E, the intended husband, covenanted to pay the trustees £5,000 after his death, and assigned to them policies of assurance for £5,000, the sums received from the policies, if amounting to £5,000, to be in satisfaction of the covenant. The trusts of this £5,000 were for S (the wife) for life, with remainder to E. E, after the marriage, became bankrupt; the trustees proved the value of his covenant as a debt against his estate; and the sum thus produced, £431, was invested in their names. The assignee of E assigned to W all E’s interest under the settlement both in the sum of £431 received from E’s estate.and invested, and in the policy fund. The trustees and the assignees*declined to keep up the policies, and the premiums were paid by W for the purpose of obtaining the absolute property in the
2. No declarations of law were given before the submission of the cause. All those asked by appellant were refused. The trial court, however, in deciding the case, handed down a statement of its view of the law applicable to the facts, which is embodied in the transcript, and which is regarded by appellant’s counsel as a declaration of law. The case, indeed, seems to have been' tried without any close attention to the admissions in the pleadings, and to have been treated below, as it has been treated by counsel here, as if it turned wholly upon the question whether, upon the evidence of a voluntary payment by defendant, he was entitled to retain the sum of the premiums paid by him to keep alive the policy. Were the law otherwise than we understand it to be as to that, the judgment must be
The judgment is affirmed.