Kashdan v. Metropolitan Life Insurance
This text of 161 Misc. 778 (Kashdan v. Metropolitan Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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This is an action to recover surrender value of three industrial policies issued on the lives of minor children. The application for such insurance was signed by the plaintiff, the mother of the children, who paid all the premiums. The policies provide for payment of the proceeds in the event of death to the legal representatives of the insured. They also provide for payment of an endowment at the end of twenty years and for a surrender value of the policies in the interim. No person is designated to receive the endowment or the surrender value. The policies provide only that surrender value will be paid upon the written application made on blanks furnished by the company and upon surrender of the policies and premium receipt book. The policies also contain the usual facility of payment clause.
The last designated clause permits defendant to pay the one equitably entitled to the proceeds but does not compel it to make such a payment. It would not, therefore, authorize this suit by plaintiff (Nolan v. Prudential Ins. Co., 139 App. Div. 166) in the absence at least of a binding election to pay her. (Shea v. United States Industrial Ins. Co., 23 App. Div. 53.)
After the policies had been in effect for several years, the company was advised of the desire to surrender same It delivered a blank application for surrender to the plaintiff and accepted same from her, signed by her only. It also received from her the policies and the premium receipt book. It thereupon executed a check to plaintiff’s order and that of the oldest of the insured children. It later developed that the plaintiff’s husband had obtained the proceeds of such check by indorsing plaintiff’s name without her knowledge or consent. After several years elapsed this suit was brought to recover the surrender value.
Defendant now contends that the husband was paid under the facility of payment clause. In our opinion such contention is untenable. Defendant attempted to pay plaintiff, not her husband. Our view is that what occurred amounted to an effective election to recognize plaintiff as the one entitled to receive surrender value. [780]*780In any event, aside from the question of election, the acts of the company amounted to a practical construction of the contract in favor of the plaintiff as the one authorized to receive such surrender value. This suit was, therefore, properly maintained by plaintiff.
Judgment affirmed, with twenty-five dollars costs.
Levy and Callahan, JJ., concur; Lydon, J., dissents, with opinion.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
161 Misc. 778, 293 N.Y.S. 354, 1937 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1507, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kashdan-v-metropolitan-life-insurance-nyappterm-1937.