Sternberg v. Levy

159 Mo. 617 | Mo. | 1901

MARSHALL, J.

This is an interpleader between the plaintiff, as a judgment creditor of Joseph Levy, and the defendant, as the sister of Joseph Levy, for $2,500, benefits payable by the Western Commercial Travelers Association, upon the death of Joseph Levy, to Pauline Levy, his sister. There *621was a judgment in favor of Pauline Levy in tbe St. Louis Circuit Court. Plaintiff appealed to tbe St. Louis Court of Appeals, where tbe judgment of tbe circuit court was reversed and tbe cause remanded to tbe circuit court with directions to enter a judgment for tbe plaintiff for tbe amount of bis claim. Biggs, J., dissented, and certified that the judgment was in conflict with controlling decisions, stated, of this court, and thereupon tbe cause was transferred to this court under section 6 of tbe amendment of 1884. It is therefore our duty to hear and determine tbe cause as if this court bad original jurisdiction of this appeal.

Tbe Western Commercial Travelers Association is a corporation organized under article 10, chapter 42, Revised Statutes 1889, relating to tbe benevolent, fraternal-beneficial companies. Under its by-laws four thousand dollars is paid upon tbe death of a member to tbe beneficiary named in bis certificate, or failing such beneficiary, to tbe heirs of tbe member. On tbe tbirty-finst of December, 1880, Joseph Levy became a member and designated bis sister, Pauline Levy, as bis beneficiary. He was then solvent and continued so until 1891. During these eleven years be paid $279 in contributions to tbe death fund. In 1891 be failed and tbe plaintiff and others obtained judgments against him. After 1891 and until bis death on tbe sixteenth of December, 1897, Levy paid $290 in contributions to tbe death fund. Upon bis death the plaintiff brought suit against bis beneficiary, Pauline Levy, and tbe association, seeking to have tbe $4,000 applied to the payment of plaintiff’s judgment against Levy. Upon a stipulation between plaintiff and defendant tbe association paid tbe $4,000 into court and was discharged; tbe sum of $100 was allowed to tbe attorneys of tbe association for services; tbe court ordered $1,400 paid to Pauline Levy and that tbe plaintiff and defendant interplead for tbe $2,500, which they did.

*622Pauline Levy’s interplea sets out the character of the association, its by-laws, etc., above referred to, the fact that she is the beneficiary named in the certificate, the death of her brother, and prays judgment.

The plaintiff’s interplea sets, out the same general facts, with the additional allegation as to the recovery of judgments aforesaid, the payment of the $279 by Levy while he was solvent, and of the $290 after he became insolvent, and then pleads separately the following:

“Further interpleading this interpleader says that after the rendition of said judgments against said Joseph Levy and while he was insolvent, as stated in the first count hereof, the said J oseph Levy, while residing with his said sister Pauline Levy and her children, gave her from his earnings for the •shelter, support, maintenance, clothing and other expenses of the said Pauline Levy, and for the shelter, support, maintenance, clothing, education and other incidental expenses of her minor children, large sums of money, to-wit, the sum of at least $1,750 per year, aggregating for said six and one-half years intervening between the date of the rendition of said judgments and the date of the death of said Joseph Levy, the sum of at least $11,375. That the said sum of money so given to said Pauline Levy was not given her as a contract price for board and accommodation, but was given to her from time to time for the shelter, support, maintenance and other expenses of herself and children, and for the education of her said children as aforesaid, which sum so given to said Pauline Levy during said six and one-half years was at least $5,500 in excess of the sum which similar board and accommodations were worth, and for which they could have been procured by the said J oseph Levy for himself individually elsewhere. This interpleader further states that the said Pauline Levy has spent the said sums of money so given her by the said Joseph *623Levy. That the said Pauline Levy is now insolvent and this interpleader can not, by garnishment or other proceedings at law against said Pauline Levy, compel her to satisfy this interpleader’s said judgments out of the moneys so given her by the said Joseph Levy in fraud of his said creditors as aforesaid.”

Pauline Levy moved to strike out of plaintiff’s interplea the matter specifically quoted, as surplusage, irrelevant, immaterial, and, if true, having no bearing on the claim of either party to the fund in controversy. The court sustained this motion on the fourth of April, 1898. Plaintiff filed a motion to vacate the order sustaining said motion on the eighth of April, 1898. In the transcript certified by the clerk there is a statement by the clerk that both parties then filed motions for judgment on the interpleas as they stood, but no such motions appear in the transcript or appear to have been made a part of the record by any bill of exceptions, and therefore the recital of the clerk is of no avail (State ex rel. Malin v. Merriam, 159 Mo. 655) and no such motions are before us for consideration.

The court, on April 26, 1898, rendered judgment for the defendant. The judgment after reciting the appearance of the parties sets out: “And the several motions of the said parties for judgment upon the pleadings having been submitted to the court and the allegations in the said several interpleas being undenied and admitted, and the court being fully advised of and concerning the premises,” etc., awarded the fund in court to the defendant. No motion for new trial was filed. Thereafter on the twenty-first of May, 1898, the plaintiff filed his bill of exceptions and appealed to the court of appeals.

The bill of exceptions siinply sets out the portion of the plaintiff’s interplea challenged, the motion to strike it out, the *624ruling of the court sustaining the motion to strike out, the motion to vacate the order sustaining the motion, and exceptions properly saved to all said matters. Then, as stated, the case was appealed to the St. Louis Court of Appeals, and by that court certified to this court, for the reasons stated.

I.

The plaintiff has properly saved the right to have the action of the trial court on the motion to strike out, reviewed by this court. No motion for a new trial was necessary to preserve this right. “It is not usual or necessary to file a motion for a new trial for the mere purpose of having the court to twice hear the same motion or demurrer.” [O’Connor v. Koch, 56 Mo. l. c. 262; Butler v. Lawson, 72 Mo. l. c. 244.]

The substance of the matter struck out is that, while residing with his sister, Joseph Levy gave her from his earnings for the shelter, support, maintenance, clothing and other expenses of herself and children, the sum of $1,750 a year for the six and a half years after he became insolvent and before his death, aggregating $11,375; that it was not given to her as a contract price for board, but “was at least $5,500 in excess of the sum for which similar board and accommodations were worth and for which they could have been procured by the said Joseph Levy for himself individually elsewhere;” that Pauline has spent the money and is insolvent; that such payments were a fraud on the plaintiff, and therefore he asks to compel Pauline to pay his judgment out of these benefits accruing to her from her brother’s membership m the fraternal-beneficial association.

Under the facts stated, Joseph Levy was the head of a family, composed of himself, his' sister and her children. He had a right to support them although he could not be com*625pelled to do so. As such head of a family he was entitled to the exemptions allowed by statute to the head of a family. The identical question was decided by this court in Wade v. Jones, 20 Mo. 75, and has been the law in this State ever since. [Broyles v. Cox, 153 Mo. l. c. 284.]

Section 5851, Revised Statutes 1889, permits a married woman to insure the life of her husband and hold the insurance free from the claims of his creditors, but provides that “when the premiums paid in any year out of funds or property of the husband shall exceed five hundred dollars, such exemptions from such claim shall not apply to so much of said premiums so paid as shall be in excess of five hundred dollars, but such excess, with interest thereon, shall inure to the benefit of his creditors.” <

In Pullis v. Robison, 73 Mo. 201, it was held, that, if the husband’s money was paid both before and after he became insolvent, “so much of the insurance as was the product of the premiums paid by the husband while he was solvent” went to-the wife and that the creditors were entitled to “so much as was the product of the premiums paid by him after he became insolvent.” But in Judson v. Walker, 155 Mo. 166, it was pointed out by Yalxuant, J., that after the decision in Pullis v. Robison, supra, the Legislature amended the statute as it was when the Pullis case was- decided, and provided that the creditor -is entitled only to the excess over five hundred dollars paid as premiums in any year, with interest thereon, and not to the product of the premiums paid, as was held in the Pullis case. And this is not only the plain mandate of the statute, but is consonant with reason, for as. aptly said in the Judson case: “Proceeds of life insurance, therefore, are not the product of premiums alone, but of premiums united with the beneficiary’s insurable interest. After the transfer of the policies we are now considering, they rested no longer on the insurable *626interest of Walker in his own life, in which his creditors were concerned, but depended for their validity upon the insurable interest of the wife and children in the life of their husband and father. Without that interest, the insurance, standing as it did in their name, would have been invalid; it would have been no insurance, and there would have been no proceeds. Therefore, while the creditors have some right to the money that was used for premiums, and to the value of the old policies converted, they have no further right in the proceeds of the insurance.”

». It is argued, however, that this applies only to a wife and not to a sister, and that the rule in the Pullis case applies to a sister. This contention is based upon the theory that it is not the duty of a brother to support his widowed sister and her children. But while it is not his duty, he has a right to do so, and if he resides with them and provides for them he is the head of a family and entitled to the same exemptions as if he had a wife living with him.

Section 5853, Revised Statutes 1889, gives a sister an insurable interest in her brother’s life. Without this provision this policy of insurance would be void, and no' matter how much premiums were paid neither the sister nor the brother’s creditors would be able to collect a cent of the insurance after his death. So here, as in the Tudson case, the proceeds of this insurance, “are not the product of premiums alone, but of premiums united with the beneficiary’s insurable interest.” Eor this reason alone it is clear that the rule laid down in the case of Pullis v. Robison, 73 Mo. 201, is not the true rule now, and was not the true rule even under the statute as it stood then. But if a man is entitled to his salary and certain exemptions as the head of a family which his creditors can not touch, and if he chooses to spend a part of his salary in premiums for life insurance for the benefit of his family after he *627is gone, his creditors are not thereby defrauded, for he has withdrawn no part of his property which his creditors could touch. Hence the provision added to the statute in 1879 did not change the right of a head of a family under the exemption laws. Under the law as it stood when the Pullis case was decided the head of a family could use his salary and his exempt property up to the value of $300, to pay the yearly premiums on insurance for his family, without defrauding his creditors. Such an use of his exempt property no more defrauded his creditors than if he had spent it in riotous and high living or than if he had paid necessary expenses or had given it away. The statute at that time was simply declarative of a right he had before. The amendment of 1879 raised the limit of exemptions, pro hac vice, from three hundred to five hundred dollars, but it did not change the principle involved. Afterwards, as before, it was a fraud for an insolvent to withdraw the excess of his property over his exemptions from the reach of his creditors and invest it in insurance for his family, 'and such excess, representing the extent of the fraud, with interest, the creditors can reach. But as the premiums did not alone produce the proceeds of the insurance and it required also an insurable interest to produce such proceeds, and as there is no legal formula for apportioning the proportion of such excess that should be credited to the payment of premiums and the, portion that should be credited to insurable interest, the courts take the only practical course and do not attempt to work out such a formula or distribution, but award the creditor the known sum so fraudulently withdrawn from the reach of the creditors, the excess over the exemption, and restore it to the creditors with interest. Thus the creditor is placed in the same position that he would have heen in if the fraud had not been perpetrated — he gets all the property of the debtor that he has a right to touch, and the interest allowed is the legal meas*628ure of bis damages for not getting tbe money when be should bave gotten it.

Section 5853, Revised Statutes 1889, giving a sister an insurable interest in a brother’s life, does not contain a similar proviso to that contained in section 5851 as to tbe wife paying tbe premiums out of her husband’s money (or bis doing so- for her), but in view of what has herein been said this difference is immaterial, except as to tbe amount of tbe exemption. Tbe statutes of exemption, section 4903, make tbe exemptions to a bead of a family, who, as shown, need not necessarily be a married man. And section 5220, Revised Statutes 1889, exempts from garnishment tbe wages of tbe bead of a family, for tbe last thirty days’ services. Hence it is no fraud for a brother who is tbe bead of a family composed of himself, bis sister and her children to apply bis wages or bis exempt property to tbe procuring of insurance for her benefit, for bis creditors can not touch tbe wages or property and bave no right to complain if be uses it thus providently and properly instead of wasting it. Therefore, section 5853 is as effective for a sister so situated, as section 5851 is to a wife, except as to tbe former only tbe wages and $300 can be used, and to tbe latter tbe wages and $500 can be used to buy insurance.

What is said in tbe plaintiff’s interplea as to tbe amount contributed by Joseph Levy to bis sister being $5,500 in excess of what be could bave procured similar board for elsewhere is of no consequence. Tbe laws of our country give no court power to determine bow much a man may spend for board, nor to inquire whether be paid too much or too little therefor and to make tbe landlord refund tbe excess to bis creditors if it was too much or to allow the landlord for tbe difference if it was too little. However, this case does not depend upon any such considerations, for as shown, Levy was not a boarder, but tbe bead of tbe family.

*629The motion to strike out the designated part of the plaintiffs interplea was properly sustained, •

II.

It is claimed that the motion for judgment on the pleadings is. a demurrer, and hence is part of the record proper, and therefore no motion for new trial or bill of exceptions was necessary, but that the court will review the judgment upon the record, so constituted.

A motion for judgment on the pleadings is not a demurrer. It partakes of some of the qualities of a demurrer but it is not a demurrer, and hence it is not a part of the record. It is a matter of exception and can only be made a part of the record by a bill of exceptions.

It partakes of the nature of a demurrer, in that, it admits all facts that are well pleaded, and if it is overruled the order overruling it is not a final judgment from which an appeal will lie, but the party may plead over or proceed to trial on the issues joined. On the contrary, if it is sustained, judgment goes at once, whereas if a demurrer is sustained the order is not a final judgment, the party has a right to plead over, and it is only in case of refusal to plead over that final judgment can be rendered on demurrer.

There is no motion for judgment on the pleadings contained in this record. The bill of exceptions filed does not call for any such motion, and therefore 'there is no such question open to review in this case.

III.

But if a motion for judgment on the pleadings could be treated as a demurrer and hence a part of the record, without *630being made so by a bill of exceptions, it would avail the plaintiff nothing in this case, for the reason that the transcript does not contain any such motion, and therefore quoad hoc there is no such record in this case.

IY.

Aside from all this, however, if the motion for judgment was a demurrer or had been made a part of the record, and if ithe whole case appeared to' this court just as plaintiff contends the facts show the status of the controversy to be, the judgment of the circuit court would have to be affirmed. It is claimed that between the time Joseph Levy became insolvent in 1891, ,and his death in 1897, a period covering six and a half years, he paid $290 in premiums, properly speaking assessments, to the association to preserve his right to benefits therein. If this be conceded, it was ten dollars less than the three hundred dollars exemptions which he had a right to spend in that manner. There was no excess over the amount exempted to him (not taking his salary into account at all) that was invested in this way, and as shown, the creditors are only entitled to recover the excess, with interest, over the amount he is entitled to spend every year for this purpose. Here the total spent for six and a half years was ten dollars less than he was entitled to spend for insurance for the benefit of his sister every year, no matter how insolvent he may have been.

Por these reasons the judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.

All concur.
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