Estate of Crosby

41 P.2d 928, 2 Cal. 2d 470, 1935 Cal. LEXIS 350
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 21, 1935
DocketS. F. 15018
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 41 P.2d 928 (Estate of Crosby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Crosby, 41 P.2d 928, 2 Cal. 2d 470, 1935 Cal. LEXIS 350 (Cal. 1935).

Opinion

WASTE, C. J.

The residuary legatee and devisee under the last will and testament of Lilly Crosby, deceased, prosecutes this appeal from an order of the probate court setting aside to the second and surviving husband of the decedent the sum of $7,847.55, representing the proceeds of a life insurance policy issued on the life of the decedent’s first husband.

On March 25, 1927, the Continental Life Insurance Company issued a policy of life insurance on the life of C. F. N. Klitgaard. Under the terms of the policy the insurer, upon receipt of due proof of the death of the insured, agreed to pay to the wife of the insured, the decedent above named, as beneficiary under the policy a stipulated sum per month until 240 monthly installments, aggregating $12,000, had been paid. The insured predeceased the beneficiary. No premiums were payable on the policy subsequent to the death of the insured and none was thereafter paid. The beneficiary later married Sverre Crosby, one of the respondents herein. Upon the subsequent death of the beneficiary under the policy there was paid to the executor of her estate by the insurer the commuted value of the monthly installments under the policy in the sum of $7,999.98. Thereafter the surviving second husband petitioned the probate court to set aside to him as property by law exempt *472 from execution all household furniture, clothing, personal effects and jewelry, concerning which there is no dispute, atid the proceeds of said life insurance policy. The petition, as to the insurance proceeds, was based on the provisions of subdivision 18 of section 690 of the Code of Civil Procedure and section 660 of the Probate Code. The residuary legatee opposed the petition contending that the proceeds of the policy did not come within the purview of the cited code sections and were not therefore exempt from execution. After hearing, the probate court made its order granting the petition and setting aside the sum of $7,847.55, which sum represents that proportion of the then total commuted value of the policy which an annual premium of $500 bears to the annual premium of $533.85, payable under the policy. This appeal followed.

So far as material here, section 690 of the Code of Civil Procedure exempts from execution or attachment: “All moneys, benefits, privileges, or immunities accruing or in any manner growing out of any life insurance, if the annual premiums paid do not exceed five hundred dollars, and if they exceed that sum a like exemption shall exist which shall bear the same proportion to the moneys, benefits, privileges and immunities so accruing or growing out of such insurance that said five hundred dollars bears to the whole annual premiums paid.”

Section 660 of the Probate Code provides that, “The decedent’s surviving spouse and minor children are entitled to remain in possession of the homestead, the wearing apparel of the family, the household furniture and other property of the decedent exempt from execution, until the inventory is filed. Thereupon, or at any subsequent time during the administration, the court, on petition therefor, may in its discretion set apart to the surviving spouse, or, in case of his or her death, to the minor child or children of the decedent, all or any part of the property of the decedent, exempt from execution, ...”

Briefly stated, this appeal presents the question whether the proceeds of a life insurance policy on the life of an insured who had paid all of the premiums therefor prior to his death, which proceeds were payable and paid in monthly installments to his widow during her life and a commuted balance to the executor of her will upon her *473 death, are life insurance moneys to which her second husband, upon her death, is entitled as property exempt from execution under the above code sections. The appellant contends that exemption statutes are primarily enacted for the benevolent purpose of saving debtors and their families from want by reason of misfortune or improvidence, and that the surviving second husband is a stranger to the life insurance on the life of the decedent’s first husband, and a stranger to the family of said insured, and is not therefore entitled to claim the property for his support as property exempt from execution within the spirit and intent of the cited code sections. Respondent, on the other hand, urges that the situation here presented falls within the letter of the foregoing code sections and that the same should be literally construed and given full force and effect. The case appears to be one of first impression in this jurisdiction and an exhaustive research of the authorities has failed to bring to light any decision from other jurisdictions presenting the identical issue here confronting us. Certain eases have been uncovered, however, the reasoning of which will be helpful in the disposition of the present cause. They will be referred to in the course of our discussion.

Preliminarily to a determination of the applicability of the above code sections to this cause, and as an aid in the solution of that problem, it is essential to ascertain the purpose that underlies the adoption of exemption statutes. In Estate of Millington, 63 Cal. App. 498, 500 [218 Pac. 1022], it is stated that, “while exemption laws are to be liberally construed, the manifest purpose of their enactment must be kept in mind. ‘ Statutes exempting property from execution are enacted on the ground of public policy for the benevolent purpose of saving debtors and their families from want by reason of misfortune or improvidence. ’ ” Substantially the same discussion appears in 12 California Jurisprudence, 332, but it is therein added, upon citation of authority, that the construction given such statutes ..must be a reasonable one and- “not one which would pervert the benevolent design and enable gross frauds to be perpetrated under color of law”. There can be no doubt that the exemption of insurance moneys constitutes a part of this same benevolent' public policy. In 7 Cooley’s Briefs on Insurance, 6508, the following appears: “All the statutes bearing' *474 on the exemption of life policies or their proceeds seem based on the theory that, in the absence of an expressed contrary intent, the object of an ordinary life insurance policy should be considered as the protection of insured’s family after his death, and that this object and desire is laudable and in accordance with public policy.”

It is settled in this state, contrary to some jurisdictions, that exempt property passing to the persons designated in section 660, supra, is, by virtue of the provisions of that section, free not only from the debts of the decedent, but also from those of the persons so designated. (Holmes v. Marshall, 145 Cal. 777 [79 Pac. 534, 104 Am. St. Rep. 86, 2 Ann. Cas. 88, 69 L. R. A. 67].) In view of this, it must be conceded that upon the death of the insured, C. F. N. Klitgaard, the proceeds of the policy above referred to passing to his surviving widow, the decedent herein, were free from garnishment and execution not only for the debts of the insured, but also for the debts of the beneficiary.

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Bluebook (online)
41 P.2d 928, 2 Cal. 2d 470, 1935 Cal. LEXIS 350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-crosby-cal-1935.