Churchill v. Bestul

209 F. 766, 126 C.C.A. 490, 1913 U.S. App. LEXIS 1844
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedOctober 7, 1913
DocketNo. 1,955
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 209 F. 766 (Churchill v. Bestul) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Churchill v. Bestul, 209 F. 766, 126 C.C.A. 490, 1913 U.S. App. LEXIS 1844 (7th Cir. 1913).

Opinion

SEAMAN, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above). In the bankruptcy proceeding below, the bankrupt and his wife claimed all benefits provided under the life insurance policy in controversy, free from property rights therein asserted on the p'art of the trustee in bankruptcy. Their petition to that end was denied by the District Court, through an adjudication (in effect) that the estate in bankruptcy was entitled to all the benefits of such policy, unless the bankrupt paid over to the trustee, within 30 days, the sum of $1,860, stated in the order as “the cash surrender value of said insurance policy.” Review and revision of such order is sought by the petitioners, under their original petition before this court, the trustee’s answer, and the certified record.

The issue of law thus presented is whether the provisions of the Bankruptcy Act authorize the ruling below that the trustee became entitled to the benefits of the policy in evidence. However difficult of solution that inquiry may be, it is not only free from complications of fact, but it neither appears nor is asserted that any terms of the policy applicable to the issue are uncertain in their meaning.

The policy was issued to Charles Churchill, as the insured, in 1892. It required all the premiums to be paid during the first ten years ensuing, and they were so paid, making the contract one of “paid-up insurance” long prior to September 15, 1910, the date of adjudication of the insured as a bankrupt. Its provisions which were operative at the last-mentioned date and at all times up to December 8, 1912, were those contained on the face of the policy, whereby his wife, then living, was made sole beneficiary in the event of death of the insured; and while its subsequent terms, made operative only after the expiration of twenty years from its date—to be considered later—provide optional' benefits in favor of the bankrupt, which include surrender of the policy ‘for its cash value” as one of the options, it is both obvious from examination of the entire policy and conceded by the parties, that neither surrender by the insured nor cash surrender value thereof, at any period prior to December 8, 1912, was provided by the contract terms. At the stage, therefore, when bankruptcy intervened, the wife was made the sole beneficiary, throughout the above-mentioned period, of the life insurance secured by the policy. Its subsequent provisions, however, confer in substance the following “optional benefits” in favor of the insured, if “living on the 8th of December,” 1912, namely: (1) Continuance of the policy as “a paid-up insurance, payable at the death of the insured,” together with an annual income of $80 during his life, and further conversion of the surplus apportioned to the policy “into a life annuity.” (2) Continuance of the policy, “guaranteeing a paid-up insurance and an annual income” as above specified, and “withdrawal in cash of the above-defined surplus.” (3) Surrender of the policy “for its cash value,” to be not less than $2,000 and in addition thereto “include the above-defined surplus.” (4) Surrender of the policy and conversion of its cash value “into an annual income during the life of the insured,” payable as described, to be not less than $249.10. The insured is required to give written notice to the company “not less than three months” prior to the above date “which privilege is selected,” and in default thereof “benefit 1 shall be considered selected.” No “dividends [770]*770of surplus shall be allowed or paid” on the policy, prior to the date “at which it becomes entitled to one of the above benefits.” If the policy is continued under benefits 1 or 2, “it shall participate annually thereafter in any dividend declared”' on paid-up policies, to be paid with the income payments.

[1] Valuable benefits are thus secured in favor of the bankrupt, contingent on his surviving the 20-year period; but we are of opinion that the bankrupt was without right or power, when the adjudication of bankruptcy occurred, either to deprive his wife of the life insurance provision then existing in her favor, or to obtain any benefits thereunder, through surrender or other arrangement not expressly authorized by the wife.

[2] In reference to such interest of the wife, the law is well settled that her rights as beneficiary of life insurance are exempt from interference or control on the part of the insured husband—both under the general rule (Central Bank of Washington v. Hume, 128 U. S. 195, 203, 206, 9 Sup. Ct. 41, 32 L,. Ed. 370), and pursuant to the Wisconsin Statute (section 2347, Wis. Stat. 1898) applicable thereto.

[3] Thus the issue is presented whether the above-mentioned prospective “optional benefits” in favor of the bankrupt constitute property which passes to the trustee within the meaning of the Bankruptcy Act. It arises irrespective of the alleged ^rror in overruling the petitioners’ contention that all benefits under the policy were exempt by the statutes of Wisconsin (Wis. Stat. 1898, subdiv. 19, § 2982, and section 2347) from claim on the part of creditors—an issue discussed in the opinion below and in the arguments of counsel herein, which may not be free from difficulty, under the Wisconsin authorities called to attention, whenever its solution becomes needful.

The order of the referee, on the hearing before him, appears to treat the policy as falling within the proviso of section 70a of the Bankruptcy Act, as an insurance policy held by the bankrupt “which has a cash surrender value payable to himself, his estate or personal representatives.” It undertakes to ascertain and fix such value, at the date of adjudication in bankruptcy, to be $1,860, and that the “insurance policy belonged to and should be taken possession of by” the trustee in bankruptcy, unless the bankrupt paid to him “the cash surrender value” thereof thus stated. We understand, however, from the opinion filed by the District Judge, that this view was disapproved, and that the ruling against the petitioners, on the issue under consideration, rested on the proposition that the policy, having no cash surrender value, must nevertheless “be treated as property of the bankrupt passing to the trustee.” In other words, that the trustee derives title under the terms of section 70a immediately preceding the proviso, which reads:

“Property which prior to the filing of the petition he could by any means have transferred, or which might have been levied upon and sold under judicial process against him.”

We are impressed with no doubt that the ruling of the referee was erroneous in its application of the above-mentioned proviso to this policy. Not only was surrender thereof by the bankrupt unauthorized [771]*771and no cash surrender value provided by the policy terms, when bankruptcy intervened, but the letter on the part of the insurance company, which appears to have been accepted as proof of such authorization and surrender value, was plainly without force to that end, if assumed to be admissible for any purpose.

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Bluebook (online)
209 F. 766, 126 C.C.A. 490, 1913 U.S. App. LEXIS 1844, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/churchill-v-bestul-ca7-1913.