199 A.D. 503 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1922
The respondent contends that the appeal from the order of April twenty-eighth should be dismissed as not appealable.
The petitioner, administrator of an estate of a beneficiary of a life insurance policy in the Knickerbocker Life Insurance Company, applied to the court for the appointment of a receiver of said company, successor to one discharged by an order of December 23, 1887, reinstated in 1906, and his estate discharged after his executor had accounted. The assets of the company are now in possession of the State Superintendent of Insurance, where they have been for many years, who has paid out of the funds in his possession dividends to those claimants who had filed their claims with the receiver, and certain legal expenses incurred in the administration of the insolvent estate.
The petitioner does not show that any demand for payment of this claim was ever made upon the Superintendent and refused.
The Superintendent of Insurance since the enactment of section 63 of the Insurance Law
The order of April 28, 1921, is reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the motion to vacate the order of March 7, 1921, granted, with ten dollars costs, and the appeal from said order of March 7, 1921, dismissed, without costs.
Clarke, P. J., Dowling, Merrell and Greenbaum, JJ., concur.
Added by Laws of 1909, chap. 300, as amd. by Laws of 1912, chap. 217; Laws of 1913, chap. 29, and Laws of 1918, chap. 119.— [Rep.