Chatham Phenix National Bank v. Crosney

167 N.E. 217, 251 N.Y. 189, 1929 N.Y. LEXIS 703
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 28, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 167 N.E. 217 (Chatham Phenix National Bank v. Crosney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chatham Phenix National Bank v. Crosney, 167 N.E. 217, 251 N.Y. 189, 1929 N.Y. LEXIS 703 (N.Y. 1929).

Opinion

Lehman, J.

The complaint alleges that Abraham Crosney at the time of his death was insolvent and indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of $50,000; that the defendant was the wife of the said Abraham Crosney and that “ she, in the lifetime of her said husband, or the said Abraham Crosney, caused his life to be insured in various insurance companies in her name as a beneficiary and for her benefit; ” that premiums for such insurance were paid annually out of the property of the said Abraham Crosney in an amount greatly in excess *192 of $500, and that at the time of the payment of such premiums Abraham Crosney was insolvent and unable to pay his debts. Upon these allegations the plaintiff seeks a judgment that the portion of the insurance moneys, payable by the terms of the policies to the defendant as beneficiary, which has been purchased by excess of premium above five hundred dollars, shall be applied in payments of the decedent’s debts.

The action is based upon the provisions of section 52 of the Domestic Relations Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 14). The courts of this State have frequently been called upon to construe and give effect to the provision of that section. Similar provisions became part of our statute law by the enactment of chapter 80, Laws of 1840. Consistently, the courts have construed the statute in the light of its history, and the conditions existing at the time of its enactment, which it was intended to remedy. At that time, married women still labored under the common-law disabilities of coverture, and as this court pointed out in the case of Whitehead v. New York Life Insurance Co. (102 N. Y. 143): Prior to that enactment and at common law it was open to question whether the wife and children had an insurable interest in the life of the husband and father (Bliss on Life Ins., § 10; Ruse v. Mut. Ben. L. Ins. Co., 23 N. Y. 516), and whether he could protect them save by taking out policies in his own name, and for the benefit of his estate which in the end would go to them. But this made the insurance liable for his debts, and left it impossible for those who needed assistance most to obtain it at all. (Ruppert v. Union Mut. Ins. Co., 7. Rob. 155, 156.) The statute was intended to and does remedy the difficulty.”

Though in terms the statute applies only where a married woman causes the life of her husband to be insured, the courts, construing the statute in the light of the conditions existing at the time of its original enactment, which the Legislature intended to remedy, *193 have held that the statute applies also where the insurance, though effected by the husband, is made payable to the wife. (Whitehead v. New York Life Insurance Co., supra; Kittel v. Domeyer, 175 N. Y. 205; Guardian Trust Company v. Straus, 139 App. Div. 884; affd., 201 N. Y. 546; Wagner v. Thieriot, 203 App. Div. 757; affd., 236 N. Y. 588.) The Legislature intended to give to the wife a limited right to the insurance fund created by the husband’s annual appropriation or investment of his moneys in premiums for insurance upon his life for the benefit of his wife.” (Matter of Thompson, 184 N. Y. 36.) “ The important feature in this statute, as interpreted by the Appellate Division and the Court of Appeals, is not who negotiates and actually procures the insurance policies to be issued, but who pays the premiums.” (Guardian Trust Company v. Straus, supra.)

Judicial decisions that a married woman “ causes ” the life of her husband to be insured within the meaning of the statute, though the husband in fact effects the insurance, have sometimes been explained upon the theory that the husband acts as the wife’s agent. Such explanations must be read in the light of the judicial interpretation of the legislative intent. This court has pointed out that “ the legislative intent bore upon the exemption of a fund, which had been created by the husband as a provision for the benefit of his wife in the event of her surviving him. Her right did not rest upon contract, but upon a legislative grant, by way of exemption from the claims of creditors, of an insurance fund, created by the husband’s * * * moneys.” (Kittel v. Domeyer, supra.) In creating the insurance fund as a provision for the benefit of his wife, the husband acts as the agent of the wife only in the sense that he enables the wife to obtain the benefit of the fund. (Baker v. Union Mutual Life Ins. Co., 43 N. Y. 283.)

*194 Since the date when the Legislature first made provision for insurance in favor of a married woman upon her husband’s life, free to a limited extent from the claims of her husband’s creditors, the conditions which the statute was intended to remedy have entirely vanished. A married woman no longer is under any disability to contract in her own name or to hold or dispose of her separate property. Any doubt which might have existed as to the right of a married woman to insure the fife of her husband has been removed by the express provisions of section 55 of the Insurance Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 28). The result of these changes in the law has produced a situation which might well seem anomalous to the Legislature. Though the provisions of section 52 of the Domestic Relations Law were intended to remedy conditions which at one time may have prevented a husband from making provision for his wife through the creation of an insurance fund payable to her, under changed conditions it operated as a limitation upon the right of a husband to make, in favor of his wife, the same provision which he might make for others having a lesser claim upon him. No limitation existed upon the right of a stranger named as the beneficiary of a policy upon the life of another to take the entire insurance fund upon the death of the insured, free from any claims of the creditors of the insured, though the annual premiums were paid by the insured, unless such premiums were paid in fraud of creditors. Where the wife was the beneficiary of a policy upon the life of her husband, the creditors of the husband were entitled to the portion of the insurance money which is purchased by excess of premium above five hundred dollars ” out of her husband’s property. The statute, intended to create rights in a wife, under changed conditions, resulted in creditors having rights against a wife which they would not otherwise possess. Only the Legislature could remedy this condition.

We are told that the Legislature did intend to remedy *195 this condition by the enactment of section 55-a of the Insurance Law (Chapter 468, sec. 1, Laws of 1927).

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Bluebook (online)
167 N.E. 217, 251 N.Y. 189, 1929 N.Y. LEXIS 703, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chatham-phenix-national-bank-v-crosney-ny-1929.