Dannhauser v. . Wallenstein

62 N.E. 160, 169 N.Y. 199, 1901 N.Y. LEXIS 793
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 20, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 62 N.E. 160 (Dannhauser v. . Wallenstein) 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
Dannhauser v. . Wallenstein, 62 N.E. 160, 169 N.Y. 199, 1901 N.Y. LEXIS 793 (N.Y. 1901).

Opinion

Werner, J".

The equities in favor of the plaintiff are so clear and strong that they should be upheld unless they conflict with some settled and inflexible rule or principle of law. The assignment from the defendant to Hamburger was executed in September, 1879, or nearly twenty years before the death of the defendant’s husband. It was made upon a consideration of $3,000, paid by Hamburger to the defendant’s husband. The subsequent assignment to the plaintiff was made in part payment of a claim of $8,000 and upwards, which the latter held against Hamburger. If the assignment to Hamburger is void, it follows that the assignment to the plaintiff is equally invalid, since he took no better title than his assignor. If these assignments are held to be void, the plaintiff may possibly have his remedy over against Hamburger, but the latter will be remediless, as his claim is clearly barred by the Statute of Limitations.

Before proceeding to examine the statutes and decisions under which the defendant seeks to repudiate her assignment to Hamburger, let us briefly consider the scope and effect of the judgment's below. The decision of the trial court was in the so-called short form and is, therefore, fortified by the presumption that all the facts warranted by the evidence and necessary to support the judgment were impliedly found by the court. (Bomeisler v. Forster, 154 N. Y. 229; Trustees, Amherst College v. Ritch, 151 id. 282; Petrie v. Trustees, *206 Hamilton College, 158 id. 463.) The order of the Appellate Division reversing the judgment of the trial court is silent as to the grounds of reversal, and this court is, therefore, hound to presume that the reversal was upon the law. (Code Civ. Pro. § 1338.) Thus the facts stand approved by the court below and our right of review is confined to the question whether, in any view of the facts proved, the plaintiff was entitled to the relief awarded him by the trial court. (National Harrow Co. v. Bement & Sons, 163 N. Y. 509.)

This question embraces several others which we will now consider. Defendant claims that the assignment to Hamburger is void under chap. 248, Laws of 1879, which became a law on May 5th of that year and provides that “ All policies of insurance heretofore or hereafter issued within the state of Hew York upon the lives of husbands for the benefit and use of their wives, in pursuance of the laws of the state, shall be, from and after the passage of this act, assignable by said wife with the written consent of her husband; or in case of her death by her legal representatives, with the written consent of her husband, to any person whomsoever, or be surrendered to the company issuing such policy, with the written consent of the husband.” The learned trial court found, and the fact is, that the husband never did consent in any formal writing to the defendant’s assignment of said policy to Hamburger, but held that the delivery of said policy and assignment by the defendant to her husband, and his delivery thereof to Hamburger, coupled with the receipt of the consideration therefor by the husband, was a substantial compliance with the law above referred to. The learned Appellate Division took the contrary view and held that nothing short of a written consent by the husband would be a compliance with the terms of the statute. We concur in this view of the Appellate Division, if the statute above quoted applies to the policy in suit; but we think it does not apply.

It is to be observed that the language of the statute is that all “ policies of insurance * * * upon the lives of hnsbands for the benefit and use of their wives ” are made assign *207 able in the manner therein prescribed. The original policy, for which the one in suit was substituted, was payable to “ Moses Wallenstein’s representatives,” and was, therefore, not a “ wife’s” policy unless this ease falls within the rule laid down in Griswold v. Sawyer (125 N. Y. 414). The contest in that case was between the widow and children of the insured, on the one side, and his administrator on the other, for the possession of a paid-up policy of insurance payable to the “ legal representatives” of Griswold, the insured. This policy was issued in the lifetime of Griswold upon the surrender of a prior policy, but there was no proof showing who were the beneficiaries named therein. Under these conditions it was held proper to consider the circumstances of the insured and the conditions co-existing with the issuance of the paid-up policy in the effort to determine the meaning of the words “ legal representatives.” This court there said : “ It is undoubtedly true that the strict, technical prima facie meaning of these words is administrators or executors, and that they must always have that meaning unless it can be seen that they were used in a different sense. That these words have sometimes been used in statutes and decisions in a different sense cannot be doubted.” (Citing cases.) In the case at bar the husband and wife have given practical construction to the words “ personal representatives ” used in the original policy. On the 11th of January, 1877, the husband assigned the same to his wife or her executors, administrators and assigns.” Thus the rule invoked in Griswold v. Sawyer (supra) does not apply.

It is further urged on behalf of the defendant that even if the original policy was not a “wife’s” policy, the paid-up policy which, it is claimed, was a new and independent contract, was expressly made payable to “ Rosa Wallenstein, wife of Moses Wallenstein,, assignee, or her legal representatives,” and thus came within the provisions of the statute of 1879. If the premise that the second policy was a new and distinct contract is sound, the conclusion must follow that it was a wife’s policy. We are, however, of the opinion that the *208 paid-up policy was not a new contract. It was simply a continuation of the original contract under the option which gave the holder thereof the right, after two or more annual premiums had been paid, to cease paying the annual premiums and take a paid-up policy in exchange for the first one. It was a change in the mere form of the contract expressly provided for by its own terms. It is true that the first policy, the original evidence of the contract between the insured and the company, was surrendered to the company and canceled ” when the paid-up policy was issued, but this was simply a part of, and in compliance with, the terms of the original contract. The contract was continued as it provided that it might be, in the form of a paid-up policy, such as was accepted by the defendant. It was not a modification, but a fulfillment of the original contract.

In People v. Globe Mutual Life Ins. Co. (15 Abb. N. C. 78; affd., 96 N. Y. 675, upon the opinion of the referee) the converse of the question now before us was decided, the court there holding that a policy originally issued for the benefit of the wife was not abrogated by its exchange for a paid-up policy, procured by the husband without her consent and by him subsequently surrendered to the company.

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Bluebook (online)
62 N.E. 160, 169 N.Y. 199, 1901 N.Y. LEXIS 793, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dannhauser-v-wallenstein-ny-1901.