Chamberlain v. Williams

62 Ill. App. 423, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 453
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 10, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 62 Ill. App. 423 (Chamberlain v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chamberlain v. Williams, 62 Ill. App. 423, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 453 (Ill. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shepard

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellants were, respectively, sisters of Frank H. Williams, who died intestate November 23, 1891, leaving him surviving a widow, the appellee, and one child.

During Williams’ lifetime he took out two policies of life insurance upon his own life, in the Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company, in favor of his legal representatives, dated respectively, March 1, 1884, and March 13,1884, one for $10,000, and the other for $5,000, and he paid all premiums chat thereafter became due thereunder.

The appellee was appointed administratrix of Williams’ estate by the Probate Court of Cook County. During the course of administration the appellants presented their several petitions to the Probate Court for the delivery to them, respectively, of said policies, then in the custody of the clerk of said court, and upon a hearing of said petitions and the answers of appellee thereto, it was so ordered.

From such order of the Probate Court appellee prosecuted an appeal to the Circuit Court of Cook County, where, upon a hearing of said petitions there consolidated and heard together, the prayers thereof were denied, and said policies were found and adjudged to be assets of said estate, and that appellants had no right, title or claim thereto.

From such decree of the Circuit Court this appeal is prosecuted.

It was shown that after the death of Williams the policies in question were found in a tin box belonging to him, and kept in the vault of the wholesale store of Marshall Field & Co., where Williams had been employed formany years before Ms death.

Attached to each policy was an assignment thereof, of which the following is a copy of that attached to the $10,000 policy:

“ In consideration of $2 to me paid I do hereby assign, transfer and set over unto Emma J. Chamberlain (my sister), of Croton Falls, New York, her executors, administrators and assigns, policy number 170,501 in the Connecticut .Mutual Life Insurance Company, dated the first day of March, A. D. 1884, in the sum of $10,000, together with all profits due or to become due thereon.
Witness my hand and seal at Chicago, Illinois,' this 5th day of March, A. D. 1884.
Frank II. Williams. [L. S.]
In presence of Henry M. Curtis.
(See special notice indorsed hereon.)”

The assignment attached to the $5,000 policy was identical with the one just copied, except that the assignee therein named was “ Maria W. Sheppard, my sister, of Falls Valley, Connecticut,” and that the policy was differently described, according to the fact, and in the date thereof, as March 19, A. D. 1894.

The “ special notice ” to which attention was directed by the note at the foot of the form of assignment was as follows :

“ The company offers this form of assignment of policies ■solely for the conveniencó and accommodation of its members. It has no control of assignments, can not become responsible for them, and must reserve all questions for impartial action when contracts become due and payable. All claims under assignments are subject to satisfactory proof of the assignee’s interest in the life insured, and to all defenses against the obligations of the policies. It is desirable that the transfer be annexed or attached to the policy. Duplicates or certified copies of assignments may be sent to the company, to be noted and filed for the purpose of reference and information.
John M. Taylor,
Vice President.” -

Paragraph sixth of the conditions of each óf such policies provides:

“ That no assignment of this policy shall be valid unless made in writing indorsed hereon; and any claim against this company, arising under this policy made by any assignee, shall be subject to satisfactory proof of interest in the life insured, in due form, and to any breach of the conditions of this contract by any of the parties hereto, whether such breach exist prior or subsequent to such assignment; and such proof of interest shall be a condition precedent to any right of action on this contract by or on behalf of such assignee; and this company shall in nó case be responsible for the validity of any assignment.”

Ho question was made by the company of its liability on the policies, or as to said assignments, or notice thereof, in any respect, but on the contrary, it paid the moneys due thereon to the American Trust and Savings Bank, under an order of the Probate Court, entered upon the stipulation of parties, providing that said bank might collect and hold the proceeds in lieu of the policies, for the benefit of the party eventually found to be entitled thereto.

It was proved by Henry M. Curtis, who witnessed said assignments, that he was a soliciting agent of the said insurance company, and had been such since December, 1878; that at the time or just after the delivery of the first, or §10,000 policy, Williams applied to him to know how he could make the policy payable to a particular person; that Curtis told Williams it could be done by an assignment, and handed Williams the blank form of assignment that was used, and showed him how to fill it out; that Williams then stated to Curtis that he felt under obligations to his sisters; that they had done a great deal for him; that he felt indebted to them for what they had done for him in years past, and he wanted to provide for them, as they had not any amount of means, and he wanted them to have his life insurance in case of his death; that' Curtis then told Williams all he would have to do in such case was to fill out the assignment, making the policy run to them, and attach it to his policy; that Williams then filled out the blanks and signed the assignment, and he, Curtis, witnessed it; that when the second policy, the one for $5,000, came, substantially the same thing was repeated, Williams stating the same reasons for so doing; that the policy in each case was right there on the desk before them when the conversation was had and the assignment made and witnessed; that Curtis told Williams where to attach the assignments, although he could not testify that he saw them attached by Williams; that afterward, on several occasions, after Williams had trouble in his family relations, Williams told Curtis he was glad that he had his insurance assigned to his sisters so that they could get it in case of his death, and expressed a very bitter feeling toward his wife’s father.

When the policies were found in Williams’ box, after his death, the assignment of each was attached to the proper policy, and it can not be reasonably questioned, under the evidence concerning the keeping and opening of the box, that he attached the same.

Mrs. Woolf, who had known Williams for eighteen years, and in whose family Williams lived from May, 1891, to the time of his death, testified to having had two conversations with Williams about his life insurance.

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Bluebook (online)
62 Ill. App. 423, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 453, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chamberlain-v-williams-illappct-1896.