Travia v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.

173 So. 721, 186 La. 934, 1937 La. LEXIS 1131
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 1, 1937
DocketNo. 34089.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 173 So. 721 (Travia v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Travia v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 173 So. 721, 186 La. 934, 1937 La. LEXIS 1131 (La. 1937).

Opinion

LAND, Justice.

On August 6, 1932, defendant company issued to John P. Douglas a policy On his life in-the sum of $5,000, payable to the estate of the assured.

On September 17, 1932, the assured assigned this policy to plaintiff to secure payment for groceries, rent, and loans, amounting, at the death of the assured, to $262; and also to secure the additional sum of $119.10, advanced to him by plaintiff for payment of the first semiannual premium on the policy.

Douglas was killed in the city of New Orleans on September 30, 1932. He died from gunshot wounds in the back.

Plaintiff, as assignee, brought this suit to recover the face value of the policy in the sum of $5,000.

Defendant company refused to pay the policy to plaintiff, after due proof of the death of the assured and after demand for payment, on the following grounds:

(a) Because of misrepresentation as to assured’s age and health in the application of insurance.

(b) Because policy constituted an attempt by plaintiff to gamble on life of assured.

(c)Because assignment was void since defendant company never accepted the same.

John P. Douglas, at his death, left a sister, Miss Lillian E. Douglas, and a daughter, May Everett Douglas, his sole heir at law. Both are of the full age of majority, and both are residents of the city of New Orleans. The policy of $5,000 payable to his estate constitutes the sole asset in his succession. Decedent also left an olographic will in which he instituted his sister universal legatee. As decedent failed to name an executor in his last will and testament, his sister, Miss Lillian E. Douglas, was appointed dative testamentary executrix by the civil district court for the parish of Orleans. She has intervened in this suit as legal representative of the succession of John P. Douglas, and claims the full face of the policy in the sum of $5,000.

Intervener alleges the validity of the policy, but attacks the assignment by assured to plaintiff on the following grounds:

(a) That plaintiff, as assignee, had no insurable interest in the life of John P. Douglas, the assured.

(b) That the assignment was without serious consideration.

(c) That defendant company never accepted the same.

(d) That the assignment constituted an attempt by plaintiff to gamble on the life of the assured.

(e) That if the assignment is held to be valid and binding, the intervener, in the alternative, contends that it is a mere security for the indebtedness of the assured to plaintiff, and that plaintiff could not, in any *939 event, recover more than the amount of that indebtedness.

After trial had upon these issues, the civil district court for the parish of Orleans held that the policy issued by defendant company to John P. Douglas was valid, and that its assignment by the assured to plaintiff was also valid, to the extent of the money advanced by plaintiff to the assured, and rendered judgment in favor of the intervener, dative testamentary executrix, in the full sum of $5,000, the full face of the policy, with legal interest from April 29, 1933, until paid and all costs.

The civil district court also decreed in this judgment that the intervener, dative testamentary executrix, should pay to plaintiff, out of the proceeds of the $5,000, the sum of $381.10, money advanced by plaintiff to the assured, with legal interest from April 29, 1933, until paid, and that plaintiff have judgment against defendant, Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, for the costs of these proceedings.

From this judgment, defendant company has appealed suspensively, and plaintiff has appealed devolutively. Intervener has neither appealed nor answered the appeals.

Plaintiff has filed in this court an exception of no right and of no cause of action to the petition of intervention.

(1) That the assured did not intend that plaintiff should have the full amount of the policy at his death is made evident by the fact that the assured made his estate the beneficiary and not the plaintiff. Besides, the assured left a sister and a daughter and disposed of his estate in an olographic will, thereby clearly intending that they should receive the benefit of whatever was left after the payment of debts.

(2) Although plaintiff cannot recover the full amount of the policy, it is conceded, in the alternative, that he has an insurable interest in the life’ of the assured, to the extent of the advances made by plaintiff to him. That this sum amounts to $381.10 is clearly shown by the testimony of Travia, plaintiff, and by Vincent Verciglio, who worked at Travia’s restaurant. Sup.Tr., pp. 5, 6-9, 9-11.

Plaintiff therefore had an insurable interest in the life of the assured as to this indebtedness, and the assignment was therefore made for valuable consideration.

(3) We find no proof in the record that the assignment was an attempt by plaintiff to gamble on the life of the assured. The mere fact of assignment of a life insurance policy for a sum less than the face of the policy does not constitute proof that it is a gamble on the life of the assured. Should we so hold, it would not be possible for the assured to obtain any loan at all, upon the assignment of the policy as security for money advanced, or to be advanced to the assured.

(4) Nor are we impressed with the contention that the assignment was void because not accepted by defendant company. The assignment was acknowledged before a notary public in the city of New Orleans September 17, 1932. It was made on a form supplied by defendant company and was filed with its local office and its New York office. Douglas was killed on September 30, 1932, and proof of death was filed *941 October 3, 1932. Subseqitently defendant company found that, in the assignment, Travia, the plaintiff, was inadvertently described as a “debtor,” instead of a “creditor” of the assured, and requested Travia to correct this mistake by affidavit, which was done on October 4th. The affidavit was supplied and admittedly received by defendant company. Sup.Tr., p. 3. The affidavit further set forth that Travia loaned money to decedent both before and after the policy issued.

Nowhere in the policy or in the assignment is any requirement that it must be accepted by defendant company. The assignment provides on its face, and the policy provides in clause 7, that it shall not be “binding upon the Company” unless it be “filed with the Company” at its home office, and it is admitted in article III of defendant company’s answer that it was so filed.

There was strict compliance with the company’s rules; the assignment was on their form, in the manner provided, and was filed with the home office, and is therefore binding on defendant company.

(5) What has been said above in this opinion also disposes of two of the grounds of attack made by defendant' company upon the validity of the policy and of the assignment in this case:

(b) Because the policy constituted an attempt by plaintiff to gamble on the life of the assured.

(c) Because assignment was void since defendant company never accepted same.

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Bluebook (online)
173 So. 721, 186 La. 934, 1937 La. LEXIS 1131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/travia-v-metropolitan-life-ins-co-la-1937.