27 A.2d 387 | Conn. | 1942
The plaintiff brought an action George E. Schaff and the writ was served upon defendant as garnishee. Judgment was rendered for the plaintiff and he has brought this scire facias to compel the defendant to pay to him the amount of a certain claimed indebtedness on its part to Schaff. From the judgment for the defendant the plaintiff has appealed. The question presented is whether the defendant was indebted to Schaff at the time the process was served on it within our garnishment statute.
The defendant had issued to Schaff two policies of insurance upon his life, payable to his executors or administrators, which were outstanding when it was served with process. Each policy had a provision that "if this policy lapse for non-payment of premium after premiums have been duly paid for three full years" Schaff would become entitled, without any *253 action upon his part, to nonparticipating extended insurance for a term specified in a table included in the policy, or in lieu thereof Schaff might surrender the policy within three months after such lapse and would then be entitled, at his option, to receive either a nonparticipating paid-up life policy to a certain amount or payment in cash, in accordance with that table. The policies also contained a "facility of payment" provision that the defendant might make any payment or grant any nonforfeiture provision provided for in the policy to any relative by blood or connection by marriage of the insured or to any person appearing to it to be equitably entitled by reason of having incurred expense in behalf of Schaff for his burial or for any other purpose, and that the production by the defendant of a receipt for or other sufficient proof of such payment or grant would be conclusive evidence that the payment or provision had been made or granted to the person or persons entitled thereto, and that all claims under the policy had been fully satisfied. Except in the nonforfeiture clause, the policies made no provision for their surrender by Schaff in return for cash payments. One policy had become fully paid up and the record does not disclose whether or not the other policy had lapsed for nonpayment of premiums.
Our statute permits garnishment in a civil action "when a debt is due" the defendant. General Statutes, 5763. In Calechman v. Great Atlantic Pacific Tea Co.,
Any payment of the surrender value under either policy was contingent, in the first place on the policy having lapsed for nonpayment of premiums and in the second place, if it had lapsed, on Schaff exercising his option to surrender the policy and receive its cash value rather than to accept a nonparticipating paid up policy. Neither of these conditions could happen as to the paid-up policy; Schaff had, under its terms, no right to demand payment of anything from the defendant, but it could continue the policy until his death, and only at that time would it become liable to make any payment. As regards the other policy, the defendant, even in the case of a lapse, was under no obligation to pay Schaff its surrender value until he had chosen that option; its only obligation, in the absence of such choice, was to issue to him a nonparticipating extended insurance policy for a certain term. When the process was served on the defendant, there was no existing obligation on its part to pay him anything, and there was no debt "due" within the garnishment statute.
While the right of the plaintiff to recover against the defendant in this case must be determined under our garnishment statute and the authoritative interpretation which has been placed upon it, the conclusion *255
to which we have come finds support in decisions in other jurisdictions where similar questions to that now before us have been presented. Isaac Van Dyke Co. v. Moll,
The "facility of payment" provision in the policies was inserted for the benefit of the insurance company and for its protection in the event that it saw fit to make payment of any sums due under the policy to *256
others than the executors or administrators of Schaff. No person within the scope of its provisions had any right to compel the company to act under it. It created no debt to the insured which did not exist under other provisions of the policies. Mazulli v. Metropolitan Ins. Co.,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.