Guerin v. New York Life Insurance

184 Misc. 530, 54 N.Y.S.2d 333, 1945 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1695
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 6, 1945
StatusPublished

This text of 184 Misc. 530 (Guerin v. New York Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guerin v. New York Life Insurance, 184 Misc. 530, 54 N.Y.S.2d 333, 1945 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1695 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1945).

Opinion

Levy, J.

Defendant issued to plaintiff’s testate two policies of insurance, dated respectively June 18, 1919, and December 24, 1925. Insured died J une 25, 1938. The present application is for summary judgment upon the causes to recover the proceeds of extended term insurance arising out of those contracts. The proof is fully documented. No factual issue is presented.

The allegations are that at the time of the claimed lapse of each policy, the insured having made no election, the company, automatically continued or became obligated to automatically continue the insurances in their face amounts for periods considerably beyond the date of death. They are controverted upon the basis of an alleged indebtedness existing at the time of the claimed lapse, rendering the policies valueless. The issue upon this motion is tendered by the reply to such defense, to the effect that the indebtedness relied on by defendant was created by the making of loans which were illegal and void because (1) they were in amounts in excess of the available reserve held for that purpose by the company at the time of such loans, and, therefore, in violation of subdivision 8 of section 16 and subdivision 7 of section 101 of the Insurance Law (1909) and (2) the loans were usurious.

With respect to the latter charge, plaintiff claims generally that defendant employed a method of casting interest whereby a usurious rate was exacted by taking, in addition to the maximum legal rate of 6% interest on a current loan, a further sum as interest upon an outstanding indebtedness, which latter interest had not yet fallen due. In other words, defendant reserved and took upon a current loan, in addition to the maximum legal interest, a further sum to which it was not entitled; it required insured, in addition to paying the legal interest, to do something which he was not otherwise obliged to do.

There were ten loans made on the first policy. The policy contract .with respect to loans made on the security thereof provided: “ Interest on the loan shall be at the rate of six per cent per annum payable annually on the anniversary of the Policy.” And the loan agreement provided: “ 1. To .pay said Company on the next anniversary of said policy, interest on said loan at the rate of six per cent per annum from this date to said anniversary, and annually thereafter on each anniversary of said policy. If interest is not paid on the date when due, it shall be added to the principal and bear interest at the same rate.”

It is thus clear that interest upon loans is payable on the anniversary date of the policy which was the 18th day of June [533]*533and not otherwise. Indeed, defendant’s bill of particulars confirms that fact in this language: “ 3(c) The due date of interest installments on each loan was the anniversary of the policy June 18th.” In other words there was but one installment of interest each year on any loan and that was due on the anniversary date.

Claim is made, for example, that in connection with the transaction computed as of January 18, 1933, which brought the indebtedness to $10,626.81, there was then taken from the insured the sum of $349.64. This sum, the defendant states, was interest accrued from June 18, 1932, deducted from the new loan proceeds and added to the principal debt. But, urges plaintiff, there was no interest in any sum whatever due on January 18, 1933, and none was due until- June 18, 1933. In Household Finance Corp. v. Goldring (263 App. Div. 524, 526, affd. 289 N. Y. 574) the court said: When the lender deducts the accrued interest from the proceeds of a new loan, the transaction differs in no respect from a payment of the interest in cash.” Thus, continues plaintiff, defendant accordingly immediately received from insured a payment of cash in addition to the obligation to pay interest at 6% upon the new loan from January 18, 1933, which additional cash payment the insurer was not then entitled to and the insured was not obliged to pay. Later, on July 14, 1933, defendant received in cash, interest in the sum of $263.75 and on January 18, 1934, the further sum of $373.82. Interest at 6% on $10,626.81 for one year is $637.61. But from January 18, 1933, to January 18, 1934, defendant received $263.75 plus $373.82 or a total of $637.57 in addition to the cash in the sum of $349.64 at the time the January 18, 1933, loan was made and to which the company was not then entitled.

The first loan was made December 14, 1931. Interest at 6% on the next anniversary date, June 18, 1932, was $296.44. It was not fully paid. Upon the occasion of the second loan the unpaid interest in the amount of $245.19 was added to the principal and the new indebtedness was $9,939.19. The loan statement declared: “ The interest due at last due date not having been paid, has been added to the loan as shown by this statement and in accordance with the Loan Agreement.” And it further declared that interest at 6% amounting to $596.35 would be due June 18, 1933, and annually, not in advance.” This transaction, it is conceded, was in all respects proper. No complaint is made that appropriate interest at appropriate [534]*534time was added to principal. Of compound interest plaintiff does not complain.

The improper practice, it is charged, commenced with the third transaction of January 18, 1933, already described. That was five months before any interest was due on the pre-existing indebtedness. Thus, it is claimed that on January 18, 1933, there was and should have been made available to insured and paid over to him as his own out of the loan of $10,626.81, the sum of $349.64. Since he was being charged with a loan indebtedness of $10,626.81, to bear interest at 6%, he was entitled to receive in cash after all proper deductions the sum of $349.64. However, in order to obtain the loan of $10,626.81 insured was required to part with the said sum of $349.64 when in fact no such sum was then payable to the company.

The subsequent transactions arranged in the same fashion are subjected to like criticism. In defendant’s answer it alleges indebtedness relying upon the last loan as the transaction creating the debt. That loan was calculated as of February 28, 1938. It was in the sum of $15,753. The preceding transaction had been calculated as of October 18, 1937, and was in the sum of $15,350.12. In accordance with the loan statement thereof interest in the sum of $613.24 was to be due June 18, 1938. Thus it will be seen that the last loan occurred four months before any part of the interest item of $613.24 was due. On the contrary, on February 28,1938, defendant took from insured interest from October 18,1937, to February 28, 1938, in the sum of $335.62, which it had no right to extract.

In general, it is plaintiff’s claim that insofar as the loan transactions are concerned, executed pursuant to statute, policy contract and loan agreement provisions, regardless when a loan is paid, no interest may be taken until the following anniversary date of the policy and annually thereafter; that the taking of interest at any intermediate time is the taking of something to which the company is not entitled; that it is the deprivation of insured of a sum of money representing interest before such interest was due. This, plaintiff claims, was tantamount to a cash payment before there was any obligation to make any payment whatever.

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Bluebook (online)
184 Misc. 530, 54 N.Y.S.2d 333, 1945 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guerin-v-new-york-life-insurance-nysupct-1945.