Doyle v. Gifford

28 Ohio Law. Abs. 602, 1938 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 962
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 21, 1938
DocketNo 2477
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 28 Ohio Law. Abs. 602 (Doyle v. Gifford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doyle v. Gifford, 28 Ohio Law. Abs. 602, 1938 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 962 (Ohio Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

OPINION

By BENNETT, J.

This case is a contest between three claimants to the proceeds of a life insurance policy in the amount of $10,000 upon the life ox Charles A. Gifford. The policy was issued on May 21, 1921, naming The Youngstown Glass & Paint Company as beneficiary. Gifford was the president of that corporation at the time and continued as an officer of the corporation and an employe of its receiver until shortly before his death, which occurred on December 2nd, 1932. The corporation paid the only premiums which were ever paid on the policy, being perhaps five in number. Thereafter, for several years prior to the death of Charles A. Gifford, no premiums were paid and the general assumption on the part of those in any way interested at the time of his death was that the policy had lapsed and was of no value. However, in the meantime, the corporation had gotten into serious financial difficulties, and on May 1st, 1931, H. B. Doyle was appointed as its Receiver by the Common Pleas Court ol Ma-honing County. The Receiver sold certain assets of the corporation at receiver’s sale on June 23, 193.1, and one of the questions in the case' is whether or not the interest of the corporation in the policy was sold at that sale. The purchaser of these assets was W. P. Redden, an officer of the corporation’s largest creditor, a Youngstown bank. He then transferred these assets, which he-had thus acquired, to a new corporation, The Youngstown Paint and Glass Company.

For sake of brevity, as well as to avoid confusion from the similarity of names, we will follow counsel in referring to the former corporation as the Glass Company, and to The Youngstown Paint and Glass Company as the Paint Company.

For two years after the death of the assured no one paid any attention to the policy. It was then discovered that it had been in force at the date ci death, despite several years default in payment of premiums, by reason of its “paid-up” insurance provisions, and this three-cornered dispute for the proceeds then arose. The Receiver in the meantime, on November 24, 1934, had been discharged, after having supposedly liquidated the estate and having been able to pay creditors only 2.46 cents on the dollar. An application to reopen the receivership was filed and granted. The Receiver of the Glass Company claims the proceeds of the policy on the theory that he had never sold or disposed of the policy, the Paint Company claims the money on the ground that they had purchased the policy at the Receiver’s sale, and the Administratrix of Charles A. Gifford bases her claim on the ground that, by the terms of the policy, the proceeds were payable to the estate of the insured in the event that the latter “survived” the named beneficiary, which was the Glass Company. Her claim is that Charles A. Gifford “survived” the Glass Company, because of the fact that its Articles of Incorporation had been can-celled by the Secretary of State on November 15, 1932, for failure to file returns and pay franchise taxes, and the fact that it had become hopelessly insolvent and had failed to perform any corporate function for a long time prior to the death of Charles A. Gifford. At the date of death the receivership was not operating in any manner but had not been closed because the funds' of the Receiver were in a closed bank.

After the Receiver’s reappointment he filed this action against the Travelers Insurance Company and the Paint Company to recover the proceeds of the policy. The Insurance Company interpleaded Redden vand the Administratrix of Charles A. Gifford and then paid the proceeds of the policy into court. The trial court found the Receiver to be entitled to the money and from its decree appeals have been taken on questions of law and fact by tbe Paint Company and by the Administratrix.

We will first discuss the merits of the [604]*604dispute as to ownership of the policy which arises from the Receiver’s sale of the assets of the Glass Company to Redden.

The interest of the Glass Company in the policy came in two arguable ways. The corporation of course paid all the premiums and is named as beneficiary in the first sentence of the policy. The insured had also made an assignment of the policy to the Glass Company, which was dated May 28, 1921, one week after the date of the policy itself.

The claimants all assert that they are relying upon the court orders and proceedings alone, as the basis of their position on this question, but each has offered testimony as to the beliefs and understandings of the parties to the sale, in the event that any of such testimony should be relevant. The Receiver denied that he personally knew anything about the policy. It was not listed as an item of the inventory which he prepared and filed with the court. We have found no testimony in the record that Redden, the purchaser, knew anything about it. There is some testimony that the men interested in the Paint Company were interested in Redden’s purchase of ihese assets at the time of the Receiver’s sale. The Giffords and their attorney knew of its existence.

Although the policy was not listed in the inventory of the assets, two of the appraisers knew of its existence and one said he had considered it as one item in the appraisal of an account owed to the corporation by Charles A. Gifford which they appraised at zero. The actual surrender value of the policy at the time was $622.71, although no one knew this. How this policy on the life of Charles A. Gifford, bought and paid for by the corporation, could be considered collateral to his debt, is not clear to me. In any event, it was not listed nor appraised at zero or any other figure. The policy itself remained among papers of the Glass Company taken into possession of the Paint Company until the death of C. A. Gifford. A. W. Gifford then turned it over to Mrs. C. A. Gifford. Hs got it back from her some two years later when it was ■discovered that it had been in force at date of death and was worth $10,000. Immediately the piece of paper, which had been kicked around as valueless for four years, became the center of the scramble which is now before us.

There certainly was no discussion about it between the Receiver and the buyer, or the purchaser from the buyer, at or prior to the time of sale. No written assignment to the purchaser or to his transferee was ever made or endorsed on the policy, with or without the approval of the Insurance Company. The policy had not been carried on the books of the corporation as an asset having any value, and did not appear in the balance sheet figures.

The Receiver’s application for authority to sell recites that he has had the inventory and appraisal made in accordance with the order of the Court, and “that it would be for the best interests of the estate to sell al! of the assets of said corporation at public sale” to be “conducted as follows: First: The stock, fixtures, book accounts, corporate name, franchise and good will, the foregoing meaning to include ail assets save and except real estate.”

The order of sale made by the Common. Pleas Court on June H, 1931. first approved, the inventory and appraisal. The court then found “that it will be for the best interests of this estate to sell all the assets promptly” and' ordered “said sale” to be held on Monday, June 22, 1931, at the Receiver’s office. Notice to all creditors and advertisement by three insertions in the Daily Legal News was ordered and Journal Entry then continued.

“It is further ordered that said sale shall be conducted as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
28 Ohio Law. Abs. 602, 1938 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 962, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doyle-v-gifford-ohioctapp-1938.