Gwynne v. Estes

82 Tenn. 662
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1885
StatusPublished

This text of 82 Tenn. 662 (Gwynne v. Estes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gwynne v. Estes, 82 Tenn. 662 (Tenn. 1885).

Opinion

Freeman, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an insolvent administration in the chancery-court at Memphis.

A number of questions are presented for adjudication arising between the administrator, Gwynne, the widow and creditors, and perhaps between the creditors themselves. We will briefly state the facts on which each question is raised as we proceed:

Mangum died September, 1878. He had been a merchant in Collierville, near to the city of Memphis, and had also another establishment at another village hard by, conducted under the style of Granberry & Co., his brother-in-law, Granberry, an infant under twenty-one years of age, having purchased one-half of said stock, giving his promissory note for $1,125 for the same.

The firm of Stewart, Gwynne & Co., of Memphis^ were the commission merchants for Mangum, and he had become largely indebted to them. About May, 1878, in order to secure said Stewart, Gwynne & Co., in addition to deeds of trust to be noticed hereafter, it was agreed that Mangum should take out a policy of insurance on his life, Stewart, Gwynne & Co. paying the premiums, and charging them up to Mangum on his account. Said policy was on its face payable to Stewart, Gwynne & Co., creditors of the said insured as their interest may appear, the balance, if any, to Kate Mangum, the wife of said» insured,” etc.

At his death Mangum was indebted to the firm over $14,000. When the policy became payable, Mrs. [664]*664Mangum, under advice of counsel tve take it, possibly by collusion with the firm, notified Stewart, Gwynne Co. not to collect the money and apply it to the payment of their debt, but insisted they must get their pro rata from the estate of S. D. Mangum, and then apply the proceeds of the policy to the balance of the debt, and pay her any surplus that might remain. However, the money was collected by agreement between the parties before administration had, the firm and widow going on the receipt. The agreement was that A. D. Gwynne, the now administrator, should hold the money as' trustee until the rights of the parties were settled. He immediately deposited the same with his gfirm, and so the firm has practically been in receipt of the benefit of this sum from then until now.

The question now presented is, whether this contention, nominally on the part of the widow, but in fact, as earnestly pressed by Stewart, Gwynne & Co. as by her, is the right of the parties. Both the widow and Stewart, Gwynne & Co., are interested in sustaining this theory, for* as matters have turned out, on this view, Stewart, Gwynne & Co. will get their entire debt paid, and leave a considerable surplus, possibly four or five thousand dollars, for the widow. On the other theory, that the proceeds of the policy shall be first applied to the payment on their debt, and then they be compelled to receive a pro rata on balance, several thousand dollars will be unpaid and lost by the firm. They evidently have worked very earnestly in conjunction with Mrs. Mangum in order to sustain the theory agreed on.

[665]*665Arguments of great ingenuity are pressed on our consideration in favor of the contention of these parties. It is urged that the provision of our Code, {sec. 3185, new Code; 2294, T. & S.), providing that “a life insurance effected by the husband on his own life shall inure to the benefit of the widow and next of kin, to be distributed as personal property, free from the claims of his creditors,” shows the controlling policy of our State to be that creditors are to be excluded from participation in such a fund, and this gives the wife some sort of an equity in this case. But that is not this case. It is a policy on his life, but is payable first to Stewart, Gwynne & Co. on their debt, and balance, if any, is only to go to the wife. Until that debt is satisfied she has no rights whatever under the policy by its very terms. Her right was to ascertain the amount of the debt, have the application made, and if any surplus, to compel its payment. The nature of this transaction, when fully considered, we think will serve to settle the rights of the respective parties more readily than by following the ingenious argument of counsel. A party indebted. agrees with his creditor to purchase or procure a contract of another party to pay him ten thousand dollars on his debt, on the happening of a certain event in the future, should his debt be that amount. If not so much, then he is to pay what is due, and pay the balance remaining to a designated third party. The contingency happens, the money is received, but that third party insists the fund shall not be applied as contracted, but the cred[666]*666itor shall proceed to sue, and exhaust the debtor’s estate before applying the money thus contracted to be so applied. What possible ground can there be-to sustain such a contention? The application of the-money to the payment of the debt is a condition precedent to the right of such third party to any part of it,- only the balance, if any, after discharge of this debt, is to be paid, is the substantial language of the policy — “if any” indicating the condition on which the wife’s right to receive any part of it, is to arise. That condition has not arisen, and cannot, if the terms of the contract are carried out and the application of the money made as contracted. She clearly has no right to insist on any thing but the balance after the debt is satisfied. This seems too clear for argument.

We think a fair analysis of the nature of the contract is equally conclusive against the contention of the creditor that he has the right to go' upon the general estate, receive an equal pro rata of that with other creditors on his entire debt, and then apply the proceeds of the policy to payment of the balance, thus getting his entire debt paid, while other creditors receive only a pro rata, lessened by his large debt. We think we have shown the widow had no right to compel him to do so. On what basis can the creditor rest such a claim?

The case is simply this: A debtor provides for the payment of ten thousand dollars to his creditor on the happening of a contingency in the future. When that event happens, the party — the insurer, for [667]*667a consideration paid him by the debtor — is to pay absolutely the creditor the sum agreed on by his contract. It is paid promptly on the terms agreed on, but is not applied to the discharge of the debt, ostensibly because a third party who is entitled to any surplus, after the discharge of the creditor’s debt, has notified the creditor not to so apply it. That this is a thin pretext is obvious, the real reason being that it happens that if the creditor can get part of' his debt paid from another source he will reap an advantage, while others, it is true, may and will lose to the same extent. Is it not a simple question whether the contract of the parties shall be carried out in good faith, or may be disregarded? There is nothing to prevent it being carried out it is legal and binding, why should it not be enforced?

The error in the argument, based on the idea of a party having two securities for his debt, and entitled to the full benefit of all he has, is in overlooking-the plain meaning of the contract under consideration, and in treating the right to prove against the general estate as a technical security.

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Bluebook (online)
82 Tenn. 662, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gwynne-v-estes-tenn-1885.