Clay County Bank v. Wilson

158 S.E. 517, 109 W. Va. 684, 1930 W. Va. LEXIS 144
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 25, 1930
Docket6536
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 158 S.E. 517 (Clay County Bank v. Wilson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clay County Bank v. Wilson, 158 S.E. 517, 109 W. Va. 684, 1930 W. Va. LEXIS 144 (W. Va. 1930).

Opinion

Maxwell, Judge:

This appeal involves an effort of creditors of William G. Wilson, deceased, to reach funds which have been paid to his *686 widow, Mabel Fout Wilson, under policies of insurance on his life. The contention of the creditors was presented by their petition filed in a chancery suit which had been instituted by Mabel Fout Wilson, administratrix, c. t. a., of the estate of William G. Wilson, deceased, for the purpose of subjecting the real estate of said decedent to the payment of his debts and of settling his estate. The petitioners appeal from a decree of the circuit court dismissing their petition.

William G. Wilson died November 16, 1925. The appraised value of his estate was $98,818.71. His primary indebtedness was about $100,000.00. His secondary indebtedness was about $117,000.00, but the ultimate liability of the estate under the latter class remains to be determined. He was greatly involved financially for many years preceding his death. We are enforced to believe from the record, and we find therefrom that at no time for at least five years prior to his death was his estate sufficient to satisfy his indebtedness.

The decedent was married to Mabel Fout Wilson April 22, 1908. ' Soon after their marriage, he undertook to assign to her certain policies of life insurance which he had theretofore purchased. Certain of these assignments are attacked because in the assignments themselves the insured reserved the right to revoke the same at any time by notice to the company. It is also said that at least one of the policies purported to be assigned was not delivered to Mrs. Wilson by the insured. Passing over the question raised as to whether these two propositions are sufficiently presented by the pleadings, we shall consider them on their merits. The record does not disclose whether the policies with the assignments thereon were delivered by the insured to his wife or whether they were found among his papers after his death. In the absence of proof of actual delivery we will assume that they were found among the decedent’s papers. There is no evidence that Mrs. Wilson knew about the assignments until after her husband’s death. Under requirements of the insurance companies, the assignments were executed in duplicate by Mr. Wilson and forwarded to the respective companies which approved the same, retained one copy of each and returned the other to the *687 insured. This was sufficient to constitute delivery to his wife. Manual delivery was not necessary.

Where there is an attempted assignment of a life insurance policy to a stranger, there is generally a rigidity of requirement of physical delivery to the assignee. Spooner v. Hilbish, (Va.) 23 S. E. 751. But where the assignment is to the wife or infant child of the insured, the necessity for manual delivery does not exist, and such delivery is therefore not required. In such circumstances the filing of a duplicate of the assignment with the company in compliance with a requirement of the contract of insurance is held to be a substitute for manual delivery. New York Life Ins. Co. v. Dunlevy, 214 Fed. 1. To the same effect is Penn Mutual Life Insurance Co. v. Forbes, 200 Ill. App, 441, where the 'insured executed, in duplicate, to her minor children, an assignment of a policy, payable to her estate, and sent a copy of such assignment to the insurance company which accepted the same, but the insured retained the policy in her possession until her death, it was held that such an assignment was valid without a manual delivery of the policy. See also Northwestern Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Wright, (Wis.) 140 N. W. 1078, where an assignment was held valid from a son to his mother and sister, although not accompanied by actual manual delivery of the.policy. In Burges v. New York Life Ins. Co., (Texas) 53 S. E. 602, it was held that actual delivery of an assignment of an insurance policy to the assignee, who was the assignor’s adopted child, was unnecessary to validate the assignment. Likewise Shorey v. Webb, (Md.) 89 Atl. 391 (no actual delivery to wife); Thompson’s Ex'r. v. Thompson, (Ky.) 226 S. W. 350 (no delivery to minor children) McDonough v. Aetna Life Ins. Co., 78 N. Y. Sup. 217 (assignments lodged with insurer; assignee a third person with no insurable interest).

As to the proposition that certain of the assignments are ineffectual because the assignor reserved the right to revoke the assignments, it is sufficient to note that an assignee of a life policy under an assignment containing such reservation occupies as secure a position as does a beneficiary under a policy wherein the insured expressly reserves the right to *688 change beneficiaries at Ms election. True, some authorities make a distinction between “change of beneficiary” in a policy and “assignment” by the insured of his interest therein, the latter resting on contract and the' former on the power to appoint. YII Cooley’s Briefs on Insurance, p. 6443; Ehlerman, v. Bankers’ Life Co., (Iowa) 200 N. W. 408. But in equity substance rather than form must be considered. Neither such assignee nor such beneficiary has an irrevocable interest until the death of the insured. Whatever we may term it, a qualified vested right, a contingent interest or an inchoate right, it becomes a vested right upon the death of the insured. There is no more justification to challenge the status of such assignee on such ground after the death of the insured than there would be to assert that a named beneficiary could not take under a policy after the death of the insured because some other beneficiary might have been substituted by the insured.

In the recent case of Webster v. Telle, (Ark.) 6 S. W. 2d 28, Edward Telle insured his life in the Prudential Insurance Company and designated his beneficiary the Alexander Refining Co. The right to change the beneficiary was not reserved. However, upon the request of Telle and the beneficiary named the insurance company changed the beneficiary by substituting the “executors, administrators or assigns” instead of the beneficiary originally named. In a financial statement later made to a bank by Telle, among other things, is the following: “Life insurance carried for $15000. Beneficiary, wife. In his will, Telle said: “I have made my beloved wife, Bernice Phillips Telle, the beneficiary of three life insurance policies,” etc. Upon his demise, a contest arose over the disposition of the insurance between Webster, his executor, and Bernice Telle. The latter claimed as beneficiary by the. terms of the will and also on the ground that Telle during his lifetime had assigned and delivered to her the policies as security for certain money she had loaned him. The insurance company knew nothing of this assignment, its provisions as regards assignments not having been complied with, nor were the policies in her possession at her husband’s death. She merely claimed under an oral and equitable assignment. *689

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Bluebook (online)
158 S.E. 517, 109 W. Va. 684, 1930 W. Va. LEXIS 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clay-county-bank-v-wilson-wva-1930.