Beed v. Beed

222 N.W. 442, 207 Iowa 954
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 14, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 222 N.W. 442 (Beed v. Beed) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beed v. Beed, 222 N.W. 442, 207 Iowa 954 (iowa 1928).

Opinion

Faville, J.

— Lewis H. Beed was the maker of a certain promissory note executed and delivered to the Franklin County State Bank for the principal sum of $5,000. The appellant is a brother of said Lewis’s. He was a surety upon.the said note. The appellee Laura B. Beed is the widow of said Lewis. When said note became due, the maker, Lewis, was unable to pay the same. He wished to secure an extension of time by the execution of a new note and the payment of the interest then due upon the existing note. He requested the appellant to become surety on the new note. The appellant objected to so doing, and finally, after some negotiations, it was agreed between said parties that the appellant would sign a new nóte, as surety for Lewis to said bank, for the said sum of $5,000, the time of payment on said note to be extended, on condition that Lewis should take, out a policy of insurance to the amount of $5,000, payable to the appellant, which should be held as security to the appellant for signing said note as surety. This arrangement was carried out. A new note for $5,000 was executed and delivered to the bank, signed by Lewis as maker, and by the appellant as surety, and practically contemporaneously therewith, the said Lewis procured a policy of life insurance in the sum of $5,000 in the Prur dentiál Insurance Company of America, which policy was made payable to the appellant, as beneficiary, who was described in said policy as the “brother of the insured.” This policy was lodged with the cashier of said bank, as security to the appellant for his liability as surety on said note. The policy was issued on or about January 5, 1925. It contained a clause as follows: “The right to change the beneficiary has been reserved by the insured.” The policy provided for the payment of an annual premium, and it appears that the premium was paid by the insured in January, 1926, after a time when the policy had lapsed, but by such payment it was duly reinstated. In January, 1927, another annual premium of $75 became due on said policy. The evidence tends to show that at said time the insured, Lewis, was insolvent, and could not pay said premium. In any event, at or *956 about the.time the premium became' due, the appellee Laura B. Beed paid said premium, and Lewis and :the; appellee -obtained from the insurance company a proper change in said policy substituting the appellee as beneficiary in said policy, in place of the appellant. It does not appear that any notice of default in the payment of the premium on said policy was ever given to the appellant. The appellant did not know, until after the death of Lewis, that the policy had been changed, substituting the’ appellee as beneficiary therein. After said change had been made, Lewis died, insolvent. The note has not been paid, and if is impossible to collect anything- thereon from the estate of Lewis. The insurance company recognizes its liability on the policy for the amount due thereon, and this action is brought for the purpose of determining whether the appellant or the appellee is entitled to the proceeds of said insurance pdicy. The evidence tends to show that the appellee knew of the existence of the old note of $5,000, and of its renewal, and that the appellant was surety on said note, and also that the policy of insurance had' been obtained as security for the protection of the appellant against his liability as surety on said note, and that it was originally payable to him as beneficiary. There is also evidence in the record, which is challenged by objection, tending to show that Lewis orally , agreed with the appellant that he would not change the beneficiary in said policy.

I. It is contended that, under the record, there was no consideration for the naming of the appellant as a beneficiary under the policy as originally issued.. The theory of the appellee is that, at the time of the Qxecution of the renewal note, the maker, Lewis, was, insolvent;. that the original note was uncollectible from Lewis, and that the renewal note was, therefore, of no benefit to him-; and tha,t there was no consideration for the execution of the new note. It is a well established rule in this state that a renewal note given for the same amount as the original note is supported by legal consideration. Klemm v. Weil, 194 Iowa 1073; German Sav. Bank v. Geneser, 116 Iowa 119. Likewise, it is a familiar rule that the extension of the time of payment of an obligation is consideration for the execution of a renewal note for the amount. Conkling v. Young, 141 Iowa 676; First State Bank v. Williams, 143 Iowa 177.

*957 It. is also urged that the 'fact that the debtor, Lewis, was insolvent at the time of the renewal of the note renders it without consideration. Such is not the rule. As bearing on the question, see Knapp v. Hoyt, 57 Iowa 591; Shively v. Globe Mfg. Co. 205 Iowa 1233. In this connection, it is also-proper -to observe that, since there-was consideration passing to the maker-of the .renewal nóte, this was sufficient to support the consideration passing to the surety. It is not necessary that an actual consideration pass to the surety. Miller v. Gardner, 49 Iowa 234.; Sherman v. Smith, 185 Iowa 654; Bell v. Cooper, 190 Iowa 529; Charlson v. Farmers State Bank, 201 Iowa 120.

II. It is contended that the policy of insurance, by its terms, provides that the insured reserved the right to - change the beneficiary; that this provision in -the .policy - was known to the appellant at the time the policy was obtained; and that, by reason of said facts, the appel~aiit cannot complain of the change in the policy by the insured. The policy of insurance was obtained for the 'purpose of security to the appellant,- because of his becoming surety on the note of the said Lewis, and by said means loaning his credit to him. He had an insurable interest in the life of Lewis by virtue of such situation. Morrow v. National Life Assn., 184 Mo. App. 308 (168 S. W. 881); Embry’s Admrs. v. Harris, 107 Ky. 61 (52 S. W. 958).

In the recent cáse of Jacobson v. New York Life Ins. Co., 199 Iowa 770, we considered a situation- somewhat similar to that involved in the instant ease. In said case.we recognized the settled rule of this state that, where a right to change beneficiaries is reserved in the policy, the beneficiary first named acquires no vested interest in the: policy, and that the person insured has the right, at any time he may see fit, to change the beneficiary. Undoubtedly, such is the general rule. Ordinarily, the selection of the beneficiary is a-matter of voluntary, action on the -part of the insured, and no vested interest in -the policy is acquired by the beneficiary, and a change may be made therein at the option of the insured, with the consent of the company, and ordinarily, the consent of the beneficiary is not -necessary.

But there is an exception to this general rule, where, as in the instant case, the policy is taken out for and in behalf of a beneficiary for a specific purpose, either under an agreement be *958 tween the parties that the beneficiary shall not be changed, or under such circumstances as to render it inequitable to permit such change to be made.

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222 N.W. 442, 207 Iowa 954, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beed-v-beed-iowa-1928.