Mutual Benefit Life Insurance v. First National Bank

169 S.W. 1028, 160 Ky. 538, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 510
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 28, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 169 S.W. 1028 (Mutual Benefit Life Insurance v. First National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mutual Benefit Life Insurance v. First National Bank, 169 S.W. 1028, 160 Ky. 538, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 510 (Ky. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Settle

Affirming.

In April, 1905, Dr. T. H. G-arvin, of Horse Cave, this State, and his son, Ed L. G-arvin, then a resident of St. Louis, Missouri, or Estonia, New Mexico, borrowed of the appellee, First National Bank of Horse Cave, Ken[540]*540tucky, $1,000.00, for which, they executed their joint note, payable one year after date. There were, at the time of the execution of the note, assigned and delivered to the bank to secure its payment, two policies of insurance of $1,000.00 each on the life' of Ed L. Garvin, one of these being in the Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company and the other in the Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company of Newark, New Jersey. The latter policy was payable “to Mrs. Bettie Garvin (wife of Ed L. Garvin) if she survived her husband, otherwise to said insured (Ed L. Garvin).” "When delivered to the bank this policy contained the following assignment:

“We hereby assign the within policy No. 250654 to First National Bank of Horse Cave, Kentucky, to secure a loan of $1,000.00, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged.

(Signed)

“Ed L. Garvin,

Bettie H. Garvín.”

While there was some contention as to whether the makers of this note were both principals or Ed L. Garvin was the principal and T. H. Garvin the surety therein, our examination of the evidence convinces us that Ed L. Garvin was the principal and T. H. Garvin his surety; and it is fairly apparent from the evidence that the entire $1,000.00 for which the note was executed was received and used by Ed L. Garvin. When this note matured in 1906 it was renewed by the execution of a new note by thé same parties and with the same collateral attached as security. Some time after the renewal of the note Dr. T. H. Garvin, at the request of Ed L. Garvin, induced the bank to surrender the policy in the Northwestern Life Insurance Company, which Ed L. Garvin used in borrowing money elsewhere, but there was placed with the bank as collateral security, in lieu thereof, seven shares of the bank’s stock, belonging to Dr. T. H. Garvin individually. Although the second note or renewal executed in 1906 became due in April, 1907, it was not paid by the makers or either of them at maturity, or thereafter, and was held by the bank until October 1, 1908, at which time it threatened suit upon the note, to prevent which Mrs. T. H. or Sallie Garvin, wife of Dr. T. H. Garvin, at the instance of the bank, executed to it, in renewal or discharge thereof, her note for a like ¿mount, due one year after date, to which she signed the name of her son, Ed L. Garvin. The [541]*541note thus executed by Mrs. Garvin was subsequently, within two or three days, also signed by her husband, Dr. T. H. Garvin. At the time Mrs. Garvin executed the note in question to the bank the insurance policy on the life of her son, Ed L. Garvin, in the Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company, and the seven shares of bank stock, which had been held by the bank as collateral security for the old note, were by her left with the bank and were retained by the bank as security for the payment of the note.

After the execution of the last-mentioned note by Mrs. T. H. Garvin, and perhaps before its maturity, Dr. T. H. Garvin died testate. His will appointed his widow executrix and devised to her his entire estate. Although the widow qualified as executrix of the will she subsequently resigned as such, and Samuel Heatherly was appointed and duly qualified as administrator with the will annexed of the estate of T. H. Garvin, deceased. Before her resignation as executrix, however, Mrs. Garvin brought suit in the Hart Circuit Court for the settlement of the testator’s estate, and about the same time the First National Bank also brought suit on the note in question, proceeding on the theory that Mrs. T. H. Garvin was interested in certain enterprises in which her son, Ed. L. Garvin, was engaged and in which the $1,000.00 originally borrowed by him and his father of the bank was used. It therefore sought to recover of Mrs. Garvin personally, and as executrix of her husband’s will, the amount due on the note and also to subject the collateral, held by it as security for the note, to its payment.

After the resignation of Mrs. Garvin as executrix, the prosecution of the suit brought by her for the settlement of the estate was proceeded with by Heatherly, administrator with the will annexed. In the meantime yet another suit was brought by the bank against the personal representative of T. H. Garvin and Mrs. Garr vin upon other obligations claimed to be owing by them to the bank, and the three actions mentioned were consolidated and heard together. We are only concerned, however, with the action on the $1,000.00 note. Before the order of consolidation was entered the bank, by an amended petition in that action, made the Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company, Ed L. Garvin and Bettie H. Garvin, his wife, parties defendant, following which a warning order was properly taken as to Garvin and [542]*542wife and an attorney appointed to make defense for them, whose report, showing proper performance of the duty imposed upon him by the warning order, appears in the record. It was alleged in this amended petition that at the time the bank’s action was instituted the cash surrender value of the policy on the life of Ed L. Garvin in the Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company was $311.42, which amount the bank, by reason of the pledge and assignment to it of the policy as security for the note of $1,000.00, was entitled to collect and apply to its payment; and this the prayer of the amended petition asked to be done.

Neither Ed L. Garvin nor his wife filed an answer to the petition of the bank as thus amended, but the Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company filed a special demurrer thereto upon the ground that the court below was without jurisdiction to adjudicate the question of its liability upon the policy on the life of Ed L. Garvin. The demurrer was overruled and the insurance company, without waiving the question of jurisdiction, then filed an answer, setting up the following grounds of defense: (1) That the original note to secure which the policy was pledged was discharged by the bank’s acceptance of the note of Mrs. and Dr. T. H. Garvin; (2) That the financial interest of Mrs. Bettie H. Garvin, wife of Ed L. Garvin, in the life insurance policy was not legally divested and her assignment thereof was not binding upon her; (3) That, even if the assignment was valid, it bound Bettie H. Garvin only to the extent of the satisfaction of the original note, for which it was pledged; and that the assignment of the policy made by her at the time of the execution of that note was, ipso facto, released by the acceptance by the bank of the renewal note executed by Mrs. and Dr. T. H. Garvin; (4) That in life insurance the cash surrender privilege was personal to the insured and did not pass to the assignee of the ■policy; (5) That the Hart Circuit Court had no jurisdiction of the subject matter or of the persons to this litigation.

On the hearing the circuit court reached the conclusion that, according to the terms of the written assignment, the policy in question was pledged to secure the payment of the loan of $1,000.00 evidenced by the several notes executed therefor, that is, the original note and the subsequent renewals thereof evidencing the original indebtedness; that the debt .sued on was that [543]*543of Ed L. Garvin and that the note executed by Mrs. T. H.

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169 S.W. 1028, 160 Ky. 538, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mutual-benefit-life-insurance-v-first-national-bank-kyctapp-1914.