Freund v. Freund

75 N.E. 925, 218 Ill. 189
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 24, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by81 cases

This text of 75 N.E. 925 (Freund v. Freund) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Freund v. Freund, 75 N.E. 925, 218 Ill. 189 (Ill. 1905).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Magruder

delivered the opinion of the court:

The question in this case is, whether the fund in controversy belongs to the appellants, as guardians of the estate of the minor child, Karl Freund, son of the deceased Josef Freund, the insured party named in the insurance policy, or whether it belongs to the appellee, Bertha Freund, the widow of the deceased Josef Freund.

The instrument of insurance in this case was a policy of insurance, issued by the New York Life Insurance Company, and not a benefit or endowment certificate. The matter to be determined is, whether the last change of the beneficiary, attempted to be made by the insured party on June 16, 1902, was valid, and had the effect of making the wife the beneficiary, or whether the son, who was theretofore the beneficiary, still remained so after the death of the insured on June 17, 1902. The laws of New York—the State where the contract of insurance was made—were introduced in evidence, and section 211 in the article on Insurance in the Code of New York is as follows: “Membership in any such corporation, association or society shall give to any member thereof the right, at any time, with the consent of such corporation, association or society, to make a change in his payee or payees, or beneficiary or beneficiaries, without requiring the consent of such payee or beneficiaries.” The policy of insurance upon the life of Josef Freund for $5000.00 contained the following provisions:

“Change of Beneficiary.-—The insured may, at any time during the continuance of this policy, provided the policy is not then assigned, change the beneficiary or beneficiaries by written notice to the company, at its home office, accompanied by this policy, such change to take effect on the endorsement of the same upon the policy by the company. If there is no beneficiary living at the death of the insured, the amount then insured by this policy shall be paid to the executors, administrators or assigns of the insured,” etc.

“General Provisions of Policy.—No. 1. Only the president, a vice-president, the actuary or the secretary has power in behalf of the company to make or modify this or any contract of insurance or to extend the time for paying any premium, and the company shall not be bound by any promise or representation, heretofore or hereafter given by any person other than the above.”

Endorsed on the policy, also, was the following: “Each selection, change or revocation of a selection shall be made by the insured in writing, and shall not take effect until endorsed on this policy by the company at the home office.”

The first written notice, signed by the insured, Josef Freund, at Chicago on January 10, 1902, and addressed to the insurance company at Broadway, New York, recites as follows: “The beneficiary under the accompanying policy, * * * in accordance with the change of beneficiary clause thereof, is hereby changed from Bertha Freund, wife, to Karl Freund, son. The policy is not now assigned.” There was a witness to this written notice of change, and it was forwarded from the branch office at Chicago to the home office in New York on January n, 1902. The next notice, signed by the insured, dated at Chicago, January 22, 1902, and addressed to the insurance company, was of the same tenor and effect, and changed the beneficiary from Karl Freund, son, to Bertha Freund, wife, and was forwarded from the branch office in Chicago to the home office in New York, and received by the latter on January 24, 1902. The third written notice, signed by the insured and dated May 16, 1902, witnessed and addressed to the insurance company, was of like tenor and effect, except that the beneficiary was changed from Bertha Freund, wife, to Karl Freund, son, and was forwarded from the Chicago clearing house of the company to New York, and received in the latter city by the home office on May 19, 1902.

The company at its home office in New York, upon receiving the first notice of change, dated January 10, 1902, made a written endorsement upon the original policy of that date, signed by its assistant secretary in the following words: “By written notice to the company the insured has changed the beneficiary of this policy to Karl Freund, his son,” After the receipt at its home office in New York of the second notice of change dated January 22, 1902, the company made a written endorsement upon the original policy, signed by its assistant secretary, as follows: “By written notice to the company the insured has changed the beneficiary of this policy to Bertha Freund, his wife.” After the receipt of the third notice of change, dated May 16, 1902, by the company at its home office in New York, it made a written endorsement upon the policy, signed by its assistant secretary, in the following words: “By written notice to the company the insured has changed the beneficiary of this policy to Karl Freund, his son.”

It is conceded that, by the written notice of May 16, 1902, and by the written endorsement of that day upon the original policy as above set forth, Karl Freund, the son, was made, under the terms of the policy, the beneficiary then entitled to the fund. Upon the death of the insured, Josef Freund, Karl Freund was the legal beneficiary, and entitled to the fund, unless the next change, sought to be made on June 16, 1902, was effectual in making the appellee, wife of the insured, the real beneficiary.

When the deceased Josef Freund, the insured party, took the policy to the local office of the company in Chicago and left there the written notice, dated June 16, 1902, signed by himself, for a change of beneficiary from Karl Freund, son, to Bertha Freund, wife, he received the following receipt:

“Chicago, Ill., 6/16/1902.
“1118 New York Life Building.
“Received of Joseph Freund the papers listed below, for transmission to the New York Life Insurance Company for change of beneficiary. Policy No. 3,157,265.
F. A. Jackson, Hunt, Cashier.”

As has been before stated, the assured died on the next day, to-wit, June 17, 1902. The policy, and the written notice of June 16, 1902, were forwarded from the Chicago clearing house branch office by F. A. Jackson, cashier, on June 19, 1902, two days after the death of the assured, and were received at the home office in New York on June 21, 1902. But no endorsement was made upon the policy, such as was made when the other changes already indicated were requested by the assured. That is to say, no endorsement of the written notice, given by the assured dated June 16, 1902, was ever made by the company at its home office, or anywhere else, upon the original policy.

The position of the appellants is that, under the statute of New York, the assured Josef Freund had no right to change the beneficiary in the policy without the consent of the company; that such consent, under the terms of the policy, could only be indicated by an endorsement on the policy by the company at the home office, and could only take effect when the endorsement of the same upon the policy was made by the company at its home office; and that in this case, as this was not done in the matter of the attempted change of the beneficiary from the son to the wife on June 16, 1902, the latter had no right to claim the fund.

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Bluebook (online)
75 N.E. 925, 218 Ill. 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/freund-v-freund-ill-1905.