Union Central Life Ins. v. Flicker

101 F.2d 857, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 4462
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 20, 1939
DocketNo. 8943
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 101 F.2d 857 (Union Central Life Ins. v. Flicker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union Central Life Ins. v. Flicker, 101 F.2d 857, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 4462 (9th Cir. 1939).

Opinions

HANEY, Circuit Judge.

In an interpleader suit filed by an insurer, funds deposited in the registry of the court which became due under a life insurance policy issued to Samuel Rabinovich were decreed to be a part of insured’s estate, and the insured’s widow has appealed.

On December 29, 1924, The Union Central Life Insurance Company, an Ohio corporation, hereinafter called the insurer, issued the policy in question in the amount of $50,000, numbered 827,108. On July 24, 1926, the insurer issued a second policy to the insured for $25,000, and on August 1, 1928 issued to the insured a third policy for $100,000. Appellant, the insured’s wife, was named-as the beneficiary in all the policies, but the insured reserved'the right to change the beneficiary. At the time' insured applied for and received all these policies, he was a resident o'f and domiciled in the State of New York.

In 1929, appellant and the insured moved to California. On June 8, 1930, the insured assigned absolutely the second policy for $25,000 to his brother, Frank Rabinovich, who was one of the principal shareholders of Ogus, Rabinovich & Ogus, Inc., a New York corporation.

On September 14, 1930, the insured changed the beneficiary in the policy in question, in the amount of $50,000 from appellant to his “estate” and on the following day assigned it “together with all rights reserved to me as the insured .under the said policy, or as the owner thereof, or as the beneficiary thereunder * * * and all sum or sums of money, interest, benefit and • advantage whatsoever, now due, or hereafter to become due to me by virtue-thereof * * * ” to Ogus, Rabinovich & Ogus, Inc., hereinafter called the assignee. A duplicate of the assignment was filed with the insurer, and the latter acknowledged receipt of the same to the assignee on September 27, 1930. The policy in question, at the time of the assignment, had no cash surrender value in excess of indebtedness which was a charge thereon.

The evidence conclusively showed that the assignment to the assignee was made pursuant to an agreement between it and the insured, whereby the assignee agreed to keep the policy in force by payment of premiums, and from any proceeds received, retain therefrom the amount of the indebtedness owing by insured to it, including the amount of premiums paid by it, with 6% interest, and pay the balance to appellant. It is not clear whether or not appellees question that such an agreement was made. However all the evidence was to that effect, and none was contrary, and therefore it need not be set out herein.

At the time the foregoing assignment was made there was also in force a fourth' policy for $25,000 issued to insured by another insurer, in which appellant was designated as the beneficiary.

On December 19, 1931, appellant was adjudicated a bankrupt on her petition, and sometime during the summer of 1932, she obtained a discharge therein.

On August 16, 1936, the insured died. Continuously since the early part of 1928, the insured had been insolvent. The premiums on the policy in question since the date of the assignment thereof to the assignee had been paid by it.

The amounts due on the second and third policies -were paid to the brother who-sent $2,000 to appellant. The amount due on the fourth policy was paid to appellant.

Appellant petitioned a California state court to be appointed executrix of the insured’s will, alleging in the petition: “That the character and estimated value of the property of said estate, and the probable annual income therefrom, so far as known to your petitioner are as follows: Insurance and Personal Effects, in excess of $10,000.-00.” Letters testamentary were issued to appellant on October 14, 1936. Thereafter she claimed and received as such executrix a check from the insurer for $30,975.41, the amount due on the policy in question. Subsequently, upon advice of her attorney, she returned the check to the insurer, and on December. 21, 1936, brought an action in her individual capacity against the insurer in a state court of California to recover the amount due on the policy in question.

On December 31, 1936, the bill of interpleader was filed by the insurer in the court below, alleging that appellant, individually and as executrix, and the assignee, all claimed the balance due on the-policy in question, and that such claims were conflicting. The insurer deposited the balance due on the policy in the sum of $30,975.41 in the registry of the court, and prayed that appellant, individually and-as executrix, and the assignee be required to interplead and litigate their claims.

[859]*859On February 8, 1937, appellant as executrix, filed in the probate proceedings an inventory returning, as the only asset of the estate, the claim on the policy in question, which she staled was “not enforceable and valueless.” She thereupon resigned as executrix. Letters of administration c.t.a. were issued to appellees on February 17, 1937, and in this suit they were substituted as a party defendant in the place of appellant as executrix.

The state court action was dismissed.

In the interpleader suit the assignee answered, alleging that the policy in question was assigned to it upon the condition that upon insured’s death it would pay the amount received on the policy, after deducting the amount of the indebtedness owing it by the insured to appellant, and that by reason thereof appellant was the owner of, and entitled to receive, the amount deposited in the registry of the court. Appellant filed an answer to the same effect.

Appellees alleged that four claims against the estate of the insured had been approved by them and the probate court, totaling $10,964.66, all of which had been reduced to judgment; that appellant originally was liable on one of the claims which had been reduced to judgment, but that no judgment had been obtained against her because of the bankruptcy discharge; that the net annual premiums on all four insurance policies were $5,100 which “was an unreasonable large sum to pay for insurance by” the insured and that “the payment thereof was in fraud of his creditors”; that the “total sum of $200,000.00 * * * was an unreasonable and excessive protection to” appellant; that payment o'f premiums on the policies was made while the insured was insolvent; and that appellant knew the amount of insurance carried was unreasonable and excessive, and that the premiums were paid in fraud of the insured’s creditors.

Appellees further alleged that the polcy in question was assigned to the assignee upon the understanding that the balance, after payment of the indebtedness owing the assignee by the insured, would be paid to the insured’s estate; that the other three policies were assigned to the insured’s brother upon a secret agreement that the proceeds thereon, less indebtedness owing the brother by the insured, would by the brother, be paid to appellant and her two children, and by reason thereof the latter “have been more than amply and fully and reasonably protected”.

The opinion of the court below discloses consideration of two questions only: (1) did the assignment of the policy in question “work a change of beneficiary”? and (2) was the assignment made to the assignee “as trustee for the wife”? In its opinion the trial court answered both questions in the negative. The court found the facts substantially as related above, there being no conflict in the evidence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
101 F.2d 857, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 4462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-central-life-ins-v-flicker-ca9-1939.