Sheffield Oil Mill v. Pool

53 So. 1027 | Ala. | 1910

ANDERSON, J.

This appeal involves the validity of section 32 of the act of 1897, as set out in chapter 63 of the Code of 1896, but which did not become a part of said Code. This section was considered and upheld in the case of Rayford v. Faulk, 154 Ala. 285, 45 South. 714. And we are called upon to overrule said case upon the theory that said section 32 is violative of section 2, art. 4, of the Constitution of 1875. “Where the subject may be comprehended in the title the act should be upheld.” — Griffin v. Drennen, 145 Ala. 128, 40 South. 1026. The inquiry therefore is: Can section 32 be construed so as to he comprehended within the subject as set out in the title?

The title is as follows: “To regulate the business of insurance in the state of Alabama.” Section 32 says: “Any person may insure his own or her own life for the sole benefit of his or her estate, his wife or her husband, his or her children, or others, as shall be provided in the policy of insurance, and the sum or amount of insurance becoming due and payable by the terms of the application and policy shall be exempt from all creditors of the assured or beneficiary, and must he paid to the *423beneficiary so named in the policy, or his or her assigns.” There can be little or no doubt of the fact, that to say how and to whom policies should and can be made would be cognate to the general subject of regulating insurance, but section 32 of the act in question goes much further than this. It makes all life insurance exempt, not only as against the debts of the insured, but as to those of the beneficiary as well. In other words, it exempts all funds derived from life insurance, regardless of amount, both from the liabilities of the insured and the beneficiary, and extends the exemption rights to a certain class without limitation, and which is not to be comprehended within the subject of regulating the business of insurance. Said section 32, also, in effect, changes the terms of the policy contract, when made payable to the estate of the insured, by diverting the fund from the very purpose to which the contract of insurance had devoted it. It not only, in effect, changes the contract, by changing the beneficiary, and thereby preventing the fund from becoming assets of the estate of the insured, and as directed by the policy contract, but exempts it from the payment of the debts of the newly constituted beneficiary. It is not germane to the title of the act, which, while in the Code of 1896, was not a part thereof as adopted by the Legislature, and is therefore violative of section 2, art. 4, of the Constitution of 1875.

We are constrained to hold that the conclusion of the majority, of which the writer was one, in the case of Rayford v. Faulk, 154 Ala. 291, 45 South. 714, was erroneous, and think that the dissenting opinion of Dowdell, J., as concurred in by Simpson and Denson, JJ., should have prevailed. In the case of Mitchell v. Allis, 157 Ala. 304, 47 South. 715, the constitutionality of section 32 of the act does not appear to have been presented by *424counsel or considered by the court. The cases of Heflin v. Allen, 160 Ala. 241, 48 South. 695, and Chandler v. Traub, et al., 159 Ala. 519, 49 South 240, are distinctly based on the case of Rayford v. Faulk, supra. The trial court naturally followed the holding of the case of Rayford v. Faulk, supra; but, a,s said case is expressly overruled, the decree of the probate court is reversed, and the cause is remanded.

Reversed and remanded.

Dowdell, C. J., and Simpson, Mayfield, Sayre and Evans, JJ., concur.
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