Gould v. Fleitmann

188 A.D. 759, 176 N.Y.S. 631, 1919 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7140
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 2, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 188 A.D. 759 (Gould v. Fleitmann) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gould v. Fleitmann, 188 A.D. 759, 176 N.Y.S. 631, 1919 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7140 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinions

Present — Clarke, P. J., Dowling, Smith, Shearn and Merrell, JJ.; Smith and Merrell, JJ., dissented.

[761]*761The following is the opinion of the referee:

Charles F. Brown, Referee:

The policies of insurance which were assigned by F. Augustus Heinze to his sister, the defendant Lida M. Fleitmann, were issued by the following companies, for the amounts and on the dates following: Equitable Life Assurance Society January 15, 1895, $50,000; New York Life Insurance Company, November 19, 1902, $100,000; Manhattan Life Insurance Company, October 29, 1895, $50,000; Manhattan Life Insurance Company, July 31, 1897, $50,000; Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company, June 4, 1906, $25,000.

With the exception of the Northwestern Company the policies were all by their terms payable to the insured or to his executors, administrators or assigns.

The policy in the Northwestern Company was made payable to such beneficiary or beneficiaries as the insured should thereafter nominate under the contract.

The assignments of these policies were made on March 29, 1912, and thereafter and up to the time of his death, which occurred on November. 4, 1914, all the premiums upon said policies were paid by Heinze as they fell due.

Mrs. Fleitmann was duly appointed administratrix of Heinze’s estate and collected from said insurance companies upon said policies the sum of $218,664.44. In an accounting in the Surrogate’s Court of Saratoga county she refused to include such sum among the assets of Heinze’s estate, upon the ground that the policies were her property and the proceeds therefrom belonged to her.

Thereafter this action was commenced. It is brought under and pursuant to section 19 of the Personal Property Law (Consol. Laws, chap. 41; Laws of 1909, chap. 45) by the plaintiff, who was a judgment creditor of Heinze at the time of his death, having recovered in the Supreme Court of this State on October 15, 1914, a judgment for $1,264,588.91 upon a promissory note bearing date July 8,1907, and payable with interest on January 8, 1908.

That judgment was affirmed upon appeal to the Appellate Division and remains wholly unpaid. (Gould v. Fleitmann, 172 App. Div. 950.)

It is not essential in an action under the provision of the [762]*762statute cited that the plaintiff should be a judgment creditor. He stands in the place of administrator. (Harvey v. McDonnell, 113 N. Y. 526.)

Even in the ordinary judgment creditor’s action the issuance and return of execution is not essential if it be impossible to issue execution as in the case at bar. (National Tradesmen’s Bank v. Wetmore, 124 N. Y. 241.)

Subsequent to the commencement of this action Mrs. Fleitmann was by the surrogate of Saratoga county, who had jurisdiction over the estate of the deceased, removed as administratrix, and the defendant Walter A. Fullerton was appointed administrator in her place, and thereafter he was made a defendant in this action.

Mr. Fullerton appears in the action as such administrator and also as the general guardian of Frederick A. Heinze, an infant and only child of said F. Augustus Heinze. As administrator he seeks to have the assignments set aside as fraudulent and joined in the demand for judgment made in the complaint. As general guardian he has denied the allegations of fraud contained in the complaint and on the trial attempted to prove that the assignments were made to Mrs. Fleitmann in trust for said infant.

There is absolutely no testimony to sustain the latter claim, and no further reference will be made to it.

Prior to the assignments of said several policies of insurance Heinze had borrowed from the said several companies issuing such policies, except the Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company, the full cash or surrender value of each policy, and at the time of the assignments to Mrs. Fleitmann, the said policies were held by the companies making such loans as security therefor.

The policy issued by the Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company had no cash or surrender value.

Subsequent to the assignments to Mrs. Fleitmann Heinze borrowed from said companies further sums equal to the additional cash value which accrued upon such policies by the payment of premiums thereon, and in respect to such loans Mrs. Fleitmann joined with her brother in the notes or obligations given to the companies making such loans and in the assignments thereof or the security therefor.

[763]*763The history of these several loans is set forth in defendants’ Exhibits 35, 41, 42.

It is sufficient to say that at the time the assignments were made the policies assigned had no cash or surrender value, and that such value as was the result of the payment of premiums after March, 1912, was obtained by Heinze from the companies through loans made to him and secured by the assignments of the policies, in which assignments Mrs. Fleitmann joined.

The defendant Mrs. Fleitmann has testified to a series of transactions between herself and her brother beginning in 1896 and continuing until his death, whereby she gave to him money to invest for her in speculative enterprises and which, considering the amount of the original contribution, resulted in large profits to her, a part of which was paid to her in cash, a part was left with her brother for reinvestment, and a part was a loan to him, for which he was indebted to her at the time of the assignments and also at his death.

It is sought by Mrs. Fleitmann to sustain the assignments on the ground that they are to be treated either as a payment or as security for the sums owing to her by her brother, and upon the further ground that as his creditor she had an insurable interest in his life.

The assignments cannot in my opinion be sustained upon either ground.

There is no connection between the dealings to which Mrs. Fleitmann testified and the assignments of these policies. The assignments of the policies were an independent act by Heinze, and the validity thereof must be determined without any reference to the dealings he had with his sister in respect to the investment of her money.

The assignments were not made either to pay or to secure any debt which Heinze owed to the plaintiff, and no such purpose was mentioned by either of the parties at any time in connection with the assignments.

Mrs. Fleitmann testified that all that was said by her brother to her about the assignments was that “ he told me he wanted to make me beneficiary of his life insurance policies.”

He did not tell her the amount of the policies or what company had issued them, and she did not see them until after his death.

[764]*764After the assignments were made, when her brother desired to borrow money upon the policies, the papers necessary to be signed by Mrs. Fleitmann were brought to her and she signed them as requested without question.

It is evident from this statement of the transaction that the assignments were not made in payment of any debt due to the defendant Mrs. Fleitmann. Whatever Heinze’s indebtedness was to Mrs. Fleitmann it was the same after the assignments as before. She gave up nothing and surrendered no part of the debt due her.

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Bluebook (online)
188 A.D. 759, 176 N.Y.S. 631, 1919 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gould-v-fleitmann-nyappdiv-1919.