109 Ga. 1 | Ga. | 1899
Lead Opinion
R. Annie Walton instituted an action against the Union Fraternal League, an insurance corporation of the State of Massachusetts, doing business in Georgia, to recover the sum of two thousand dollars besides interest, being the amount of a certain certificate of membership insurance issued by the defendant company on the life of Sid A. Pughsly Jr., in which the plaintiff was named as the beneficiary. The certificate was taken out by Sid A. Pughsly Jr. on his own life and upon his own application, and kept in force at his own expense as a member of the local lodge of the defendant company doing business in Laurens county, Georgia. To the petition was annexed a copy of the certificate of membership and insurance, by which it appears that the defendant company undertook to pay, out of its beneficiary fund of the class in which the certificate was issued, a sum of money not exceeding two thousand dollars to Mrs. R. Annie Walton on the death of Pughsly. In the certificate the beneficiary, Mrs. Walton, is named as “ cousin.” Attached to the certificate are a number of conditions- to which no particular reference need be made. Certain tables of designations and figures are also printed on the back of the certificate, and in reference to them is a collection of rules designated as “laws on the foregoing table,” which seem to be more in the nature of explanation than of arbitrary rule. Among these we find the following: “ Speculative risks will not be tolerated, nor will any benefits be paid to other than blood relatives, or dependents on the member.” “The foregoing Plan of Family Protection is devised to insure permanent success, and to restrict the admission of undesirable people.” It appears from the certificate that the defendant is a Massachusetts corporation, and the signatory clause recites that it was executed in Boston, Massachusetts. It does not, however,, othérwise appear whether the contract was executed in Georgia or Massachusetts, nor does the record contain the charter of the defendant company, nor any part of its constitution or. by-laws. The defendant filed a demurrer to the petition, on the sole ground that it set forth no cause of action, because it did not appear that the said Mrs. R. Annie Walton, the beneficiary named in the certificate of insurance, had any
A contract of life-insurance is defined by our Civil Code, §2114, as one by which the insurer for a stipulated sum engages to pay a certain amount of money if another dies within the time limited by the policy. The last paragraph of this section is in the following words: “The life may be that of the assured, or of another in whose continuance the assured has an interest.” Taken together, the meaning of the section is, that one may insure his own life without qualification ; that he may not insure the life of another unless he has an interest in the continuance of the life of that other. Necessarily, in the first instance, the amount of the policy is to be paid to some one other than the insured, because ordinarily under the contract the amount is not payable until his death. By section 2116 of the Civil Code it is provided that the assured may direct the money to be paid to his personal representative, or to his widow, or to his children or to his assignee; and it is further provided that when the insurer gives such directions, no other person can defeat the same, and that the assignment is good without such assent. We are aware that there is a seemingly irreconcilable conflict between the adjudicated cases as to whether the assignee of a life policy takes anything under, the
Mr. Greenhood, in his treatise on the Doctrine of Public Policy in the Law of Contracts, pp. 279, 280, lays down two rules so abundantly supported by adjudicated cases as to make their citation impractical here. The first is: “A policy of insurance issued on the life of one in whose life he to whom the policy is issued has no insurable interest, unless he is a mere trustee for the life-assured ; or a policy issued to one upon his own
Mr. Joyce in his Treatise, on Insurance, vol. 2, § 918, declares that “ the weight of authority seems also to favor the proposition that if a person effects a valid insurance upon his own life, and the transaction is bona fide and not intended to circumvent the law, the assignment to another will be upheld, «ven though the assignee has no insurable interest in the life insured.” In the case of Amick v. Butler, 111 Ind. 578, Mitchell, J., delivering the opinion, refers to this question in the following language: “It has never been seriously questioned but that a person may insure his own life, and by the terms of the policy appoint another to receive the money upon the event of the death of the person whose life is insured; or, having taken a policy valid in its inception, that he may in good faith assign his interest in such policy, as in any other chose in action.” For which he cites: 51 Ind. 24; 53 Ind. 380; 3 Sim. 149; 138 Mass. 24; 11 R. I. 439. He further says, “In either
In the case of Loomis v. Eagle Life Ins. Co., 6 Gray, 399, Chief Justice Shaw, delivering an opinion which involved the question of insurable interest, used this language: “All, therefore, which it seems necessary to show, in order to take the case out of the objection of being a wager policy, is that the
We have entered into the discussion of this case at length,
In the present case, while it appears on the face of the certificate that the plaintiff in error is a Massachusetts corporation, none of the provisions of the charter appear in the record, nor any portion of its constitution or by-laws is set out, nor can it be now determined whether the contract of-insurance is to be governed by the laws of the State of Massachusetts or by those of Georgia. Hence, no restriction of the power of the member to name the beneficiary is made to appear, and the certificate evidencing a contract of life-insurance similar to those entered into by mutual companies, the case will be determined under the general law applicable to insurance contracts. It is true that on the back of the certificate appears a condensation of certain explanations in which it is asserted that speculative risks will not be tolerated nor benefits paid to other than blood relatives or dependents. It does
Affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. A policy of life-insurance naming as the beneficiary thereof one who has no insurable interest in the life of the insured is a wagering policy, and therefore' void, although taken out by the insured at his own expense. Independently of adjudications rendered outside of this State, I am of the opinion that the question raised in this case is settled by section 2114 of the Civil Code, which reads as follows: “An insurance upon life is a contract by which the insurer, for a stipulated sum, engages to pay a certain amount of money if another dies within the time limited by the policy. The life may be that of the assured, or of another in whose continuance the assured has an interest.” That is to say, the life insured may be that of the beneficiary named in the policy, or the life of another person in the continuance of which life the beneficiary has an insurable interest. “The beneficiary of an insurance policy may be defined as the party to whom the proceeds are made payable by the terms of the contract; ” and “beneficiary” and “assured” are synonymous terms, though the former is the more commonly used. 3 Am. & Eng. Enc. L. (2d ed.) 926.
The question at issue was neither made in nor passed upon by this court in the case of Equitable Life Assurance Society v. Paterson, 41 Ga. 338. It is true the report of that case discloses that in the requests to charge, made by counsel for the defend