Kincaid v. Alderson

354 S.W.2d 775, 209 Tenn. 597, 13 McCanless 597, 1962 Tenn. LEXIS 392
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 7, 1962
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 354 S.W.2d 775 (Kincaid v. Alderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kincaid v. Alderson, 354 S.W.2d 775, 209 Tenn. 597, 13 McCanless 597, 1962 Tenn. LEXIS 392 (Tenn. 1962).

Opinion

*599 Mb. Justice Burnett

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The bill in this cause was filed by the appellants to clear their title to a mobile home, which had been purchased by the appellants under circumstances of a contract hereinafter set out. The bill was demurred to on various grounds. The Chancellor sustained the second ground of the demurrer, which was that neither of two conditions, which were set out in the title bond given the appellants, had been performed. The Kincaids have appealed and assigned error. The propositions presented present a number of facets and, in view of their interest to the writer of this opinion, he has spent several days in an independent investigation before arriving at a conclusion hereinafter set forth.

In 1958, Clayton L. Alderson and his wife, Barbara M. Alderson, purchased a mobile home in Wichita Falls, Texas. At the time of this purchase they executed a chattel mortgage on said mobile home to the Commercial Credit Corporation to secure a note, payable to said corporation, in the sum of $6,439.20, which was payable in monthly installments of $107.32 over a period of five years. The amount of these payments included premiums on a life insurance policy issued to Commercial Credit on the life of Clayton Alderson, the maker of the note. This life insurance was payable to the credit corporation in the event Alderson died prior to the payment date of said note.

In January, 1960, the Kincaids purchased this mobile home from Alderson for “$600.00 in cash upon the execu *600 tion of this obligation and the balance of said purchase price shall be paid by the parties of the second part assuming and agreeing to pay the balance due the Commercial Credit Corporation, of Wichita Falls, Texas, on a note executed by the parties of the first part and which is secured by purchase money chattel mortgage of the above described mobile home.” At the time of the purchase the balance due on said note was $4,892.80. In September, 1960, following this purchase by the Kin-caids, Clayton Alderson was killed in Germany. In due course the insurance company paid the balance due on said note to the Commercial Credit Corporation.

The contention of the Kincaids is that by the payment of this note by the insurance company to the Commercial Credit Corporation, that they are thus entitled to this payment by the insurance company of this note and that the widow, the administrator of the estate of Clayton Alderson, should execute to them a bill of sale for said home, and that they should be relieved of the payment of the balance of this note since it had been •paid off by the life insurance on Clayton Alderson.

The title bond issued by the Aldersons to the Kincaids provides:

“When the parties of the second part shall have paid in full the amount due the Commercial Credit Corporation and said purchase money chattel mortgage is cancelled, or when said parties of the second part shall have reduced the amount due the Commercial Credit Corporation whereby they can refinance the mobile home in their own name, said parties of the first part make, execute and deliver unto the said parties of the second part or their assigns a good and sufficient bill of sale *601 and title for said mobile home, and thereby transfer all of said parties of the first part interest to parties of tbe second part with general warranty and free from encumbrances.”

Obviously, from the quotation above one or two words are left out of this, but the sense of the provisions of the transfer is plain nevertheless.

It is first to be observed that the contract between the Aldersons and the Kincaids is nothing1 more than an old-fashioned title bond. Such a bond gives the holder, that is the Kincaids, an equitable title, converted into a legal title, upon the payment of the consideration. Thus it is that the Kincaids contend that since the mortgage has been paid in the way above indicated Mrs. Alderson, the administrator of the estate of her deceased husband, should execute to them a clear title, or that it be done through the court.

The original bill praying, as it did, to clear the title had filed as exhibits thereto, the original contract or title bond, as well as certain portions of the insurance contract, and the chattel mortgage executed by the Aider-sons to the Commercial Credit Corporation.

This contract of life insurance on Alderson taken out by his creditor, Commercial Credit Corporation, provides when the obligation of Alderson to Commercial Credit is paid including any premiums that they have to pay, etc., that any balance left over will be paid to Alderson. In other words, the life insurance policy merely covers any and all obligations of the creditor under this chattel mortgage.

*602 A number of questions are raised as to whether or not there is an insurable interest herein in the person on whose life this life insurance was written. “As a general rule, it has been stated that insurable interest exists only if the beneficiary has some interest, or has a reasonable expectation of advantage, from the continuance of the insured’s life, or would lose by his death.” Appleman on Insurance Law & Practice, Vol 2, sec. 762, p. 88.

“Subject to any contrary statutory or contract provisions, a creditor has an insurable interest in the life of his debtor, and may be made the beneficiary in a regular life insurance policy upon the debtor’s life, so as to entitle him to the proceeds of such insurance, at least, to the amount of his debt, including interest, and the cost of insurance with interest thereon, during the period of life expectancy of the insured according to the Carlisle Tables, or money paid by the creditor for funeral expenses of the debtor in accordance with an agreement made with the insured before his death.” Couch on Insurance, Vol. 3, sec. 24:154, p. 266.

Under this quotation the case of Moneymaker v. Calloway, 9 Tenn.App. 348, is cited along with decisions from many other jurisdictions in the United States. This is unquestionably the general rule and is the rule applicable in this State. Here under the allegations of the bill and exhibits attached thereto, the Commercial Credit Corporation as a creditor of Alderson had an insurable interest in Alderson’s life, and thus as between the Commercial Credit Corporation and Alderson the *603 insurance was valid and the payment of it to the Commercial Credit Corporation is not contested in any way. Contention is made in this case though that the Kincaids had an insurable interest in the life of Alderson by reason of their assumption of the contract and that thus this payment of the life insurance on the death of Aider-son should inure to their benefit. The Kincaids though under a fair and applicable definition of insurable interests, as above quoted, do not have such an interest in the life of Alderson.

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Bluebook (online)
354 S.W.2d 775, 209 Tenn. 597, 13 McCanless 597, 1962 Tenn. LEXIS 392, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kincaid-v-alderson-tenn-1962.