Pullis v. Robison

5 Mo. App. 548, 1878 Mo. App. LEXIS 61
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 16, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 5 Mo. App. 548 (Pullis v. Robison) 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
Pullis v. Robison, 5 Mo. App. 548, 1878 Mo. App. LEXIS 61 (Mo. Ct. App. 1878).

Opinion

Bakewell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This proceeding is a bill in equity against the Avidow of one James P. Eobison, against the administrator of his estate, and against the Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company of Newark.

The allegations of the bill are, that the intestate died insolvent, and largely indebted to various persons ; that he OAved plaintiff $4,332, which has been alloived against his [550]*550estate, and placed in the fifth class; that Robison, during his lifetime, effected insurance on his life in the defendant company by three policies of $5,000 each, all payable to his widow, the annual premiums being all paid by him, and being, respectively, $283, $263, and $289, and payable annually on the dates of the policies, which were Feb. 26, 1867, Feb. 21, 1868, and May 12, 1870; that at the time of his death there was further insurance on his life for the benefit of his wife, amounting to $7,000, on which the annual premiums were paid by the deceased during his lifetime; that at the time of these insurances, and of the payment 'of these premiums, Robison was embarrassed, and the premiums a voluntary donation to his wife, in fraud of his creditors, and for the purpose of hindering and delaying them, and the plaintiff especially. The prayer is, that the sum due on the policies in the defendant company be subjected to the payment of the allowed demand of plaintiff, and for general relief.

The defendant company paid into the, hands of a receiver, by direction of the court, the amount due on the policies, and was discharged. The administrator failed to answer, and default was taken as to him. The widow filed an answer, denying the allegations of the petition as to indebtedness, fraud, and insolvency.

After the present action was begun, Schúlenburg & Boeckler instituted a similar proceeding ; and, still later, a like action was begun by Matlack. The suits were consolidated for trial.

The evidence showed clearly that Robison was insolvent when he died, in March, 1876, and during the latter part of 1875. It was admitted that Robison paid annually, in February and May, $1,225 premiums on five policies, all payable to his widow; that his widow had already received $5,500 on two policies, on which the aggregate annual premium was $390 ; that all the premiums were paid by Robison with his own funds. The court found these facts ; and, further, that [551]*551Robison was solvent when the policies were issued, and when all premiums were paid, except those maturing in Februaiy, 1876; that when these were paid, Robison was insolvent, and the payments in fraud of creditors ; that the amount of these premiums paid in cash was $342. The court further found that Robison was indebted to the plaintiffs in the other suits in the manner claimed by them; and decreed that the receiver pay costs, and, after paying the plaintiff $359, being the premiums paid in fraud of creditors, and interest, that the remainder be paid to the widow.

The decree in this case seems to be warranted by the pleadings and evidence. All the parties to the suits, except the administrator, moved to set it aside; but we see no reason why it should be disturbed. The administrator would seem to have nothing to do with the case. He was not a necessary party plaintiff, and we do not know why he was made a party defendant. But, as he incurs no liability for costs, and has taken no part in the proceedings, the decree ought not to be set aside merely because the administrator is unnecessarily made a defendant. That neither the administrator nor the Probate Court have any control over the proceeds of these policies is quite plain. If the premiums were lawfully paid, the money belongs to Mrs. Robison alone. If they were paid by Robison in fraud of bis creditors, and, in consequence of such payments, as it is claimed, the proceeds of the policy are not to go to his wife, then the money belongs to such of his creditors as by diligence establish the fraud. But in no case can it be Robison’s money. The donor in a voluntary conveyance has parted with all his interest in the property; he cannot set his own conveyance aside, and his administrator is in no other or better position than the donor. If the voluntary and fraudulent conveyance of his intestate could be attacked by the administrator, it would follow in the case at bar, for instance, that if the plaintiffs had succeeded in the main object of their suits, and obtained the full relief [552]*552which they claimed, the balance of these policies, after paying the creditors of Robison in full, would go, not to Mrs. Robison, the payee in the policies, but to Robison’s heirs generally. And if the administrator had any thing to do with the matter, it would follow that plaintiffs should be paid pro rata out of the fund, as all representing fifth-class demands, and not in the order of the equitable lien created by each bill.

The truth is that the administrator has nothing to do with a proceeding of this nature. A fraudulent conveyance, if attacked, must be attacked by those defrauded by it. Such a bill becomes a specific lien as soon as filed, and the creditor who first files his bill obtains a priority as a reward for his diligence.

In the present case, Schulenburg & Boeclder claim that they are entitled to share the fund recovered equally with Pullis, whose bill was first filed ; and they endeavor to support their claim by an affidavit to the effect that they were thrown off their guard, and delayed in filing their bill, by misrepresentations of an attorney who was acting at once for the administrator and for Pullis, and who led them to believe that if they would share the expenses of the trial they should have a pro rata share of the amount recovered. It was the imprudence of these plaintiffs, if they relied in so important a matter upon loose talk,.which, as the affidavit filed shows, was quite probably misunderstood. We thinlc that the Circuit Court committed no error in disregarding this affidavit. The money was properly applied to the payment of the creditor first filing his bill.

The question of priority would be wholly unimportant, had the views of counsel for plaintiffs as to the relief to which they were entitled found acceptance with the trial court, because the fund, in that case, would pay in full the claims of all the plaintiffs. They contend that they were entitled to a decree subjecting the whole proceeds of the three policies to the payment of their debts. They cite no [553]*553authority whatever in support of this view, and we do not think that it can be maintained.

This is not the case of a voluntary assignment by the intestate, during his lifetime, of a policy of insurance originally issued in favor of the deceased himself. If such an assignment were fraudulent, as a policy of insurance is a security for money, a chose in action which may have a money value and may be sold, a conveyance of it fraudulently made would tend to hinder and delay creditors, and might be set aside by them. But these policies were effected without the slightest fraud ; they were for the benefit of the wife of the intestate and the mother of his children, and were payable alone to her.

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Related

Lewis v. American Life Insurance
7 Mo. App. 112 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1879)

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Bluebook (online)
5 Mo. App. 548, 1878 Mo. App. LEXIS 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pullis-v-robison-moctapp-1878.