155 Wis. 335 | Wis. | 1914
Two questions are raised in this case, viz.: (1) Was the husband’s right to assign the policy taken away by ch. 376 of the Laws of 1891? and (2) Was the assignment in question void because executed in Minnesota ?
The second question demands careful examination. The policy in. question was- issued at Milwaukee and was payable by its terms at Milwaukee. , Moreover it' contained an express statement that it was a contract made and to be performed in the-state of Wisconsin. There can be no doubt, therefore, that it was a Wisconsin contract, although both the insured and the beneficiary resided in Dakota. Presbyterian M. Fund v. Thomas, 126 Wis. 281, 105 N. W. 801. But it was assigned and. delivered to the appellant in the state of Minnesota, and in that state the law is settled (contrary to the Wisconsin rule) that such a policy belongs to the beneficiary alone and cannot be assigned by the assured because he has no legal or equitable interest in it. Birge v. Franklin, 103 Minn. 482, 115 N. W. 278. The contention is that the assignment is void because executed in a state where the law does not recognize that the assured has any right to make such an assignment.
That the question is one involved in some difficulty must be admitted. That field' of law which goes by the name of the conflict of laws .is one of the most thorny and difficult fields to traverse. It is full of conflicting decisions, refined reasoning, and unsatisfactory results. Especially is this the case when the subject under consideration is a mere chose in action.
Approaching the question from the a priori standpoint, it would seem as if the laws of Minnesota could have no effect on the matter at all. The contract of insurance was from the beginning a Wisconsin contract and governed as to its validity and effect by the laws of Wisconsin. By those laws it became the property of the deceased when it was issued and remained his property notwithstanding the subsequent change of law in Wisconsin. Boehmer v. Kalk, supra. That
Before proceeding to consider these authorities it will be desirable to state the exact facts appearing in the record which have a bearing on the question. As before stated, the contract of insurance was purely a Wisconsin contract. At the time of its execution and delivery the insured and the beneficiary were residents of the territory of Dakota. In November, 1893, at the suit of the deceased, Foster D. Adams, a decree of divorce was granted by, the district court of Hennepin county, Minnesota. This would seem to be prima facie proof that he then resided in that state. The assignment bears date February 11, 1908, at Omaha, Nebraska, and runs to his brother, the appellant, a resident of Dead■wood, South Dakota. It was not delivered until about June 19, 1911, three days before the death of the insured and when both he and his brother were at the house of a sister in Minneapolis, Minnesota. , There is no finding as to the residence or domicile of the insured after the divorce in 1893. The evidence, however, shows without dispute that for sometime prior to February, 1911 (for what length of time does not appear), the insured was .manager of the southern division of the American Express Company and remained such manager until his death, with his headquarters at St. Louis, Missouri; that he was ill and not in active duty from February, 1911, until the time of his death in the following June; that during that absence he was at Los Angeles, California, for a part of the time and a part of the time at Monrovia, a suburb of Los Angeles. At this last named place his-
The fundamental principle upon which the line of cases just referred to rests is the principle that any sovereign state may regulate the conduct of its own residents within its limits; that marriage is a status', and that the parties to that status, so far as their ability to contract is concerned, are subject to the regulations and disabilities imposed upon them by the laws of the state of their domicile. Freeman’s Appeal, 68 Conn. 533, 37 Atl. 420; Colburn’s Appeal, 74 Conn. 463, 51
Tbe English case of Lee v. Abdy, L. R. 17 Q. B. D. 309, which is cited in many of the American cases, is a good illustration of the principle. In' that case an English insurance company had insured the life of a married man, and the insured and his wife became thereafter permanently domiciled in Cape Colony, where, by express legal enactment a husband could not legally assign a policy of insurance to his wife. Nevertheless while he and his wife were so domiciled he formally assigned the policy to her, and on his death she sued the company. It was held, in effect' that the parties to the assignment were domiciled and made their contract of assignment in Cape Colony, and that the law of Cape Colony and not of England must determine the validity of that contract. Of similar tenor are the Canadian cases of National T. Co. v. Hughes, 14 Manitoba, 41, and Toronto G. T. Co. v. Sewell, 17 Ont. Rep. 442.
This power of a sovereign state to regulate the conduct of its own residents within its borders and to prescribe limitations or disabilities upon their liberty of contract is not in question here. The state of Minnesota has not attempted to do anything of that kind. It has not forbidden a husband to dispose of any property which by virtue of the lex loci contractus he may have in a life insurance policy. It has simply said that a husband has no property in a policy of the kind in suit where the interpretation and legal effect of the policy are governed by the law of Minnesota. In other words, it has said, if the policy in question were a Minnesota contract E. D. Adams could not assign it because he has no
Had it been specifically declared by the legislature of Minnesota that an assignment of such a policy by the husband was against public policy and prohibited, or should not be valid unless accompanied by certain formalities not present in this case, we should have a different question here, a question somewhat similar to the, questions arising in Russell v. Grigsby, 168 Fed. 577, and Miller v. Manhattan L. Ins. Co. 110 La. Ann. 652, 34 South. 723, but' we have no such case.
It is sometimes said in the text-books and in the opinions that an assignment of a policy is governed by the law of the place where the assignment' is made. 25 Cyc. 780. This is generally true in the sense that it is competent for the state to prescribe formalities for the transfer within its borders of a chose in action like the present, even though it be a contract made in another state, and that these requirements-will generally be given effect. It is true in the sense that the lex loci may make a chose in action assignable which was-not assignable by the law existing where the contract was made and is to be performed.
It is certainly true'in the general sense that a contract valid where made will be valid in another jurisdiction unless contrary to good morals or the public policy of the other jurisdiction. Mowry v. Crocker, 6 Wis. 326; Smith v. C. & N. W. R. Co. 23 Wis. 267.
Were this an assignment of a policy whose meaning and' effect were subject to determination by the law of Minnesota, an assignment by the husband in Minnesota or elsewhere would be worthless, not because it was unlawful but
Rule 141 of Dicey’s Conflict of Laws seems t'o be applicable and is as follows:
“An assignment of a’ movable which cannot be touched, i. e. of a debt, giving a good title thereto according to the lex situs of the debt (in so far as by analogy a sitios can be attributed to a debt), is valid. Provided that (1) the liabilities of the debtor are to be determined by the law governing the contract between him and the creditor, (2)’ the right to recover the debt is, as regards all matters of procedure, governed by the lex fori.”
The case of Lebel v. Tucker, L. R. 3 Q. B. Cas. 77, fully sustains this rule. In that case a negotiable bill of exchange drawn, accepted, and payable in England was indorsed by the payee in France and an action brought by the indorsee against the acceptor in England. The defense was that the indorsement was void because, though sufficient under the general law merchant, it lacked certain formalities required by the law of France, and it was held that the original contract could not be thus varied by the law of a foreign country through which it passes. See Kelly v. Selwyn, [1905] L. R. 2 Ch. Div. 117; In re Maudslay, [1900] L. R. 1 Ch. Div. 602.
We have just held in another case that a law of this state cannot take away the property right which a husband has in a policy of this nature issued prior to the passage of the law. Boehmer v. Kalk, ante, p. 156, 144 N. W. 182. Now in the present' case it cannot be doubted that Foster D. Adams owned this policy at the time of its issuance in 1881 and thereafter so long as lie was a resident of South Dakota. Could it be possible that his property right could be taken
By the Court. — Judgment reversed, and action remanded with directions to enter judgment for the appellant' in accordance with this opinion.