Block v. Mylish

41 A.2d 731, 351 Pa. 611
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 11, 1945
DocketAppeal, 244
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 41 A.2d 731 (Block v. Mylish) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Block v. Mylish, 41 A.2d 731, 351 Pa. 611 (Pa. 1945).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Jones,

This appeal arises out of a declaratory judgment proceeding instituted to settle a controversy between sur *612 viving partners and the personal representative of a deceased partner concerning the proceeds of insurance carried by the partnership on the life of the deceased partner.

In 1923, the firm of Mylish, Mann and Drucker, composed of Isaac D. Mylish, Alfred Mann and Jerome J. Drucker, took out a separate policy of insurance on the life of each of the partners in principal sums of $10,000 and, in 1930, took out three additional like policies for $50,000 each, making in all two policies for an aggregate amount of $60,000 of insurance on the life of each partner. The partnership was named beneficiary in all of the policies and, at all times, paid the premiums thereon with partnership funds, as business, expenses.

The partnership endured until June 4,1943. Throughout its existence, the three partners had equal interests in the partnership and shared equally its profits' and losses. On December 29,1941, the partners entered into a written agreement continuing the partnership until December 31, 1943, and thereafter, from year to year, until any of the partners, should give specified notice in writing to the others of his intention to terminate the agreement at the end of the then current term. This agreement conferred on the surviving partners an option to purchase a deceased partner’s interest in the business upon a basis and terms as provided for in the agreement to which further reference will hereinafter be made.

At the time of the execution of the above mentioned agreement, all of the insurance policies on the lives of the partners were pledged with banks as collateral security for the payment of indebtedness then owing by the partnership. This indebtedness was paid off in full on or about May 21, 1943, and the policies were then reconveyed to the partnership as the owner and beneficiary thereof.

Mann died on June 4, 1943, leaving a last will of which Gordon A. Block is executor. At the time of Mann’s death, all of the life insurance policies owned by *613 the partnership were free and clear of any encumbrances. Following his death, the insurance companies , paid the sums due under the policies on his life, in an aggregate amount of $60,077.70, by checks drawn to the order of Mylish, Mann and Drucker and ísaac D. Mylish, Jerome J. Drucker and Gordon A. Block as executor, of the estate of Alfred Mann, deceased.

Mylish and Drucker duly exercised their .option to purchase Mann’s interest in the business pursuant to the provisions of the partnership agreement, but a dispute arose among the interested parties with respect, to the extent to which the value of the business should be affected on account of the policies of insurance on Mann’s life. His executor maintained that the life: insurance proceeds became an asset of the partnership contemporaneously with Mann’s death and should, therefore, be.reflected in toto in a valuation of the business, while Mylish and Drucker contended that only the cash surrender value of the policies on Mann’s life was. a partnership asset at the date of his death and that the proceeds of the insurance were available to them under the partnership agreement for their personal use in. purchasing Mann’s interest in the business. The learned judge of the court below decided the controversy in favor of the deceased partner’s estate and entered judgment accordingly from which the surviving partners have appealed.

The matter in dispute is to be determined in accordance with the intent and purpose of the partnership agreement. To that end, decisions in. other cases are not helpful. No decision has been cited nor found which treats with circumstances similar to those here present. The two cases cited by the appellants, both from outside jurisdictions, 1 are offered for no more than to establish the proposition “that in interpreting an agreement between partners as to insurance proceeds received as a *614 result of a partner’s death, it is the previously expressed intention of the partners which is all-important.” With that, we fully agree, as did the learned court below, and so does the appellee.

In the one case cited by the appellee (Germantown Trust Co., Exr., v. Risser, 269 Pa. 286, 112 A. 443), this Court affirmed a judgment in favor of a deceased partner’s estate for his share of partnership insurance on his life. But, there is an important difference between that case and the present which prevents the ruling from being presently applicable. In the Risser case there was no agreement among the partners specifying the use to be made of the proceeds of the insurance on the partners’ lives. True enough, the surviving partner in the Risser case sought to prove an oral contract, said to have been entered into by the partners at the time the insurance issued and alleged to provide that the proceeds of the policy on the deceased partner’s life should be an ásset “of the surviving partner, to be used for a specific purpose, namely, to pay off the deceased partner’s interest.” But, the proofs adduced by the surviving partner were held insufficient to establish the alleged oral contract and it, therefore, dropped out of the case. The present appellants contend that the partnership agreement of December 29,1941, gave them, with respect to the insurance on Mann’s life, what the unproven oral contract in the Risser case was said to have provided. We are unable to see how the partnership agreement in the instant case can possibly be thought to be susceptible of any such construction.

The presently material' portions of the partnership agreement are contained in paragraph 7 thereof and the three ensuing unnumbered paragraphs from which the following excerpts or summaries are taken:. .

In paragraph 7 it is provided that “In the event of the termination of the partnership by the death of any one of the partners, a complete inventory of the assets of the business shall bé ascertained as soon after the *615 death of said partner as possible, * * *” by appraisers to be selected as provided in the agreement. 2

Tbe next succeeding paragraph provides that “From the gross assets of the business so ascertained, the.liabilities shall be deducted -which shall show the net worth of the business. The surviving partners shall have, the right and are hereby granted the option of purchasing the deceased partner’s interest in the partnership for the sum so arrived at as to his share (good-will not to be included), * * The same paragraph specifies the terms of payment for the deceased partner’s interest, viz., $5,-000 in cash at the time the surviving partners exercise their option to purchase, fifty per cent of the balance within six months of the date of death of the deceased partner, twenty-five per cent within nine months of the same date and the remaining twenty-five per cent within one year.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hansen v. Hansen
16 Pa. D. & C.5th 241 (Delaware County Court of Common Pleas, 2010)
Osborne v. Carmichaels Mining MacHine Repair, Inc.
628 A.2d 874 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1993)
Herman v. Provident Mutual Life Insurance
886 F.2d 529 (Second Circuit, 1989)
Beard v. American Agency Life Insurance
550 A.2d 677 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1988)
Neshaminy Federation of Teachers v. Neshaminy School District
462 A.2d 629 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1983)
Stuchell v. Girard Trust Bank
5 Pa. D. & C.3d 189 (Delaware County Court of Common Pleas, 1977)
Burne v. Franklin Life Insurance
301 A.2d 799 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1973)
Seaboard Industries v. Monaco
53 Pa. D. & C.2d 321 (Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas, 1971)
Land & Simmons Co. v. Arconti
162 A.2d 478 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1960)
Lakin v. Postal Life and Casualty Insurance Co.
316 S.W.2d 542 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1958)
Hagan v. Dundore
50 A.2d 570 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1947)
Spigelmire v. North Braddock School District
43 A.2d 229 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1945)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 A.2d 731, 351 Pa. 611, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/block-v-mylish-pa-1945.