179 N.E. 250 | NY | 1932
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Plaintiff, as administrator of the will annexed of Edwin D. Ruggles, deceased, sues the widow of decedent and the defendant insurance company, pursuant to section
The policies are in two groups, one issued by the Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company; the other by AEtna Life Insurance Company. The policies issued by the Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company were obtained in Ohio, where insured and his wife then resided, and the first premiums were paid there. They were payable at the company's home office in Wisconsin. The AEtna policies were also issued in Ohio and were payable at the company's home office in Connecticut. Under the laws of Ohio premium payments, not actually *38 in fraud of creditors, are wholly beyond the reach of creditors.
Ruggles and his wife later changed their residence from Ohio to New York where they remained until he died. Five ten-thousand-dollar AEtna policies were, after they came to New York, split up for convenience into ten five-thousand-dollar policies, not by novation nor by a change in the original contract but by a mere division of the original insurance into smaller policies. The same is true of the Northwestern policies. A change of beneficiary was made, as the policies permitted, but no new contract of insurance was made. The place of contracting was where the policies were delivered to assured. (NorthwesternMut. Life Ins. Co. v. McCue,
Section
The exception in this section was repealed by implication by section 55-a of the Insurance Law (Laws of 1927, ch. 468, in effect March 31, 1927; Cons. Laws, ch. 28). The rights of creditors in the proceeds of such policies are now confined to the amount of the premiums which may have been paid by the insured in fraud of his creditors. (Chatham Phenix Nat. Bank v.Crosney,
Judge LEHMAN in the Crosney case has indicated how the statute, which had its origin in Laws of 1840, chapter 80, prior to the Married Women's Acts of 1848, "intended to create rights in a wife, under changed conditions, resulted in creditors having rights against a wife which they would not otherwise possess." (Chatham Phenix Nat. Bank v. Crosney, supra, 194.) Once an extension of the right to contract, it became a limitation thereon. The common law saw difficulties in the way of procuring insurance on the life of the husband. The statute granted that right for the benefit of the wife with regard, however, to the conflicting rights of wife and creditors. Without the statute, the insurance money payable to the wife might not, in the year 1840, have been kept from the creditors. At least it would seem that on some such theory the remedial statute was passed. (Barry v. Equitable Life Assur. Soc.,
The Legislature has at length remedied this anomalous survival of the common law of married women by giving the wife the same rights to enforce contracts with insurance *40
companies for insurance on her husband's life as she has to enforce her contracts generally. (Dom. Rel. Law, § 51.) No policy of the forum is offended which might subject the proceeds of foreign policies to the State law or regulate the enforcement of rights against the proceeds of policies in the hands of the beneficiary. (Straus Co. v. Canadian Pac. Ry. Co.,
Matters respecting the remedy, such as the bringing of suits, admissibility of evidence, statutes of limitation, are governed by the lex fori and depend upon the law of the place where the suit is brought. (Scudder v. Union Nat. Bank, supra.) With such remedial matters we are not concerned. So also one who removes his own personal property into the State thereby submits to the laws of the State concerning its transfer. (Dearing v.McKinnon Dash Hardware Co.,
The conclusion follows that the New York statute, in placing a limitation upon the power of insurance companies to write policies payable to the wife, could reach only business transacted within the State; contracts made within the State. Indeed, we find in the statute no intention to prescribe limitations upon the contracts even of a New York corporation made outside the State. The statute has no extra-territorial effect. (Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Cohen,
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The conclusion reached renders it unnecessary to say whether an action under the statute would lie against the defendant insurance company which had paid the policies to Mrs. Ruggles according to their terms (Kittel v. Domeyer,
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
CARDOZO, Ch. J., CRANE, LEHMAN, KELLOGG, O'BRIEN and HUBBS, JJ., concur.
Judgment affirmed.