Prudential Insurance Co. of America v. Markowitz

172 Misc. 911, 16 N.Y.S.2d 416, 1939 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2557
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1939
StatusPublished

This text of 172 Misc. 911 (Prudential Insurance Co. of America v. Markowitz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Prudential Insurance Co. of America v. Markowitz, 172 Misc. 911, 16 N.Y.S.2d 416, 1939 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2557 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1939).

Opinion

Hallinan, J.

On August 9, 1937, The Prudential Insurance Company of America (hereafter referred to as the Company ”) issued a policy of life insurance on the life of one Sophia Markowitz in the sum of $5,000, containing in substance the following beneficiary provisions:

1. The proceeds of the policy to be held by the Company and a guaranteed interest thereon paid to Mordecai Markowitz during his lifetime and after ten years the proceeds to be subject to withdrawal by said beneficiary only to the extent that he may in each year * * * make a single withdrawal of $250 from the amount so held.”

2. At the death of Mordecai Markowitz the principal amount or any withdrawn portion thereof to be paid “ in one sum in equal shares to such of Sanford H. Markham and Jerome D. Markham, sons of the insured, as may be living and per stirpes to the living children if any of such of said Sanford H. Markham and Jerome D. Markham as may be deceased.” - -

The insured died on October 10, 1938. Her three sons, the said named beneficiaries, Mordecai, born December 12, 1908; Sanford, [913]*913born December 24, 1904, and Jerome, born January 27, 1917, survive.

At that time, as well as at the trial, Sanford alone was married. Anne Bernice, born March 3, 1938, was his only child.

In December, 1938, and well within the time limited by the incontestability clause of the policy — “ two years from its date of issue ”— the company brought an action designating the aforesaid beneficiaries named in the policy as well as the executors of the will of the insured, defendants. This action, which will hereafter be referred to as Action No. 1 ” sought to contest the policy by reason of material misrepresentations by the insured and prayed that it be rescinded and declared null and void and of no effect and that the plaintiff be discharged of and from all, any and further liability with regard thereto,” and for other incidental relief, having for its general purpose the complete nullification of the insurer’s obligations under the policy, upon the return of the two paid annual premiums aggregating $436.90. All of the defendants named in said action answered.

Subsequently, and on or about August 15, 1939, after the toll of the contestable period contained in the policy, and while Action No. 1 was pending, an order was made appointing Sylvia Markham, wife of Sanford H., one of the defendants in said action and attorney for all of the defendants therein, guardian ad litem of Anne Bernice Markham, his daughter. Shortly thereafter the said infant, by her guardian ad litem, instituted an action through her father as her attorney, against the company seeking an adjudication of the interest, if any, of said infant in and to the proceeds of the policy which is the subject of Action No. 1. The company interposed an answer in said action alleging affirmatively the facts upon which it prayed for the rescission of the policy in its own action previously instituted and asked for the consolidation of both. These actions were, upon the company’s motion, duly consolidated and thus tried before this court.

Sanford H. Markham, as attorney for the defendants in Action No. 1 and for the infant in the second action, adduced but formal proof at the trial and in his main brief submitted thereafter conceded that the company has established a material misrepresentation in the application sufficient to warrant a rescission of the policy ” and assumed throughout “ that the judgment to be entered will so decide that issue.” Indeed, the result was a foregone conclusion; none other is possible in light of the record.

'C Counsel for the respective parties have argued pro and con as to whether the infant, concededly not named specifically as a party defendant in Action No'. 1, was a proper and necessary party thereto. While no direct authority on that issue in relation to [914]*914a contest of a life insurance policy was furnished, or found by the court, rulings of the Court of Appeals in Hess v. Hess (233 N. Y. 164) and McKnight v. Bank of New York & Trust Co, (254 id. 417), would seem to apply, although a dower interest was the subject-matter of the first case and a trust of the second. In the Hess case the court held that those having “ the first remainder represented in the particular action unborn children having a contingent estate ” but “ that this rule has never been applied to living persons having contingent interests or estates,” and in the McKnight case it was said: “Not always is it easy to determine in an action of this kind who should be made parties or who are the beneficially interested, but the prevailing equitable rule appears to be that all those who are living and are beneficially interested should be made the parties in an action to set aside or revoke the instrument or deed of trust.”

This rule, applied to the instant case, would require a holding that since the infant was alive at the time that Action No. 1 was instituted, she was a proper and necessary party, and the fact that she was not a named beneficiary in the policy, but merely belonged to a general class of persons who may, upon the happening of various contingencies, share in one-half of the proceeds if any, was no impediment to joining her in view of section 215 of the Civil Practice Act which permits the fictitious naming of an unknown defendant by “ adding a description identifying the person intended.”

The essential issue in this case, however, is not so much the question of parties, since the infant is now before the court, but rather is it the question whether a suit timely commenced by the insurer to rescind a policy of life insurance for material misrepresentations in its procurement, is a “ contest ” as the term has been construed, which stopped for all purposes the running of the period of limitations provided in the “ incontestability clause.”

The infant contends that her interest in the policy is incontestable as “ she did not become a party until after the operation of the incontestability clause.” She claims, therefore, that notwithstanding that the policy may be properly rescinded as to all others and the premiums refunded, she will be entitled to $2,500 upon the death of the primary beneficiary Mordecai, if the latter survives her father, Sanford H. According to this view, her interest in the rescinded policy would actually be larger than it would be if it were held valid, since Mordecai cannot withdraw-any of the proceeds in accordance with option 3 of the beneficiary clause, and the general class of persons of which the infant is a member cannot be enlarged by any afterborn brothers and sisters since the latter will have been divested by the rescission of any [915]*915possible interest because they were represented in this action by their father, the defendant Sanford H. Markham. (Hess v. Hess, supra.)

In Killian v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. (251 N. Y. 44) the Court of Appeals said through Cardozo, Ch. J. (at p. 48): Repudiation of a policy is notice that a contest will ensue if insured or beneficiary shall make attempt thereafter to enforce a claim of right. It is not a contest of itself. * * * The clause, in effect, if not in form, is a statute of limitations, established by convention, and like the statute is directed to remedies in court (Wright v. Mutual Benefit Life Assn., 118 N. Y. 237).

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Bluebook (online)
172 Misc. 911, 16 N.Y.S.2d 416, 1939 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2557, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prudential-insurance-co-of-america-v-markowitz-nysupct-1939.