Kessler v. Kuhns

27 N.E. 980, 1 Ind. App. 511, 1891 Ind. App. LEXIS 97
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 27, 1891
DocketNo. 126
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 27 N.E. 980 (Kessler v. Kuhns) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kessler v. Kuhns, 27 N.E. 980, 1 Ind. App. 511, 1891 Ind. App. LEXIS 97 (Ind. Ct. App. 1891).

Opinion

Black, J.

The appellee brought suit against Catharine Hahn and the appellant, Samuel I. Kessler. The complaint, with its exhibits, showed that on the 30th of October, 1876, the defendants, and one Jacob Hahn, executed to one Joseph H. Defrees, “ for value received,” a certain written instrument as follows:

“ Whereas, the undersigned Jacob Hahn is indebted to Joseph H. Defrees in the sum of two thousand dollars; and, whereas, the said Jacob Hahn has effected an insurance on the life of Catharine Hahn, his wife, in the Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company, in the. sum of two thousand dollars, under policy numbered 20,558; now, therefore, for the purpose of providing means for paying off and liquidating said indebtedness, it is hereby agreed by and between the undersigned that said Jacob Hahn and Catharine Hahn assign all their title, interest, and estate, both present and prospective, in said policy of insurance, to said Joseph H. Defrees; and the said policy, when paid, shall be taken in payment of said indebtedness. The said Jacob Hahn and Catharine Hahn, and Samuel I. Kessler, hereby agree to pay each and every year the sum of twenty dollars on the premium to become due on said insurance, said sum to be payable on or before said premium becomes due and payable, according to the terms of said policy; and, if the same is not so paid, the said Defrees shall have the right to recover the same from each, or either, of the undersigned.
“Jacob Hahn.
“ Catharine Hahn.
“ Oct. 30th, 1876. Samuel I. Kessler.”

It was alleged in the complaint that by this instrument said Catharine Hahn, Samuel I. Kessler and Jacob Hahn bound themselves jointly and severally to pay said Defrees the sum of twenty dollars on or before the 23d of August of each year thereafter, during the life of said Catharine, with lawful interest after maturity; that she was still in life, and no payment had been made on said obligation by [513]*513or for or on account of said Catharine, Samuel and Jacob, or any of them, except certain payments specified; that there was due and owing on said obligation two hundred and thirty-five dollars, which remained wholly unpaid ; that said Joseph H. Defrees, in his lifetime, and his heirs and the assignor of the appellee and the appellee, had each severally paid all premiums which had become due and payable on said policy, and the same was still in full force and effect; that said Joseph H. Defrees died intestate, the owner and possessed of said obligation, on December 23d, 1885, at Elk-hart county, in this State; that he left surviving him as his widow and his only heirs certain persons named; that one of these, named, was appointed by the court below as administrator of the estate of said intestate; that said administrator duly settled said estate in said court and paid all the debts and liabilities of said estate, which was in due form of law adjudged by said court to be settled, and said administrator was discharged as such by said court; that said obligation, above set out, remained unadministered, and descended to said widow and heirs, who became and were the lawful owners and holders of said obligation, which was delivered to them by said administrator after the settlement of said estate. It was further shown that said widow and heirs, on the 1st of October, 1886, for value received, assigned in writing said obligation to Meander and Kuhns, and that on the 30th of July, 1887, Meander, for value received, sold and in writing assigned his interest therein to Kuhns, the appellee.

It was also alleged that said Jacob Hahn died in 1878; that afterwards said Catharine, for a valuable consideration, ratified said agreement, or obligation, and made ” certain specified payments thereon, which, by the exhibit referred to in the complaint appear to have been receipted for by J. H. Defrees.

Issues were formed, the trial of which by the court re-[514]*514suited in a finding and judgment against the appellant for ninety dollars, and in favor of the defendant Catharine Hahn.

The appellant has assigned a number of alleged errors, the first being the overruling of his demurrer to the complaint.

. The demurrer raised the question of the sufficiency of the facts stated in the complaint.

It is contended on behalf of the appellant that the assignment to Defrees of the policy taken out by his debtor, Hahn, upon the life of the debtor’s wife, was in the nature of a wagering contract, and contrary to public policy, and that therefore the contract sued on was not binding upon the appellant.

The position taken in argument by counsel for the appellant is, in substance, that one who holds a valid policy upon another’s life, in which the former has an insurable interest, can not assign the policy to a third person who has not an insurable interest in the life insured, but to whom the holder or beneficiary is indebted to the full amount insured, the assignee not assuming the payment of the premiums.

There has been great lack of uniformity in the decisions concerning the question of insurable interest in connection with assignments’ of life policies.

In Franklin Life Ins. Co. v. Hazzard, 41 Ind. 116, a policy had been issued to Cone, payable in the sum of three thousand dollars to the assured, his executors, administrators and assigns. Cone sold and assigned the policy to Hazzard, who had no insurable interest in the life of Cone. The court, in the course of the opinion, said: There can be no doubt that a policy issued to Hazzard upon the life of Cone, the former having, as in this case} no insurable interest in the life of the latter, would be absolutely void. * * * Now, if a man may not take a policy directly from the insurance company, upon the life of another in whose life he has no insurable interest, upon what principle can he purchase such policy from another? If he purchase a policy as a mere [515]*515speculation, on the life of another in whose life he has no insurable interest, the door is open to the same ‘ demoralizing system of gaming/ and the same temptation is held out to the purchaser of the policy to bring about the event insured against, equally as if the policy had been issued directly to him by the underwriter.”

The doctrine that if the policy is valid in its inception, it may be assigned to any one, whether he have an interest in the life of the insured or not, was referred to and disapproved; and it was said: “All the objections that exist against the issuing of a policy to one upon the life of another in whose life the former has no insurable interest, seem to us to exist against his holding such policy by mere purchase and assignment from another. In either case, the holder is interested in the death, rather than the life, of the party assured. The law ought to be, and we think it clearly is, opposed to such speculations in human life. In our opinion no one should hold a policy upon the life of another in whose life he had no insurable interest at the time he acquired the policy, whether the policy be issued to him directly from the insurer or whether he acquired the policy by purchase and assignment from another. * * In this case there was but a simple purchase of the policy by Hazzard. * * By his purchase he became interested in the early death of the assured. We are of opinion that the law will not uphold such purchase, and that the appellee acquired no right to the policy or to the sum secured thereby.”

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Bluebook (online)
27 N.E. 980, 1 Ind. App. 511, 1891 Ind. App. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kessler-v-kuhns-indctapp-1891.