Johnson v. Penn Mut. Life Ins.

31 F. Supp. 394, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1290
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedMay 4, 1938
DocketNo. 18934
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 31 F. Supp. 394 (Johnson v. Penn Mut. Life Ins.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Penn Mut. Life Ins., 31 F. Supp. 394, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1290 (N.D. Ohio 1938).

Opinion

WEST, District Judge.

This action is brought by plaintiff, the divorced wife of John A. W. Prout, insured in one of defendant’s policies for $5,000 issued July 14, 1913, payable to Albert H. Prout, father of the insured, and became fully paid prior to the insured’s death on March 7, 1936. Plaintiff sues as the owner of said policy under an alleged assignment from the insured dated December 8, 1914, and also claims as the designated beneficiary of the policy. The defense is based on an alleged forfeiture of the policy for non-payment of a loan thereon as evidenced by a so-called certificate of indebtedness for $2395 dated September 18, 1931, executed by the insured only and to which the plaintiff never consented. Jury was waived and the matter submitted to the court.

Plaintiff’s claim, as I see it, depends upon the effect of the alleged assignment of December 8, 1914. In the opinion of the court this document did not constitute an assignment, but was merely a change of beneficiary, made by the insured under the provisions of the policy, and under it plaintiff took only the rights of a beneficiary so named.

True the document recites that the insured sells and assigns all his rights in the policy to the plaintiff, then his wife. But it designates her as the beneficiary, conditions her rights upon outliving the insured, and specifically provides that the-insured retains full power “to change the said beneficiary or surrender the policy to the company at any time, this to be done by instrument in writing under the insured’s hand and seal to be recorded at the home office of the company”. Upon its face the document should be regarded as a change of beneficiary rather than an absolute assignment, and this construction is fortified by the fact that the insured thereafter on October 26, 1927, executed a further designation of beneficiary by which he made the policy payable to his executors, administrators or assigns, reserved the right to make a further change, which he carried out by again designating his wife as the beneficiary on November 1, 1927, in which document he again reserved the right to make a similar change; and by the terms of the certificate of indebtedness which first effected another change of beneficiary, again to the insured’s executors, administrators or assigns, and then assigned the policy to defendant as security for the loan, after which and at the conclusion of the certificate the former beneficiary, i. e., his wife, was reinstated as such, but subject to such indebtedness.

It seems perfectly clear when the evidence touching the point is considered, that these various steps subsequent to the alleged assignment to the plaintiff were taken by the insured in connection with loans on the policy, each of which was preceded by making his estate the beneficiary, in order that any assignment made to secure a loan, for example, the assignment of September 16, 1931, embodied in the certificate of indebtedness, would become fully effective without the consent of the wife, the previous beneficiary. And that the insured could not have intended the document on which plaintiff’s claim mainly rests, to have been an assignment of the policy to her. If this be true, then plaintiff being only the designated beneficiary, .at the date of the last loan and later when the alleged forféiture took place, has no equity or rights in the policy paramount to the defendant’s rights under the assignment securing such loan. The certificate of indebtedness. executed by the insured specifically made the rights of the beneficiary “subject to this indebtedness”; nor under the terms of the policy was her consent to the loan required.

But plaintiff, though not pleading estoppel in her reply, contends in the brief that defendant is estopped because of its failure to furnish her copies of the original assignment from the insured to his father, Albert H. Prout, the assignment from the latter and the insured to the insured’s estate made on December 7, 1914, and of the alleged assignment from the insured to the plaintiff on December 8, 1914, from claiming the benefit of any such documents. This contention is based on Gen.Code Ohio, §§ 9387, 9388, and 9389.

[396]*396Passing all other questions, these statutes have no application. The first relates to documents “upon which such policy was issued, or which may affect its validity” ; and the second section relates to “papers mentioned in the next preceding section”. None of the assignments, etc. mentioned are within such statutes, for the policy was not issued upon any of them, nor did they affect its validity. No question of the validity of the policy is made in this case.

Sec. 9389 relates to the same class of documents and in addition is intended to bar defendant from setting up “any incorrectness or want of truth of such application or other document” as a defense. The defendant merely insists upon the so-called assignment of December 8, 1914, being given its correct interpretation and meaning, and is not relying upon either its incorrectness or want of truth.

Gen.Code Ohio, § 11554, providing how copies of documents upon which a defense is founded shall be secured prior to trial, is also mentioned in the brief. But as that section “does not apply to a paper, a copy of which, as required by law, is filed with a pleading”, and the plaintiff embodied in her exhibit attached to the petition a copy of the alleged assignment on which she claims, while defendant attached a copy of the certificate of indebtedness to its amended answer, the section has no practical force here.

Plaintiff further relies on Gen. Code Ohio, §§ 9393, 9394, 9395, 9398, and 9399, as these sections formerly stood. She contends that under them, especially Nos. 9394 and 9398, she had a vested right in the policy by assignment of December 8, 1914, or if not in this manner, at least because she is a married woman to whom the policy was made payable through the change of beneficiary provided for at the close of the certificate of indebtedness. The purpose of the statutes is mainly to protect dependents from claims of creditors of the insured. But they do not apply to policies which have been properly forfeited either for nonpayment of premiums or failure to repay a loan on the policy. Sec. 9394 relates only to policies “which may here.after mature, and which have been or shall be taken out for the benefit of, or bona fide assigned to the wife or children * * * ”. And Sec. 9398, while possibly broad enough to include a policy payable to a married woman through a change of beneficiary, merely recites that such policy “shall inure to her benefit” free of creditors’ claims.

There is not the slightest indication that either of these or any of the other sections mentioned were intended to apply to a policy which never matured because duly forfeited for any proper reason.

The two cases cited: In re Weick, 6 Cir., 2 F.2d 647, and Reakirt v. Besuden, 3 Ohio N.P.N.S., 646, affirmed 73 Ohio St. 383, 78 N.E. 1118, without opinion, do not involve forfeited policies. In the opinion at page 649 of 2 F.2d in the Weick case, the fact that Sec. 9394 applies only to policies which may mature is mentioned; and the second case involved an assignment to a wife and not an interest conferred by change of beneficiary. Neither has any application.

Whether assignee or beneficiary, the plaintiff was bound by the terms of the policy. In Union Central Life Ins. Co. v. Buxer, 62 Ohio St. 385, 57 N.E. 66, 49 L.R.A.

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In Re Shaffer
228 B.R. 892 (N.D. Ohio, 1998)
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167 B.R. 466 (S.D. Ohio, 1994)
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17 Ohio Misc. 25 (N.D. Ohio, 1968)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 F. Supp. 394, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-penn-mut-life-ins-ohnd-1938.