Cassel v. Bigler

22 Pa. D. & C. 125, 1934 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 428
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Clearfield County
DecidedOctober 4, 1934
Docketno. 1
StatusPublished

This text of 22 Pa. D. & C. 125 (Cassel v. Bigler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Clearfield County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cassel v. Bigler, 22 Pa. D. & C. 125, 1934 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 428 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1934).

Opinion

Smith, P. J.,

This case arises on a bill in equity filed by the receiver of Clearfield National Bank to compel Elizabeth G. Bigler, widow of A. Wright Bigler, and the administrators of A. Wright Bigler to interplead for the purpose of determining the ownership and right to receive certain collateral held by the bank, the loan thereon having been paid out of the proceeds of certain life insurance paid by the insurance company under the circumstances hereinafter set forth. A consent decree having been made by the court raising the issue between the interested parties, a bill of complaint was filed by the administrators of the estate and an answer by the widow, and upon these pleadings and the legal question raised thereby the matter comes before the court. ...

Briefly, the facts may be stated as follows: A. Wright Bigler had insurance policies amounting to $41,099.74, all of which were payable to his wife as beneficiary. All this insurance was assigned to and held by Clearfield National Bank as collateral security for the payment of loans upon which he was liable as maker or endorser, the amount of the loans being at the time of payment $33,-731.63. While the clauses pertaining to assignment and change of beneficiary vary somewhat in form, there was no difference in substance or effect. There was other collateral, also held by the bank as security for payment of the same indebtedness, consisting of stocks, bonds, and liens on real estate. The widow’s right to receive $7,368.11, which was the amount in excess of the loans, was recognized, and that amount was paid to her. The contest is as to the ownership of the other collateral, the widow and beneficiary claiming it for herself, and it also being claimed by the administrators as part of the decedent’s estate.

The right to claim the collateral depends upon the question of the ownership of the funds which were used to pay the bank loans.

The question is one which has arisen in various reported eases and upon which the decisions are conflicting. There is considerable authority for the view that, as the insured did not exercise his right to change the beneficiary, and as the rights of the beneficiary became vested upon his death, she becomes entitled to the proceeds of the policies except to the extent she is subordinated to the pledgee’s rights therein, and that therefore the insurance money used- to pay the loan and which would otherwise go to her is in fact her money, and that she should be subrogated, therefore, to the insured’s rights in the collateral after payment of the loan. We have been particularly referred to a recent case in the Ohio Supreme Court, which so holds: Katz v. The Ohio National Bank, Executor, 127 Ohio 531, decided February 21, 1934, the opinion in which contains extensive citations from other jurisdictions.

[126]*126While much could be said upon this question, both by way of citation of authorities and by way of reasoning on behalf of either view, it appears to us that this question has already been squarely met and ruled by authority in this State in the case of Fidelity Trust Co., Administrator, v. Union National Bank of Pittsburgh et al., 313 Pa. 467. In that case, Harrison Nesbit had created a life insurance trust, the trustees of which were the beneficiaries of certain insurance policies. These particular policies were found to have been so deposited and the beneficiaries so designated at a time when the insured was solvent, and the question of a conveyance in fraud of creditors which was involved in some of the other items in the same case does not apply to the policies in question (p. 471). Subsequently, after becoming insolvent, he made an agreement with an Ohio bank which required the trustees to purchase certain notes, upon which he was indebted to it, after his death, this Ohio bank agreement being found by the court to be in effect, though not in form, an assignment of the proceeds of the policies. The Ohio bank held other collateral securities for the payment of its indebtedness of $200,000 and sold these securities and realized thereon sufficient to reduce the indebtedness to the bank to $57,494.20. The action was brought by the administrators of Nesbit against the trustees of the insurance trust, naming also as defendants Nesbit’s wife and children, who were beneficiaries of the life insurance trust, and the Ohio bank. The Ohio bank, in view of its having realized on a large part of its security, asked for discontinuance of the action as to it and was accordingly dismissed as a party to the action. The lower court awarded to the administrators the amount of $57,494.20 out of these policies. The plaintiff appealed, contending that the entire $200,000 should have been awarded. The defendants also appealed, contending that the plaintiff was not entitled to any part of this amount. The Supreme Court sustained the plaintiff’s contention and awarded the entire $200,000 to the plaintiff.

In passing upon the defendant’s contentions in the Nesbit case, the court disposed of three principal contentions: (a) That the Act of April 17, 1843, P. L. 273, relating to assignments, was repealed by the Insolvency Act of June 4,1901, P. L. 404; (6) that the Ohio bank agreement had not been accepted by the bank; and (c) that insurance payable to a wife and children is exempt by statute from the claims of creditors. The Supreme Court sustained none of these contentions. While it found that the Act of 1843 was repealed by the Act of 1901, it found that the provisions of the Act of 1901 governed the assignment in question and had the same effect, also finding that the assignment was contrary to the Uniform Fraudulent Conveyance Act of May 21,1921, P. L. 1045 — in other words, that the assignment itself was valid, not depending upon statute but being an assertion of a right incidental to ownership, but that the assignment, because of the operation of the acts mentioned and because of the insolvency of Nesbit at the time, operated not for the benefit of the Ohio bank but for the benefit of all the creditors of Nesbit. Contention (6) was disposed of on evidence of the bank’s acting under the agreement. Contention (e), which would also apply in the instant case, was disposed of in the following language: “The right of the wife and children to participate in the insurance was an expectancy measured by the policies and the insurance trust agreements. One of the conditions of the donor’s gift was that, by the exercise of power expressly reserved, he might destroy altogether the expectancy of his wife and children. By the Ohio bank agreement, he diminished the contingent beneficial interest theretofore conferred on his family, and subordinated that interest in the insurance proceeds to the extent of the loan and interest.” The court also says: “While the statute exempts insurance payable to the family, it does not exempt pro[127]*127ceeds payable to a creditor or creditors and the family; the creditor’s interest is not exempt.”

It has been contended in the instant case that the decision in the Nesbit case depended largely on the question of insolvency. Examination of the case, however, with reference to this portion of the insurance in question, does not sustain that view. In finding that the plaintiff was entitled to receive the entire amount of the loan of $200,000 from the proceeds of the policies, the reasoning of the Supreme Court is based not upon insolvency but upon the nature of the interests involved. The court says in part: “The Ohio bank agreement was a conveyance, to the bank, of an interest in the proceeds expected to come into the hands of the trustees; the value of the right was the face of the note with interest.

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Related

Fidelity Trust Co. v. Union National Bank
169 A. 209 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1933)

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Bluebook (online)
22 Pa. D. & C. 125, 1934 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cassel-v-bigler-pactcomplclearf-1934.