Hurlburt v. Hurlburt

17 N.Y. St. Rep. 31
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1888
StatusPublished

This text of 17 N.Y. St. Rep. 31 (Hurlburt v. Hurlburt) 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
Hurlburt v. Hurlburt, 17 N.Y. St. Rep. 31 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1888).

Opinion

Daniels, J.

The disposition of the action depended upon the title to a sum of money paid into court by the Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company, in satisfaction of a policy of life insurance, issued by it to and upon the life of Richard W. Hurlburt. The policy was issued in the year 1845, for the sum of $3,000, payable to the assured, his executors, administrators or assigns. He paid the premiums upon it until and including May, 1887, and he himself died in September of the same year.

On the 10th of June, 1887, he executed a formal assignment of all sums of money, interest, benefit and advantage, to arise, or be had, by virtue of the policy, to the plaintiff in this suit. And in case of . her decease prior to his own, then to another person, who, if he also previously became deceased, then the policy was directed to revert to the assured. The assignment was drawn and executed at the office of the agency of the company and witnessed by its cashier. It was forwarded to the company and a copy of [33]*33it retained and filed, and thereupon it was returned, with the endorsement that if the assignment should be after-wards canceled, the holder should return it to the company. In August, 1887, and after the assignment itself had in this manner been returned to the assured, he wrote a letter to the plaintiff, who was his daughter, informing her of this assignment of the policy. And he stated in his letter to her, that he had attached to the policy a document whereby at his decease, the company would pay over to her the sum of $3,000. and which he stated might do her some good, and help her along in her struggle for bread.

A dispute arose between the plaintiff and the defendant, as the administratrix of the assured, as to which had the better right to the moneys paid by the company, in discharge of its liability under the policy. And it was held at the trial under this state of facts, that the title to the money had become vested in the plaintiff, and that she was entitled to recover it in this action, and upon the accuracy of this decision the disposition of the case is now mainly made to depend.

What the assured intended to do was to give the insurance and the money resulting from it to his daughter, he, in the meantime, designing to pay the premium and keep the insurance in life. And to create such a gift, it is beyond dispute the law of the case, that a delivery of the assignment must have been made to the donee. Delivery is essential to a gift of personal property, and it must be such as to vest the donee with the control and dominion over it, and to absolutely divest the donor of his dominion and control, and the delivery must be made with the intent to vest the title to the property in the donee.” Jackson v. Twenty-Third Street Railway Co., 88 N. Y., 520, 526.

In that case there was no such delivery to the testator, and because of its absence, the action was not permitted to be sustained. The same principle was followed in Wallace v. Berdell (97 N. Y., 13). But it is not necessary that the delivery of the thing intended to be given should be made directly to the person intended to receive or be invested with the gift, but it may be made to another person for him, when that is done, so as to divest the possession and title of the donor. Young v. Young, 80 N. Y., 422, 430. And what took place concerning this insurance seems to have been attended with that effect. Hutchings v. Miner, 46 N. Y., 456.

The assignment, so far as it was for the benefit of the plaintiff, was absolute, and subject only to the contingency of her surviving her father, the assured, who was the assignor. And it was delivered to the company, intending to secure such action on its part as would recognize the right and title of the plaintiff to the money, and place the com-[34]*34pony under the obligation to pay it over to her upon the decease of the assured, unless the assignment should be after-wards cancelled and returned. It appears to have been accepted by the company with that understanding, and with the intent to hold the money afterwards for the benefit of the plaintiff. And for the expression of that intent, after it. had filed away a copy of the assignment, it made the endorsement, which it did upon the original, before it was returned. The assignor acquiesced in the action of the company, which had been taken in this manner at his instance, and informed the plaintiff of the transaction, giving her by the letter written to her by himself the right to look to. and hold the company as her debtor for the payment of this money. And she accordingly accepted the gift, and proceeded to enforce it after the decease of her father, by supplying the usual proofs of death, and demanding of the company the payment of the money. More was done in this instance to confer upon her the title to the insurance money than was sanctioned as being attended with the like effect, in the case of Martin v. Funk (75 N. Y., 134).

There the donor made a deposit in a savings bank, declaring in the account that it was in trust for another person. And that was held to be equivalent to a gift of the money by the depositor to the beneficiary. There was not only the-intention to make a gift of these moneys to the plaintiff, but the company which was to be the debtor after the decease of the assured, was appraised of it and placed in such a position as to be obligated to pay it over to her, and she was-informed of what had been done in this mannér to secure to her the payment and benefit of the fund. The assignment, under this state of facts may legally be held to have been delivered to the insurance company for the benefit of the-plaintiff, and the effect of the delivery was not defeated by afterwards returning the assignments to the assignor, after the company had complied with what appeared to be essential to mature its obligation. As to this part of the case the ruling at the trial appears to have the support of the law.

To defeat the right of the plaintiff to maintain the action, proof was given under the answer, showing that a general assignment was made on the 11th of September, 1884, by a firm, of which the assured was a member. This assignment was not only made of the partnership property for the benefit of the firm creditors, but in addition to that, it was declared that the assignors sold, assigned, delivered and conveyed to the assignee, all and singular, their real estate and personal property of every kind and nature, held and owned bythem respectively as their separate and individual property. And under this assignment it was urged at the trial that the assured had became divested of his interest in. [35]*35the policy prior to his assignment in 1887, to the plaintiff, and that she acquired no title whatever, under that assignment, but the defendant was in no ways connected with this assignment, or with the right or title of the assignee under it. And it did not appear that the policy of life insurance was ever passed over or delivered to the assignee, or in any manner claimed by him, but the probabilities of the case, warrant the conclusion that it remained in the possession of the assured himself, and he paid the premiums upon it, which by its own language was indispensably necsary to keep the policy alive. In this manner he had from time to time renewed it for his own benefit, subsequent to the time of the execution and delivery of the assignment. If that had not been done by the payment of the annually accruing premium the policy would have ceased to exist and become null and void.

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Related

Martin v. . Funk
75 N.Y. 134 (New York Court of Appeals, 1878)
Hutchings v. . Miner
46 N.Y. 456 (New York Court of Appeals, 1871)
Jackson v. Twenty-Third Street Railway Co.
88 N.Y. 520 (New York Court of Appeals, 1882)
Young v. . Young
80 N.Y. 422 (New York Court of Appeals, 1880)
Wallace v. . Berdell
97 N.Y. 13 (New York Court of Appeals, 1884)

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Bluebook (online)
17 N.Y. St. Rep. 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hurlburt-v-hurlburt-nysupct-1888.