Mutual Benefit Life Insurance v. Willoughby

54 So. 834, 99 Miss. 98
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 54 So. 834 (Mutual Benefit Life Insurance v. Willoughby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court 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. Willoughby, 54 So. 834, 99 Miss. 98 (Mich. 1910).

Opinion

Mayes, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

An extended discussion of the facts of this case seems unnecessary. In truth, there is very little room for dispute, in the attitude in which this record now comes to us, after the verdict of the jury finding that Mrs. Willoughby did not sign any of the documents leading up to the loan or surrender of the policy. In 1897 Julian H. Willoughby procured a policy of insurance on his life under a twenty-year payment plan, and named as beneficiary therein his wife, Mrs. Roberta Willoughby, in case she survived him, and, if she did not, the policy was then payable to the insured, his executors, administrators, or assigns. The insured died in 1908, and the beneficiary did survive him. In this aspect of the contention in this case, unless the beneficiary has done or acquiesced in something which defeats her rights in the policy as beneficiary, she is entitled to the full benefit of same.- There is nothing peculiar in the contract of insurance which is the subject of litigation in this case from other life insurance policies. The contract stipulates that, if the premiums thereon shall be paid twenty years, it then becomes a paid-up policy of insurance, and no further premiums are required to keep it up. The policy has certain provisions in it which provide for its non-forfeiture after two full annual premiums have been paid. It has certain stipulations giving it a loan value and a cash surrender value, and in case of a lapse of the policy after the second annual premium payment the contract provides for an automatic extension of the policy; the length of extension depending upon the number of premiums paid. All the premiums on the policy were paid by the insured until the year 1908. At that date a sufficient amount in premiums had been paid, according to the testimony, to automatically extend the policy until [105]*105February, 1914. The insured died on October 12, 1908. It is thus seen that the automatic -extension of the insurance carried the policy long past the date of the death of the insured.

The main contention in this case is that the insured procured a loan, in accordance with the terms of the policy, in 1903, of the then loan value of the policy less the premium for the current year. Subsequently the premium for 1904 was paid on the policy, part in cash and the balance by an additional loan on the policy, which was the full loan value of same, and a new certificate of loan was executed, and the original certificate of loan, made in 1903, cancelled and returned. In 1905 the last premium was paid on the policy. On May 12, 1906, the insured wrote to the company that he was financially embarrassed and wanted to surrender the policy, because he was unable to pay the premiums. Accordingly, some time during the year 1906, the insurance company sent a check to the beneficiary and the insured of the then full cash surrender value of the policy of sixty-two dollars and twenty-eight cents and canceled the policy. All the applications for the loan on the policy were required by the company to be signed by the beneficiary and the insured — that is to say, Mrs. Willoughby and her husband — and were apparently so signed. When the checks were sent to cover the amount of the loan, they were made payable to the insured and the beneficiary, and both their names appear to have been indorsed on the check when it was collected at the bank. When the application was made for the cash surrender value, and the surrender receipt signed, it was required to be signed, and was apparently signed, by the husband and the wife, and the cheek made payable' to the husband and wife, and when collected from the bank they both apparently indorsed it. Mrs. Willoughby, the beneficiary, denies that she knew anything about the negotiations of the loans on the policy, or of the application for the sur[106]*106render of the policy, or the collection of any of the money paid on the loans or sent by the insurance company as a surrender value on the policy, and denies that she signed the checks with her husband, or any of the applications for loans, or the surrender receipt, or that she knew anything’ about it, or received any benefit in any way from any of the money so received. In short, her testimony is that all these signatures which purport to be of her name were made by the husband without her knowledge, acquiescence, or consent. These facts were submitted to the jury, and they have found as facts that Mrs. Willoughby knew nothing about these negotiations, did not consent, and did not sign the checks, or receive any of the money. We must therefore assume that, although Mrs. Willoughby was the beneficiary in the policy, Mr. Willoughby, the insured, undertook to collect and dispose of the benefits, of the policy without her consent.

We held in the case of Johnson v. Bacon, 92 Miss. 156, at page 163, 45 South. 858; Where a life insurance policy is taken out for the benefit of named beneficiaries, it vests in the beneficiaries the absolute ownership, and it cannot be assigned, transferred, deposited as collateral security, or made in any way liable for the debts of the insured without the consent of the beneficiary expressly given. If there be any attempt to assign, transfer, or in any way dispose of the proceeds of the policy by the insured, or any attempt to make same liable for his debts, and it is done without the consent and authority of the beneficiary expressly given, it is as void as if the insured undertook to dispose of property belonging to an entire stranger; and this is true, whether the premiums are paid by a~ solvent or insolvent insurer. Jones v. Patty, 73 Miss. 179, 18 South. 794; Bishop v. Curphey, 60 Miss. 23; Cozine v. Grimes, 76 Miss. 300, 24 South. 197; Central Bank v. Hume, 128 U. S. 195, 9 Sup. Ct. 41, 32 L. Ed. 370; Pence, Admr., v. Makepeace, 65 Ind. 345; [107]*107Hendrie & Blotfoff Mfg. Co. v. Platt, 13 Colo. App. 15, 56 Pac. 209; Stigler’s Ex’x v. Stigler, 77 Va. 163; Bank v. Williams, 77 Miss. 398, 26 South. 965.” And in Bank v. Williams, 77 Miss. 398, 26 South. 965: “Where the policy designates a person to whom the insurance money is to he paid, the person who procures the insurance, and who continues to pay the premiums, has no authority; by will or deed, to change the designation or title to the money. He is under no obligation to continue to pay the premiums, unless he has covenanted so to do; but, if he does so, the person originally designated in the policy will derive the benefit.” From the above authorities it is seen that this court has already held that the right of the beneficiary named in an insurance policy to the proceeds of the policy is absolute; that is to say, the right to the benefits under the policy during the life of the contract cannot be destroyed by the insured, or disposed of, except with the consent of the beneficiary. Of course, the party taking out the policy cannot be forced to pay the premiums thereon, and in this way the policy may be destroyed; but so long as the policy has any living force all rights accruing under same and all values belong to the beneficiary.

But counsel for appellant argue that the rule announced by this court in the authorities above quoted has application only to an ordinary life policy, where there are no such incidents attached as loan value, cash surrender values, and automatic paid-up insurance, etc.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 So. 834, 99 Miss. 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mutual-benefit-life-insurance-v-willoughby-miss-1910.