Newton v. Hick's Adm'r

138 S.W.2d 329, 282 Ky. 226, 1940 Ky. LEXIS 145
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 8, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 138 S.W.2d 329 (Newton v. Hick's Adm'r) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Newton v. Hick's Adm'r, 138 S.W.2d 329, 282 Ky. 226, 1940 Ky. LEXIS 145 (Ky. 1940).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Sims, Commissioner

— Affirming in part and reversing in part.

De Forrest Hicks was a ne’er-do-well who made his home for some 10 or 12 years before his death with. Sylvester Newton’s family in Somerset, Ky. It appears that Hicks’ brothers brought him to the hotel operated, by Sylvester Newton with the request that Hicks be given a job at the hotel. Newton informed the brothers he had no opening for Hicks, whereupon they requested Newton to let him remain at the hotel for a couple of weeks until they could locate a job for him. The couple of weeks never expired and Newton let him remain at the hotel until his death in November 1934, although on several occasions Newton insisted upon his leaving and obtaining employment; Though addicted to liquor, Hicks was an affable person and acted as night clerk at the hotel for which he received his room, board, laundry *228 and clothes, hut received no pay. At irregular intervals Newton and his son, Abe, handed him small sums for cigarettes, barbers’ bills and other such incidental expenses. The record does not show any heirs survived Hicks except a sister, Mrs. B. H. Beuhler, his administratrix, the appellee here.

The appellant, Abe Newton, assisted his father, Sylvester Newton, in operating the hotel, and- in 1923 or 1924, he took out two industrial insurance policies on Hicks ’ life. After paying the premiums thereon for several years appellant became in need of money for his wife’s surgical operation, and with Hicks’ consent, he surrendered these policies to the company and received their cash value amounting to $169. Shortly thereafter appellant took a number of industrial insurance policies on the life of Hicks. Pour of these policies were issued by the Prudential Insurance Company; to-wit, Sept. 26, 1927, a policy for $408; April 15, 1929,-a policy for $129; Peb. 13, 1933, a policy for $200; and March 6, 1933, a policy for $200. He also took out two industrial insurance policies on Hicks’ life in the Metropolitan Insurance Company on Sept. 26, 1927 and November 1, 1928, which aggregated $974.54. There was a $500 policy issued by the National Life Insurance Company on the life of Hicks in which appellant was named as beneficiary but the record does not show the date it was issued. The premiums on most of these policies were payable weekly, and when any effort was made to collect them from Hicks, he sent the collector to appellant, who held the policies and the premium receipt books, and who paid all the premiums.

Neither the policies, nor copies thereof, nor any assignments alleged to have been made of same, are in the record, and although many exhibits are referred to in the transcript of evidence, not one of them can be found in the record. It is stated in the brief for appellee, and not denied by appellant, that the $500 National policy was the only one in which a beneficiary was named, and the remaining six policies all contained this facilitating clause, “The company may pay the amount due under this policy to either the beneficiary * * * or to any other person appearing to the company to be equitably entitled to same.” Due to the comparatively large amount each insurance company was obligated to pay, *229 the Prudential and Metropolitan required a personal representative to qualify before they would pay their respective policies.

Appellant qualified as administrator shortly after Hicks’ death and in so doing he led the county judge to believe no kin of Hicks’ desired to qualify. After he collected the proceeds of the policies, Mrs. Beuhler, Hicks ’ sister, heard of the amount of the insurance and on Jan. 11, 1935, she moved the county judge to remove appellant as administrator and to appoint her to administer the estate of her brother, which motion was sustained. Appellant resigned as administrator and on Jan. 24, he filed a settlement in the county court which showed he collected $2,017.86 on the Prudential and Metropolitan policies; that he paid $1,113.84 premium on the policies carried in these two companies, and the interest on these premiums amounts to $111.10; that he paid $201.50 funeral expenses and doctor bills; that 5% commission is due him as administrator, amounting to $100.92, and a $o0 fee is due the attorney representing Mm as administrator; that he expended $100 for deceased on a whiskey indictment in federal court, and advanced deceased an aggregate of $500 during the last five years of his life. These items total $2,177.36, and left the estate insolvent by $159.

Mrs. Beuhler filed exceptions in the county court to this settlement denying any of the expenditures were proper charges against the estate, and pleaded the statute of limitation against appellant recovering any premiums paid more than five years prior to the death of her brother. Kentucky Statutes, Section 2515. Appellant’s response was a traverse and contained the affirmative plea that he paid the premiums under the belief he would be entitled to collect the policies on the death of the insured, and that should the court adjudge he was not entitled to the proceeds of the policies, he should recover the amount of the premiums he had paid. He duly proved his claims against decedent’s estate as required by statute. The county judge overruled the exceptions and Mrs. Beuhler appealed to the circuit court. Upon proof heard, that court adjudged the Prudential policies had been assigned to appellant and he was entitled to the proceeds thereof in the sum of $1,043.42; that he was entitled to $398.91 in premiums he paid on *230 the Metropolitan policies, funeral expenses, doctor’s bill, attorney’s fee, and $12.58 commissions as administrator, or a total of $1,794.31. It was further adjudged appellant should pay Mrs. Beuhler $313.55, being the •difference between the $2,017.86 he collected on the Prudential and Metropolitan policies and the $1,704.31 credits allowed him in his settlement. Both parties filed motions and grounds for a new trial, which were overruled, and appellant is here with his bill of exceptions on his motion for an appeal, and Mrs. Beuhler prosecutes •a cross-appeal.

It is the contention of the appellant that these policies were assigned to him by Hicks and that as all of them are industrial policies upon which he paid the premiums, it is not necessary - that he have an insurable interest in the life of Hicks to collect the proceeds thereof under the facilitating clause. ■ Mrs. Beuhler’s position is that the aggregate amount of these policies takes them out of the class of industrial insurance; therefore appellant is not entitled to their proceeds as he had no insurable interest in the life of deceased; also, any assignment of the policies to him was void; that he could not recover for premiums paid more than five years before the death of her brother; that he was not entitled to •qualify as administrator, he performed no services as .such for the estate and is not entitled to commissions, ■or to an allowance for the attorney representing him as administrator.

It has long been the rule in all jurisdictions that •one who has no insurable interest in the life of another ■cannot be the beneficiary in a policy issued on his life, and this rule applies to the assignment of a policy after .it is issued and prevents the assignee without an insurable interest from collecting the policy at the death of the insured. Cooper’s Adm’r v. Lebus’ Adm’rs, 262 Ky. 245, 90 S. W.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
138 S.W.2d 329, 282 Ky. 226, 1940 Ky. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newton-v-hicks-admr-kyctapphigh-1940.