74 Ga. 669 | Ga. | 1885
The contest in this case is between a gratuitous beneficiary named in a policy of insurance,- and one who claims that she was entitled, for a valuable consideration, to-wit, an agreement with the assured entered into prior to her marriage with him, to its benefit, in lieu of the volunteer named therein as such beneficiary. Among other conditions upon which the policy issued was this:
“ Eighth. This policy is issued and accepted upon the express condition that the assured may, with the consent of the company, at any time assign it,' or, before assignment, change the beneficiaries therein, or make any other change.”
The assured was an unmarried 'man when he took out the policy; the person named as beneficiary therein was his sister, to whom he delivered the policy; he paid the premiums. Subsequent to this, he married the other claimant of the fund, with whom, before their marriage, he agreed that, if she would .marry him, she should be made the beneficiary thereof, and it was satisfactorily shown, and not controverted, that this contract, which was an inducement to the marriage, was made. After this, and on the day before the second semi-annual premium on the policy fell due, the marriage was solemnized. The assured sought out the agent of the company, and paid this premium, upon the condition that the beneficiary should be changed from his sister to his wife. The sister had the policy and would not give it up, because she was angry with the assured for having married Without the policy, the agent was uncertain whether the desired change could be made, but promised to report this .direction to change the beneficiary to the officers of the company, and if possible to have the change made. He complied with his promise so far as to communicate the direction of the assured to the officers of the company, and requested them to attend to the matter, which they agreed to do. They, however, overlooked it, and nothing further seems to have been done until the
- To constitute a valid gift, there must be the intention to give by the donor, acceptance by the donee, and delivery of the article given, or some act accepted by the law in lieu thereof. Code, §2657. Actual manual delivery is not always essential to the validity of a gift,, but the act from which it is inferred must indicate renunciation of dominion by the donor and the transfer thereof to the donee (Id., §2660) ; and while it is true that where the law requires a conveyance in writing to the validity of a gift,
Had the assured not reserved the right to change the beneficiary in this policy, and had he paid up all the premiums due or to become due before he delivered it to her, and had there been nothing further to be done by him in order to its perfection, then perhaps it might have been deemed a completely executed trust; but such was not the case; she took the policy subject to the conditions stipulated upon its face; she had no right to restrict his selection of another beneficiary, and no power to compel him to continue the life of the policy by paying the premiums as they fell due; his failure to meet one of these would have put an end to the contract and would have terminated the conditional trust which he had created for her benefit; nor could she have prevented the forfeiture of the policy by paying the premiums against his wishes and when he forbade her doing it.
There is no condition in this policy requiring the consent of the beneficiary named therein to a change of any of its terms or of the parties entitled to claim under it, whether such change was to be effected either by parol or by a written instrument; this was a matter entirely between the assured and the company, and if it chose to dispenso with any of the modes to effect this purpose, this concerned no third party. The company does not insist upon a rigid compliance with the forms prescribed in the policy; and even if it had capriciously withheld its consent to the alteration which the assured desired to have made, and for which he received a'valuable consideration,., it is hardly to be questioned that it would be compelled, at the suit of the wife, to perform this contract specifically.. Even in the case of a parol contract for-the conveyance of land, specific performance will be-decreed, if the defendant admits the contract, or if it be so far executed by the-party seek jpg relief, and at the instance or by the inducements of the other party, that if the contract be abandoned he cannot*!>e restored to his former position. Full payment alone, which has been accepted by the vendor, is such part performance as entitles the opposite party to a specific execution of the contract. Code, §3187. In this instance, it would be impossible to restore the wife to her former position, if the contract were abandoned. She-
Judgment reversed.