Green v. Southwestern Voluntary Ass'n

20 S.E.2d 694, 179 Va. 779, 1942 Va. LEXIS 274
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 8, 1942
DocketRecord No. 2554
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 20 S.E.2d 694 (Green v. Southwestern Voluntary Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Green v. Southwestern Voluntary Ass'n, 20 S.E.2d 694, 179 Va. 779, 1942 Va. LEXIS 274 (Va. 1942).

Opinion

Spratley, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action was instituted by Minnie Green, whose true name was Minnie Donald, to collect from the Southwestern Voluntary Association, Inc., the sum of $300 under a life insurance policy issued by that corporation on the life of Robert Clayton Green, deceased. The notice of motion described the plaintiff as the beneficiary named in the policy and also as a dependent of the insured.

The defendant filed a plea of the general issue, and at the conclusion of the evidence filed a demurrer to the evidence. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff for $300, subject to the ruling of the court on the demurrer to the evi[783]*783dence. To a judgment on the demurrer in favor of the defendant, this writ of error was awarded.

Upon the demurrer to the evidence, the truth of all the following facts and circumstances, and all just inferences therefrom, was admitted; and all evidence of the defendant in conflict therewith was waived.

Minnie Donald and Robert Clayton Green were colored persons, both living at a rooming house in the city of Bristol, Virginia. They were engaged to be married. After their engagement, Minnie gave up her work of washing and ironing for others and went to work in a restaurant owned by her husband-to-be. Green furnished her a room and supplied her with clothes, furniture, and the necessities of life. She received no pay from him other than some money to pay her insurance premiums and small bills. There was no evidence of improper relations between the two.

On March 3, 1941, the defendant’s agent and solicitor went to the rooming house where Green resided and persuaded him to make an application for a policy of insurance. The plaintiff and two other witnesses, who were present at the time, testified that when Green was asked who was to be the beneficiary, he named Minnie Donald, saying that he was engaged to her and that he expected to marry her. The agent said it would be all right to name her in the application as Minnie Green, wife of the insured, and his beneficiary, in order to avoid the trouble of changing the name of the beneficiary in the policy at a later date. The agent then accordingly filled out the application blank. Green signed it and paid the premium.

The Association approved the application on March 4, 1941, and a certificate of insurance in the sum of $300, dated March 15, 1941, was duly issued to the insured payable upon his death to Minnie Green, described as standing in the relationship of wife of the insured. Green, unmarried, died by accidental or violent means on April 12, 1941, while the policy was in force.

No objections were made to the admission of the above evidence. The defendant only sought to contradict it in [784]*784part, denying that its agent advised the insured that it was proper to describe the named beneficiary as his wife.

Neither the application nor the policy contained any specified limitations upon the power and authority of the insurance solicitor.

There was no evidence as to the particular status of the Association as a life insurance corporation, either in the application or in the certificate of insurance, except a reference in one of the numerous clauses of the certificate as to a reserve fund to be kept by the Association in accordance with “Chapter 411, Acts of Virginia Assembly, 1936” (Virginia Code, 1936, chapter 169 A, sections 4258(1) to 4258(15)) and its right to make additional calls to maintain sufficient reserves. Its charter was not put in evidence; nor its constitution and by-laws, if any it has.

The grounds of the defendant’s demurrer to the evidence were that (1) since the defendant operated as a burial society, the plaintiff was prohibited from being a beneficiary by Virginia Code, 1936, section 4258 (7); and (2) the policy was obtained through the fraud and misrepresentation of the insured and the plaintiff in falsely stating the name of the plaintiff, and that she was the wife of the insured.

Neither the application nor the policy of insurance makes, any reference whatever to the insurer as a corporation organized to provide for “burial benefits for the payment in whole or in part of funeral, burial and expenses of deceased' persons, certificate holders or subscribers, * * as a burial society is defined by Virginia Code, 1936, section 4258(1).

The defendant filed no plea setting up its status as a burial society nor offered evidence thereof. Whether it operated as such society or as a voluntary association carried on for the sole benefit of its members and their permissible beneficiaries was a matter of affirmative proof, and it made no such proof. Statutes restricting those who may be beneficiaries-under certain insurance contracts are for the benefit of insurers who establish their status thereunder.

The reference to a reserve fund was insufficient to put the insured on notice of its peculiar status as every solvent insurance corporation should carry a sufficient reserve.

[785]*785Since there was nothing to show that there was any hmitation as to who might be a beneficiary under the certificate of insurance, it must be treated as an ordinary life insurance contract; and if the beneficiary had an insurable interest in the life of the insured and committed no fraud upon the defendant, she is entitled to recover.

In this State it has long been held that in the absence of an insurable interest, a policy on the life of another is contrary to public policy and cannot be enforced by the beneficiary. The lack of insurable interest causes the transaction to be regarded as a speculative or wager contract. Roller v. Moore, 86 Va. 512, 10 S. E. 241, 6 L. R. A. 136; Crismond v. Jones, 117 Va. 34, 83 S. E. 1045, Ann. Cas. 1917C, 155; Fulcher v. Parker, 169 Va. 479, 194 S. E. 714.

In several cases we have approved this statement from 1 May on Insurance, section 102a:

“Wherever there is such a relationship that the insurer has a legal claim on the insured for service or support, or when, from the personal relationship between them, the former has a reasonable right to expect some pecuniary advantage from the continuance of the fife of the other, or to fear loss from his death, an insurable interest exists.” Lewis v. Palmer, 106 Va. 522, 56 S. E. 341; Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Board, 115 Va. 836, 80 S. E. 565, L. R. A. 1915F, 979.

We have also said that the contract is not obnoxious to public policy when the relationship is such that the bonds of affection between the beneficiary and the insured would naturally incline the former to foster and prolong the fife of the latter rather than to desire to shorten it. Lewis v. Palmer, supra.

We have not been heretofore called on to pass upon the specific question as to whether or not a fiancee has an insurable interest in the life of her intended husband. However, the question has been answered in the affirmative in many other jurisdictions. Harden v. Harden, 191 Ky. 331, 230 S. W. 307, 17 A. L. R. 576; Clements v. Terrell, 167 Ga. 237, 145 S. E. 78, 60 A. L. R. 969, and cases cited; 14 R. C. L., section 97, p. 921; 37 C. J. 395, section 61 cc. See also [786]*786annotation, “Insurance; insurable interest of fiancé and fianceé.” 17 A. L. R., page 580.

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Bluebook (online)
20 S.E.2d 694, 179 Va. 779, 1942 Va. LEXIS 274, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-southwestern-voluntary-assn-va-1942.