Hicks v. Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance

166 Iowa 532
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 24, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 166 Iowa 532 (Hicks v. Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hicks v. Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance, 166 Iowa 532 (iowa 1914).

Opinion

WeaveR, J.

The first count of the petition is upon a policy of insurance dated December 13, 1901, and numbered 502959, on the life of Sherman E. Hicks, for the sum of $2,000, payable to his wife, Addie M. Hicks; a right to change such beneficiary being reserved to the insured. No change of beneficiary appears ever to have been made or attempted by Hicks, and he died November 29,1911. Due notice and proofs of death were delivered to the company, which refused payment, for reasons hereinafter shown. Plaintiff alleges these facts, and that the policy was in full force and effect at the date of Hicks’ death. She proceeds further to state that on November 15, 1910, all premiums accruing to that date having been paid, Hicks attempted to surrender said policy to defendant, and in consideration thereof defendant paid Hicks the sum of $450.10. These facts she concedes would be a bar to a recovery in this action but for the further fact that from a date prior to said transaction until his death the insured was insane, and utterly incapable of transacting business or making a contract or appreciating the nature or effect of his acts. Plaintiff further concedes that defendant is entitled to credit upon said' policy for the amount of said payment and the amount of premiums becoming due on the policy from November 15,1910, to the date of the death of the insured, November 29,1911, and asks judgment for the remainder of the insurance provided by the policy. This policy, plaintiff alleges, has been assigned by her in her individual capacity to the estate of Sherman E. Hicks, of which she is administrator.

The second count is upon a policy dated March 19, 1896, numbered 344311, on the life of said Sherman E. Hicks, for $1,000, payable to the administrator, executor, or assigns of said deceased. With respect to this policy plaintiff pleads substantially the same alleged facts as are set forth in the first [535]*535count, and asks judgment thereon for the amount insured, less credit for the sum paid for the attempted surrender.

The defendant admits the policies, admits due payment of the premiums thereon up to November 15,1910, and pleads the fact of the alleged surrender as effecting a complete satisfaction of its obligation and liability on said contract of insurance. It also pleads that plaintiff herself, as beneficiary under the policy first described united in making such surrender, and is thereby estopped to maintain this action. It further alleges that if Hicks were insane, as claimed, defendant had no notice or knowledge thereof, and dealt with the deceased and his wife in good faith and paid them the full surrender value of the contract. Other defenses are pleaded which, so far as they need to be considered upon this appeal, will be stated in the further progress of this opinion.

In reply plaintiff, after denying generally the affirmative defenses pleaded, repleads her allegations that the insured was insane and incompetent to make valid surrender of the poli(fy. In another count she alleges that the writing acknowledging the surrender, of the policy and purporting to bear her signature was obtained by fraud, deceit, and duress. This allegation was afterward withdrawn, and the issue was not submitted to the jury. She also specifically denies having assented to the surrender of the policy, and denies knowledge that such surrender had been made until soon after the death of her husband, when she promptly notified defendant of her refusal to recognize or ratify it.

By demurrer to the reply and motion to transfer the cause to equity, defendant raised the legal questions which are hereinafter considered. Both demurrer and motion were denied, and exceptions duly preserved. The issues were tried to a jury. Considerable evidence was introduced by' the plaintiff; tending to sustain her allegation that Hicks was insane when the surrender of the policy was made, and so continued to his death. There was also evidence tending to support plaintiff’s denial of participation by her in the alleged [536]*536surrender of the policies. The defendant offered no evidence on the issue of Hicks’ insanity, except as it relied upon inferences to be drawn from the proved or admitted facts attending the negotiation and consummation of the alleged surrender. As showing the plaintiff’s participation in the surrender, reliance was placed upon the negotiations for surrender, the papers signed and delivered as a part of the transaction, and certain alleged admissions and inconsistencies in the petition and reply and in the testimony of Addie M. Hicks. Motion for directed verdict for defendant was overruled. There was a verdict and judgment for plaintiff for the amount of the policies, less admitted credits. The net amount found due on policy No. 502959 was $1,533.56 and on policy No. 344311, $326.15. Motion for judgment for defendant notwithstanding the verdict and for new trial were overruled. In presenting its case here defendant waives its appeal as to the judgment on the second count of the petition, but argues for a reversal of the judgment on the first count.

I. Counsel have formally assigned many errors, but in their brief they have materially aided the court by grouping all the points on which they rely under two general heads. Of these the first proposition is stated as follows:

The beneficiary, Addie M. Hicks, having joined with the assured, Sherman E. Hicks, in surrendering policy No. 502959 is bound by such surrender, and is estopped now to assert that the assured was at the time of unsound mind, or that any fraud, misrepresentation, or duress was practiced upon her by said assured in inducing her to unite with him in surrendering said policy to the defendant.

With this introductory proposition counsel proceed to build up their argument in the following manner:

(1) That, as the beneficiary named in the policy, plaintiff had a vested property right in the insurance so provided; (2) that, having such vested right, she was competent to waive or surrender the same without the co-operation of her husband [537]*537and without regard to his mental condition; and (3) that the record shows conclusively and as a matter of law that plaintiff did make such surrender, and she is therefore estopped to maintain this action.

Let us consider these points in the order stated. It will be remembered that, while the policy in this suit names Addie M. Hicks as beneficiary, it reserves the right to her husband 1. Insurance: interest of beneficiary : surrender of same. to change this designation at will and name . or appoint some other person to receive the benefits of the insurance. Whatever may be # # ^ the holdings in other jurisdictions, it is well settled in this court that the beneficiary of a policy so conditioned “acquires no vested right therein or in the insurance which it represents” until the death of the insured without having exercised his power of appointment. Townsend v. Fidelity, 163 Iowa, 713; Carpenter v. Knapp, 101 Iowa, 729; Wandell v. Mystic, 130 Iowa, 639. And, so far as this reserved power affects the rights of the beneficiary, it is immaterial whether the insurance contract be upon the assessment or level premium plan. Townsend v. Fidelity, supra.

In the Carpenter case, supra,

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Bluebook (online)
166 Iowa 532, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hicks-v-northwestern-mutual-life-insurance-iowa-1914.