213 P. 1104 | Mont. | 1923
delivered the opinion of the court.
In February, 1915, W. F. Winkelmann, cashier of the Farmers’ & Merchants’ State Bank of Savage, Montana, secured a policy of insurance for $5,000 upon his life in the Minnesota Mutual Life Insurance Company. The policy was obtained for the purpose of securing the bank against any loss which it might suffer through the acts of Winkelmann, and to that end the bank was named beneficiary in the policy “with the right of revocation,” however, reserved to the insured. The bank agreed to pay the annual premiums on the policy and did pay
When he severed his connection with the bank, Winkelmann was informed that the bank would no longer carry the policy of insurance, and he then suggested to Jens Miller, a director of the hardware company, that it “would be a good idea” for the hardware company to carry the policy as the bank had done, and to this suggestion Miller agreed, but nothing further was done about the matter at that time or at the annual meeting of the stockholders in January, 1919. About February 14, 1919, Winkelmann, Miller, Anderson, Johnson and Christlaw met in the hardware store and the agreement over which this controversy wages was entered into. On the following day Winkelmann secured the policy from the bank, and Christlaw, the secretary and manager of the hardware company drew that company’s check for $40.75 in part payment of the premium then due. The policy, the cheek and a written request for change of beneficiary were sent to the insurance company, and in due course the policy was returned to Winkelmann, bearing the insurance company’s indorsement to the effect that the beneficiary had been changed by substituting the name of the hardware company for the bank “with the right of further change” reserved to Winkelmann. The policy was delivered to Christlaw and by him placed in the hardware company’s safe. Later Winkelmann paid the balance due on the premium, $20, and this amount was re-' funded to him by the hardware company.
At the annual meeting of the stockholders of the hardware company held in January, 1920, Winkelmann, by virtue of his control of the stock, ousted certain directors and elected a majority of the new board. He was re-elected president, and a man by the name of Pust was made manager. In March,
In May, 1920, the stock owned and controlled by Winkelmann was sold to persons who immediately took charge of the company and reorganized the board. Winkelmann resigned as president and director and severed his connection with the hardware company, which issued to him a receipt “in full of all accounts to date.” In this settlement nothing whatever was said about the policy, but in withdrawing Winkelmann took the policy with him, and in August following secured a change of beneficiary by having the name of his wife, Lydia C. Winkelmann, substituted in lieu of the name of the hardware company. On February 1, 1921, Winkelmann died. Due notice was given, the required proofs of death furnished, and a demand for payment made by Mrs. Winkelmann. On account of a claim preferred by the hardware company, the insurance company declined to make payment and this action was instituted. In response to the summons the insurance company appeared, paid the money into court, and asked to have the hardware company substituted for it as defendant. The request was granted, the insurance company was discharged from further liability, and the cause proceeded as between Mrs. Winkelmann as plaintiff and the hardware company as defendant.
The issues to be tried were framed by the hardware company’s cross-complaint and the plaintiff’s reply thereto. In the cross-complaint, after the formal allegations, it was alleged that in February, 1919, Winkelmann made to the directors of the hardware company an offer to the effect that if the com
Upon the trial the hardware company assumed the burden of proof. At the conclusion of its testimony the court discharged the jury, found the issues for the plaintiff, and caused judgment to be entered accordingly. From that judgment this appeal is prosecuted.
In their brief, counsel for the hardware company devote their entire argument to sustain the proposition that the insured, in a policy of the character of the one here involved, may by contract put it beyond his power lawfully to change the beneficiary, or in other words, that by contract the named beneficiary may acquire a vested interest in the proceeds of the policy which cannot be defeated by the act of the insured in causing the beneficiary to be changed in violation of the agreement. The argument, however, proceeds upon the assumption that the contract as set forth in the cross-complaint was proved, and therein counsel beg the real question before this court.
The trial court held that the contract pleaded was not proved and the judgment followed that conclusion. In determining the controversy the court indicated that it found the evidence insufficient to prove: (1) That the agreement of February, 1919, was made with the directors of the company acting as a board; (2) that the company paid the premium due February 12, 1920; and (3) that the company was made bene
We deem it unnecessary to consider either the first or second reason assigned. If we- confined our investigation to the evidence furnished by the policy itself, no difficulty whatever would be encountered, for -when the insurance company granted the request for a substitution of the hardware company in the place of the bank as beneficiary, it did so with the express declaration that the insured reserved the right to make further change at will, and with the stipulations in or indorsed on the policy it was delivered to and accepted by the hardware company and retained for more than a year. The contention of the hardware company resolves itself into this: Notwithstanding Winkelmann specifically reserved the right to change the beneficiary at will, he agreed orally for a valuable consideration that he would not exercise that right so long as the hardware company paid the premiums.
The determination of the controversy depends upon the character of the oral contract entered into in February, 1919. The terms of that contract, as detailed by the hardware company’s witnesses, are so meager and indefinite that it would be quite impossible from them alone to determine the effect of the agreement. From those terms it is doubtful whether the hardware company bound itself to do anything; certainly it did not bind itself to pay any definite number of premiums. It might have ceased paying at any time without incurring liability. But a key to the interpretation of the agreement is furnished by the evidence of the circumstances under which the contract was made and the purpose or intention of the parties to it. That the contract grew out of the one between Winkelmann and the bank is beyond controversy, and that it had its origin in a conversation between Winkelmann and Miller at the time Winkelmann severed his connection with the bank and entered the employ of the hardware company is equally well settled. While the witnesses Christlaw, Miller and Anderson detailed the terms of the contract, only Miller and Anderson assumed
It is an elementary rule in the construction of contracts that
Applying these rules to the evidence before us and the mean-
The judgment is affirmed.
'Affirmed.