New York Life Insurance v. Kansas City Bank

121 Mo. App. 479
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 5, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 121 Mo. App. 479 (New York Life Insurance v. Kansas City Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New York Life Insurance v. Kansas City Bank, 121 Mo. App. 479 (Mo. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

BBOADDUS, P. J.

This is a proceeding in equity to settle the conflicting claims of the defendants to a certain fund amounting to $4,197.72 in the hands of the plaintiff, a life insurance company. The facts are that, on June 8, 1868, the plaintiff company issued two policies, each for the sum of $2,500, on the life of Horace N. Chittenden, numbered respectively 4881 and 4882. The insured died February 14, 1903. The respondent Albert Young as the administrator of Chittenden’s estate filed his interplea claiming that he was entitled to the proceeds of said policy which had been paid into court by the company. The defendants Harriet and Anna B. Chittenden based their claim upon the ground that by the terms of the policy they were its beneficiaries.

The bank, the trust company, Chick and M'cCoun all base their claims, arising out of the following state of [484]*484facts, viz.: — In the year 1874, the claimant Joseph S. Chick, according to his testimony, became cashier of the Kansas City National Bank, at which time said bank had in its possession the two policies in controversy together with what purported to be a written assignment of the same as collateral security for a note purporting to have been executed by Chittenden in favor of the bank. The note was dated in 1878, was for the sum of $3,000, bore interest and was past due in 1874. Chick testified that he was cashier and director of the bank from 1874, until it went into voluntary liquidation under the National Bank Act and paid its debts; that he and the other directors afterwards had possession of all the assets of the bank, including said note, policies of insurance and assignment thereof, as trustees of the bank; that all the other officers and directors of the bank were dead; that McCoun moved out of the State many years ago; and that for a number of years before this controversy he was the sole surviving officer, director and trustee of the bank, had possession of all its assets and was engaged in collecting them. He testified that the note of Chittenden was lost in 1894, and that the policies and assignment thereof, was at all time in the possession of the bank or its officers or directors. He states that no part of the debt had been paid. He could not testify that the signature to the note was that of Chittenden, but that the handwriting was the same as that of the signature of Chittenden to the assignment. His testimony was that the bank paid the premiums while the policies were in its possession, and that he as trustee paid $15 as premium after the bank went into liquidation.

The interpleading bank claims that it is the owner of said fund the proceeds of said policies assigned to it as collateral security for the payment of the said note of Chittenden for $3,000 with interest. McCoun claims an interest in the fund proportionate to the shares of [485]*485stock he owned of said bank. The interpleader Chick claims an interest in the fund also as a shareholder of the bank’s stock, and the entire fund as the surviving officer and trustee thereof. The trust company claims the fund because the policies had been transferred to it by Chick in consideration of an indebtedness of the latter to the trust company.

The court found for the administrator Albert Young and ail the other interpleaders, except Harriet L. and Anna B. Chittenden appealed. One of the contentions of the respondent is that the proceeds of the policies rightfully belongs to the said Harriet L. and Anna B. Chittenden, the former the wife and the latter the daughter of the insured. If such is true it amounts to a confession upon the part of respondent that the judgment in his favor was erroneous and against the rightful claimants, but at the same time it would be a sufficient cause to affirm the judgment as against the appealinginterpleaders as they would not be entitled to the fund. The language of the policies is as follows: “And the said company do hereby promise and agree to and with the said assured, his executors, administrators and assigns, well and truly to pay, or cause to be paid, the said sum assured, to the said H. N. Chittenden’s legal representatives, within sixty days after due notice and proof of interest (if assigned or held as security), and of the death of said H. N. Chittenden.”

The principal controversy is over a construction of the meaning of the language used with reference to the persons to whom the amount of insurance was to be paid upon the death of the insured. The words legal representatives in their- general acceptation means executors and administrators; but not always as they may mean next of kin, or assignees. [New York Life Ins. Co. v. Flack, 3 Md. 341; Insurance Co. v. Armstrong, 117 U. S. 591; Bank v. Abernathy, 32 Mo. App. 211; Griswold v. Sawyer, 125 N. Y. 411; Hutson v. Merefield, [486]*48651 Ind. 24; Ewing v. Jones, 130 Ind. 247.] In the latter case the grantor conveyed certain real estate to a trustee reserving to himself sufficient in the opinion of the trustee for his maintenance, the estate at his death to descend to his legal representatives, with a proviso that a certain adopted brother, “shall under no circumstaneces whatever, inherit or be entitled to any part or parcel thereof.” The court holds that, “the term legal representatives as used meant the heirs of the grantor.” In Griswold v. Sawyer, supra, the controversy was over the proceeds of a life insurance policy which provided that upon the death of the insured the insurance should be paid to his legal representatives. The widow and children claimed it as his legal representatives, and the administrators claimed it. It was held that the term legal representatives meant the wife and children. “That while the strict, technical meaning of the words legal representatives is administrators or executors, and they must be so construed in the absence of anything showing a different intent; as they are not always used in this sense, it is the province of construction in any case to ascertain the sense in which they are used, and for that purpose the subject-matter, and the surrounding circumstances, as well as the language used may be considered.” The court then proceeds to- state that, the object of such insurance is generally, to provide a support for the family of the insured, which taken into consideration with the extraneous evidence that the insured was an old and feeble man who had once been wealthy, but had become poor, evidenced an intention on his part not to provide a fund for his creditors, as the amount of insurance was small and his debts large. Taking these matters into consideration the court felt justified in construing the words as meaning that the insured intended to make his wife and children and not his executors or administrators his beneficiaries.

But the facts of this case are entirely different. [487]*487Chittenden at the time the policies were issued was only twenty-six years old, and unmarried. The fact that he was unmarried would of course do away with the idea that he was providing for any existing wife and children, and it seems to us that there is nothing shown to indicate that he was providing for any such future wife and children. The provision of the policy that the insurer, “do hereby promise and agree with the said assured, his executors, administrators and assigns, well and truly to pay, or cause to be paid, the said, sum so assured, to said H. N.

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Bluebook (online)
121 Mo. App. 479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-life-insurance-v-kansas-city-bank-moctapp-1906.