Cheeves v. Anders, Administrator

28 S.W. 274, 87 Tex. 287, 1894 Tex. LEXIS 456
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 12, 1894
DocketNo. 205.
StatusPublished
Cited by105 cases

This text of 28 S.W. 274 (Cheeves v. Anders, Administrator) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cheeves v. Anders, Administrator, 28 S.W. 274, 87 Tex. 287, 1894 Tex. LEXIS 456 (Tex. 1894).

Opinion

BROWN, Associate Justice.

J. H. Anders, as administrator of L. B. Chilton, brought this suit in the District Court of Falls County to recover the amount of a policy issued by the New York Life Insurance Company for $10,000, payable to Cheeves and Chilton, or their administrators or assigns, making the insurance company and Cheeves defendants. The insurance company did not deny liability, and the *291 contest was between the plaintiff and Cheeves as to the right to receive the proceeds from the policy.

Cheeves filed an answer, in which he pleaded that he was entitled to the proceeds of the policy as against the company and plaintiff, because at the time of issuing the said policy, on the 17th day of May, 1889, he and the deceased, L. B. Chilton, were partners engaged in a mercantile business in Falls County, and that the said partnership procured the issuance of the said policy of insurance upon the life of the said Chilton and paid the premium'thereon, $590, out of and with the money and assets of said firm, and that thereafter, on April 23, 1890, the said firm paid out of its assets another premium of $590 upon said policy, which kept it in force until the death of Chilton.

It is alleged in the answer, that at the same time another policy was issued by the said insurance company payable to Cheeves & Chilton, or their administrators or assigns, upon the death of T. A. Cheeves, and for the like sum of $10,000, upon which premiums were paid out of the assets of the said firm amounting to an equal sum as that paid upon the policy in suit.

That on the 23rd day of September, 1890, the firm of Cheeves & Chilton was dissolved, and Chilton, for a consideration of about $20,500, by writing conveyed to Cheeves all of his right and claim in and to all of the partnership property and rights of every kind, the language being set out broadly enough to include all interest that the firm had in the policy at the time of the transfer.

Chilton died November 7, 1890, and proofs of loss were duly furnished. Cheeves claims that he was interested in the life of Chilton as his partner at the time the policy was issued, and also that Chilton transferred the policy to him. He closed his answer with a prayer for general relief.

There is no allegation in the answer that L. B. Chilton was indebted tó the firm of Cheeves & Chilton, or to Cheeves, or in what respect Cheeves had any interest in the life of Chilton, except simply that he was a partner when the policy was issued.

Plaintiff filed a general demurrer to the answer, which the court sustained, and upon trial without a jury gave judgment for the plaintiff against both defendants for the whole amount of the policy, which judgment was by the Court of Civil Appeals affirmed.

It is against the public policy of this State to allow any one who has no insurable interest to be the owner of a policy of insurance upon the life of a human being. Price v. Knights of Honor, 68 Texas, 361; Schonfield v. Turner, 75 Texas, 329; Ins. Co. v. Hazlewood, 75 Texas, 351.

In some States it is held that an element of wagering likewise enters into such contracts, which has led, as we believe, to inconsistencies in the decisions in some of the courts. Our court has placed the inhibition against such contracts upon the higher and. sounder ground that *292 the public, independent of the consent or concurrence of the parties, has an interest that no inducement shall be offered to one man to take the life of another. Making this the test in every phase of such cases, there can be no inconsistency in our decisions, and the public good will be better guarded.

Applying this salutary rule, the conclusion has been reached by our courts that such policy can not be beneficially owned by any one not interested in the life insured, whether the policy be taken out in the first instance by the noninterested party, with or without the consent of the insured, or that he acquired the policy by assignment from the person whose life is insured, or from another who had an insurable interest.

A man may insure his own life, making the policy payable to his legal representatives, and afterwards assign it to any one, or he may procure such policy and make it payable to any person that he may name, but in either case, if the person to whom it is assigned or who is named in the policy has no insurable interest, he will hold the proceeds as a trustee for the benefit of those entitled by law to receive it. Price v. Knights of Honor; Schonfield v. Turner, cited above.

The law permits one who is interested in the life of another to become the owner of insurance upon the life of such other person, either by contracting with the insurance company, or by contract made by the party whose life is insured, or by assignment of the policy after it is issued. If, however, the interest is of a definite character, as that of a creditor of the insured, or of one who may from the life of the insured reap some pecuniary advantage of a definite nature, the interest of the holder of such policy will be limited to the amount of such liability at the death of the insured, together with such amount as he has paid to preserve the policy, with interest thereon, and the remainder will be given to the estate of the party insured. Price v. Knights of Honor, 68 Texas, 361; Schonfield v. Turner, 75 Texas, 324; Ins. Co. v. Hazlewood, 75 Texas, 338; Goldbaum v. Blum, 79 Texas, 638. If the interest of the policy holder should cease before the death of the insured, or if the debt and premiums advanced should be paid, then the whole of the policy will go to the estate of the insured.

When an insurance company has issued a policy upon the life of a person payable to one who has no insurable interest in the life insured, or when a policy has been assigned to one having no such interest, the insurance company must nevertheless pay the full amount of the policy, if otherwise liable, because it has so contracted, and it is no concern of the insurer as to who gets the proceeds, except to see that it is paid to the proper parties under its agreement. It is simply required to perform its contract, and the law will dispose of the money according to the rights of the parties. Ins Co. v. Williams, 79 Texas, 637, and authorities cited.

*293 This rule does no wrong to the insurance company. It having agreed to pay the money on the death of a named person, ought not to be permitted to avoid liability upon its contract upon the ground that it has made an unlawful agreement, when that contract can be enforced in favor of a person who is in nowise concerned in the unlawful part of the transaction. It is held by the courts of this and other States, that when one secures a policy upon his own life and transfers it to another who has no insurable interest, the want of insurable interest can not be set up as a defense by the insurance company; the policy or the assignment is not void as to the insurance company, but will be enforced.

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Bluebook (online)
28 S.W. 274, 87 Tex. 287, 1894 Tex. LEXIS 456, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cheeves-v-anders-administrator-tex-1894.