100 Tenn. 484 | Tenn. | 1898
In December, 1895, Geo. T. Winton, then a resident of Birmingham, Ala., took out a policy of insurance upon his life, payable to his father and mother, who lived in Coffee County, Tenn. The policy was for $5,000, and was issued by the Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company, of Newark, N. J. For the first installment premium upon the policy the assured gave his check for $28.76 to the agent of the company, and the agent advanced the amount of the check to the company. When presented to the bank this check was not paid, and the agent retained it in his hands until after the assured’s death, on the fifteenth of January, 1896, and the settlement by the insurance company with the payees of the policy. It was then paid to him by Williarp R. Gunn, a brother of the assured’s mother.
After the assured’s death, in Alabama, his remains were sent to his father, defendant T. J. Win-ton, in Tennessee, for burial, and at the same time the life insurance policy was delivered to him by William R. Gunn. He returned it to Gunn to take back with Mm to Birmingham, where Gunn resided, in order that it might be collected for him. Gunn administered in Alabama upon the estate of the insured, and thereafter returned the policy to the father, in Tennessee, and the insurance company compromised and settled the policy with the father and mother by the payment of $2,500 to them in full of all liability thereunder. T. J.' Winton, the
In regard to the form of the policy, it is. only necessary to state that it was payable to T. J. and Sarah E. Winton, father and mother of the assured, Geo. T. Winton, in case they, or either of them, survived him; if not, then to his estate, and it was payable at the office of the company in Newark, N. J.
The complainants are creditors of Geo. T. Winton, the insured, who died insolvent. It is charged that Gunn, the Alabama administrator upon the insured’s estate in Alabama, conspired with T. J. Winton, the father, to remove the policy to Tennessee, and thus place it, as an asset of Geo. T. Winton’s estate, beyond the jurisdiction of the Courts of Alabama, and in the hands of the defendant in Tennessee, and that they, as creditors, have a right to follow the proceeds of the policy, and collect and appropriate them to their debts. The bill is filed as a general creditors’ bill.
An amended bill was filed, alleging that there was no administrator in Tennessee upon the insured’s estate, and repeating that the administrator in Ala
Defendant, Winton, answered, denying the equities of the bill, insisting that' the contract of insurance should not be construéd by the laws of Alabama, but by the laws of Tennessee or New Jersey, and denying that he was guilty of any fraud in obtaining the proceeds of the policy. The Chancellor was of opinion that the answer denied the equities of the bill, and that it was not sustained by the proof, and dismissed the bill. On appeal, the Court of Chancery Appeals reversed this decree, sustained the bill, granted the relief prayed, and defendants have appealed to this Court, and assigned errors.
It is insisted the Court of Chancery Appeals erred in holding that the contract must be construed by the laws of Alabama, and not by the laws of New Jersey or Tennessee. It is further' insisted that there was no assignment of the policy of 'insurance or other assets of the insured’s estate involved,' but that the policy was made payable, in the first instance, to the defendants; that there was no relation existing between the insured’s creditors and the defendant
The first question presented and necessary to be considered, is whether this contract of insurance is to be construed and governed by the laws of Alabama, New Jersey, or Tennessee, -so far as the rights of the creditors of the insured, and the' beneficiaries under the policy, are concerned. , The Court of Chancery Appeals was of opinion the laws of Alabama, and not those of New Jersey or Tennessee, must control, and in this we are of opinion that Court is correct. Alabama was both the place where the contract was' entered into and- where the insured resided at the time it was made. The general rule is that the lex domicilii,' or the 'lex- loci contractus, governs and determines the validity ■ of contracts relating to personal property. ■ -3 Am. & Eng. Enc. L., 552, p. '571, and notes; citing authorities. Here the lea! domicilii ' and lex loci contractus concur. * -
We are also referred to the case of Fearn v. Ward, 65 Ala., 33. In that case, Fearn had insurance payable to his infant daughter, Kate Coles Fearn,. and, after his death, the proceeds of the policy were paid over for the infant daughter, and invested for her by her guardian. It appears that the policy- was for $10,000, and that the insured had paid something less than $500 upon it in the way of premiums. It was held that, under the provisions of § 2333 of the Code of Alabama of 1876, the exemption- therein. provided . was designed for the. benefit of the wife and children, and inasmuch as the policy was payable to and for the benefit of only one of several children, it was. not protected by the statutes, and that the statute could not operate as to contracts * made before its- . passage, and. that the conveyance of the insurance was voluntary and ■ fraudulent as to existing creditors, whether their liability was fixed or..contingent. - It appears -that the. policy was originally taken out payable. to the , wife and children, but subsequently ■ that ■ policy was canceled,
The demurrer of the bill having been overruled and cause remanded, it was tried and again appealed to the Supreme Court, where it is reported in 80 Ala. Reps., 555. The Court thereupon reaffirmed its former holding, that the policy being payable to one only of several children, was not protected by the exemption in the statutes. It was further held that the investment of premiums by the insured in this policy was, in effect, a gift by the father to the child, which would be void as to existing creditors of the father, and that such creditors were entitled to have their debts satisfied out of the proceeds, and were not confined merely to the premiums paid; that the proceeds of the policy constituted the property purchased, and was the subject matter of the investment; that the father being in debt, the premiums paid must be treated as a voluntary investment, and hence fraudulent in law as to existing creditors.
The Court of Chancery Appeals construe this holding to be, in effect, that the taking out of a policy of life insurance, upon the life of any person not protected strictly by the exemption of the statute, must be treated as an investment of the insured’s money, and would inure to the benefit of his estate, which a creditor, upon the death of the
Applying the rule to the facts of this casé, the Court of Chancery Appeals was of opinion that the creditors of the insured have the right to follow up and reclaim the $2,500 paid over to T. J. Winton, the beneficiary named in the policy, and to have it administered as a part of the estate of insured deceased, but that inasmuch as the said T. J. Winton had received the proceeds in good faith, and had paid part of it on just debts of the estate, to that extent he should have credit. A decree was therefore entered for the sum of $2,500, but the cause was remanded to the Court below, and execution in the meantime was suspended in order that an account might be taken of the debts thus paid, and for which the defendant is entitled to credit, and ■ the balance is - directed to be paid into the Chancery Court of Coffee County, to be there administered as assets of the estate of Gr. T. Winton, deceased, as an insolvent estate, and the costs were adjudged against the defendants, so far as accrued.
Conceding that the Court of Chancery Appeals is correct in their construction of the law applicable to the case, there is a feature of it, as developed in the record, which is necessarily fatal to the claim of complainants. They can only recover upon the theory that the insured diverted into life insurance investment, funds which his creditors had a right to
But the present case is even stronger, inasmuch as the deceased did not invest a dollar of his funds or any of his property in this insurance of any kind whatever. On the contrary, he gave his individual check to the agent, which proved entirely worthless, as he had no funds in bank to meet it. In other words, he purchased this insurance with his individual credit — a promise to pay. But his credit and promise to pay • was not an asset which a creditor could seize any more than would have been his persona] labor. Having put nothing into this insurance upon which his creditors could have had any claim when it was put in, or rather when the policy was issued, though nothing had been put in or paid, there is nothing which the creditor could follow up.
The decree of the Court of Chancery Appeals is reversed, and the complainants’ bill dismissed at their cost.