Hicks v. Cary

52 N.W.2d 351, 332 Mich. 606, 1952 Mich. LEXIS 602
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 6, 1952
DocketDocket 2, Calendar 45,276
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 52 N.W.2d 351 (Hicks v. Cary) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hicks v. Cary, 52 N.W.2d 351, 332 Mich. 606, 1952 Mich. LEXIS 602 (Mich. 1952).

Opinion

*608 Dbthmers, J.

Plaintiff prays that the proceeds of insurance on the life of her decedent, paid to defendant corporations in accord with the terms of 2 policies which named them beneficiaries, be decreed to be held by them in trust for decedent’s estate. Prom an order granting defendants’ motion to dismiss the bill of complaint for failure to state a cause for equitable relief plaintiff appeals. In such circumstances the well-pleacled allegations of the bill are to be taken as true. Gilmer v. Miller, 319 Mich 136. They are, in substance, as follows: In accord with the terms of written agreements between them decedent became engaged by defendant corporations as a full-time employee, director and vice-president and purchased W. B. Cary & Company stock in the amount of $18,712.50, and defendant corporations, in turn, took out and paid the premiums on policies which named them beneficiaries and insured the life of decedent in the amount of $50,000 for the purpose, as agreed between them in writing, of purchasing from decedent’s estate all such stock held by him at his death. Thereafter the contractual relationships between decedent and defendants were terminated, his employment by them ceased, he sold his stock back to "W. B. Cary & Company for $20,838.75 and he received $1,323.12 in full settlement of all. claims against defendant corporations, in exchange for which he gave them a release from all further liability to him. A few days later he died and, the insurance policies having remained in effect, defendant corporations, as named beneficiaries, collected the full amount of the policies. Plaintiff demanded that defendants pay said money over to her, claiming a constructive trust. This suit followed defendants’ refusal of the demand.

After suggesting that the insurance was taken out to secure defendants in a debtor-creditor relationship existing between them and decedent, plaintiff *609 cites cases from other jurisdictions, as well as the Michigan case of Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. v. O’Brien, 92 Mich 584, for the proposition that, after payment of the obligation secured by the insurance and the expenses incurred in connection therewith, the assured’s personal representatives are entitled to the balance of the proceeds of the insurance. Typical of the facts in such cases are those in the O’Brien Case, supra, in which the assured himself took out the insurance, paid some or all of the premiums and owned the policy at the time it was pledged or given by him as collateral security for payment of his debt. It is fundamental that upon payment of the debt the debtor is entitled to the return of his collateral or pledge. See Jules S. Bache & Co. v. Bank of Detroit, 261 Mich 436, and Wallace v. Finnegan, 14 Mich 170 (90 Am Dec 243). The latter rule is at the root of the holdings in the O’Brien and similar cases. In the instant ease the decedent did not take out or pay for the insurance and never owned or gave it as collateral. It was taken out, paid for and owned by defendant corporations. Furthermore, when defendants took out the insurance the decedent did not nor was it contemplated that he ever would owe defendants a debt for which the insurance should stand as security.. Accordingly, the indicated line of authorities is without application here.

The subject of wagering contracts is also mentioned in plaintiff’s brief. In this connection see Mutual Benefit Association of Michigan v. Hoyt, 46 Mich 473, in which it was held that a life insurance policy naming as beneficiary one who has no insurable interest in the life of the assured is a wagering contract, contrary to public policy and void. In Smith v. Pinch, 80 Mich 332, this Court said concerning such a policy of insurance and concerning the plaintiffs in the case, who were the heirs at law and *610 the administrator of the estate of the assured, the following:

“The contract of insurance set up in the bill is against public policy, and void. Complainants are not parties to it, neither have they been injured by it. It could not be enforced between the parties in courts of justice; and the fact that one of the parties to the illegal contract has seen fit to pay over to the other the wager does not afford a basis in equity for outside parties to lay claim to the reward of iniquity.”

Similarly, in Standard Life & Accident Ins. Co. v. Catlin, 106 Mich 138, where the administrator of assured’s estate claimed the proceeds of the policy on the ground that the beneficiary named therein had no insurable interest in the assured’s life, this Court said:

“If this contention should be allowed as a matter of fact, it would follow that the policy is void on the ground of public policy. Mutual Benefit Association of Michigan v. Hoyt, 46 Mich 473. But we think, as between the complainant (the insurance company) and Nettie Gail Catlin [the beneficiary] the question is not here. The company concedes its liability on the contract, and has paid the money into court. If the question were open, it is difficult to see how a determination that the policy is a wager policy would be fruitful in results to the heirs of the deceased. See Smith v. Pinch, 80 Mich 332.”

From this it will be seen that the rule in Michigan applicable to cases in which the beneficiary has no insurable interest in assured’s life affords no support for plaintiff’s claim to the proceeds of the insurance in the instant case. To avoid the application of that rule, however, plaintiff then veers to the' position that when the policies were obtained defendant corporations possessed an insurable interest in decedent’s life which dwindled, at the time they pur *611 chased decedent’s stock, to the amount defendants paid in premiums or, at most and in addition thereto, the amount paid by defendants for decedent’s stocks. After accepting that horn of the dilemma plaintiff is confronted with the difficulty that the cases cited by her as holding that the assured’s estate is entitled to the insurance proceeds in excess of the debt due the creditor present factual situations in which the debtor had owned the insurance and pledged it to-the creditor. As hereinbefore noted, such cases are of no help to plaintiff on the facts at bar. We are mindful, in this connection, of the Pennsylvania and Texas cases, cited by plaintiff, which indicate a contrary view. The Pennsylvania cases cited are Haberfeld v. Mayer, 256 Pa 151 (100 A 587); Pittsburgh Underwriters v. Mutual Life Ins. Co. of New York, 149 Pa Super 554 (27 A2d 278); Downey v. Hoffer, 110 Pa 109 (20 A 655); Ulrich v. Reinoehl, 143 Pa 238 (22 A 862, 13 LRA 433, 24 Am St Rep 534); Murray v. G. F. Higgins Co., 300 Pa 341 (150 A 629, 75 ALR 1360).

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Bluebook (online)
52 N.W.2d 351, 332 Mich. 606, 1952 Mich. LEXIS 602, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hicks-v-cary-mich-1952.