Vinson v. Vinson

105 La. 30
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 1, 1901
DocketNo. 13,778
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 105 La. 30 (Vinson v. Vinson) 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
Vinson v. Vinson, 105 La. 30 (La. 1901).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Breaux, J.

PlaintifE brought suit for a partition of property owned in part by her and her co-heirs for her portion of the proceeds of a sale of property and to compel her co-heirs to collate the amount of a life insurance policy.

The late M. A. Vinson died in November, 1899. lie left as heirs five children — (1) William J. Vinson, a major, issue of his first marriage with a wife who departed this life in 1885, (2) Grover W., (3) Rose E., and (4) Alice E. Vinson, issue of a second marriage, the wife of which marriage died in 1892, and (5) John McIntosh Vinson, issue of a third marriage with Iona Hill in 1898. The surviving widow of this last marriage as tutrix of her minor child is the plaintiff in this suit.

The defendant having been recommended to be appointed tutor of the minors Grover W., Rose E., and Alice E. Vinson, without bond, took the oath and obtained letters of tutorship. He also made application to be appointed as administrator and met with opposition on the part of the surviving widow. He paid a small amount she claimed arid, so far as the records disclose, matters remained in statu quo between plaintiff and defendant to the date that she brought the instant suit.

On the trial, the testimony established that defendant had collected a policy of insurance. Plaintiff avers, regarding this policy, that her late husband had insured his life in favor of W. J. Vinson and the three children of his second wife for the sum of three thousand dollars. This policy defendant admits he collected, and alleges that it is for account of himself and the children of the second marriage. Plaintiff [32]*32seeks to recover an heir’s interest in the amount collected on the policy of insurance and to this end demands that the heirs named in the policy be ordered to collate the amount they have received as beneficiaries. Plaintiff also sues for an heir’s share of the money received from the proceeds of the sale of personal property and for a partition of the real estate. The defendant, in substance, denies that plaintiff is entitled to the relief claimed.

Plaintiff recovered judgment for two hundred and forty dollars and interest and her ward was decreed entitled, as one of the heirs of M. A. Vinson, to one-fifth of the property belonging to the succession and specially referred to in the judgment, and one-tenth of land known as the Wallace place. The judgment dismissed plaintiff’s demand for a partition, but reserves to her the right to sue for a partition on behalf of her ward when legally authorized. From the judgment, plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.

In the first place, we take up for decision the complaint directed against the judgment on the ground that it is erroneous for the reason that the claim set up by plaintiff to one-fifth of the proceeds of the policy of insurance was not recognized, and on the further ground that is a corollary of the first, that the heirs named in the policy should be compelled to collate.

A definition of the contract of insurance preliminarily will assist us in reaching a conclusion on the issue presented. It is a contract having in view the payment of a sum of money at the death of the insured in consideration of the payment of the premium stipulated. The condition of the payment of premium has in view the future acquisition by the beneficiary of a stated amount. It is not to be held as part of insured’s estate. It must be paid directly to the beneficiary. The administrator ov other legal representative of the estate has no claim upon the proceeds of a policy payable to the children, as the amount realized is theirs directly by the terms of the policy. There is no question before us regarding the premiums paid by the insured and for that reason we pass the question without commenting' upon the indebtedness vel non of the beneficiaries as to the amount these premiums' aggregate, but as to the amount of the policy, the decisions of this court have uniformly held that it is due to the beneficiary at the death of the insured. Only recently it was held that creditors are not entitled to the proceeds of a policy payable to the wife. The rights of the children as beneficiaries are not different from those of the wife. Putnam vs. Ins. Co., 42 Ann. [33]*33739; Hall vs. Toussaint, 52 Ann. 1763. The question is not res nova and we have found no good reason not to adhere to the views heretofore repeatedly expressed.

Plaintiff invokes the laws regarding collation as affording ground to compel the beneficiaries to account tot plaintiff for an heir’s portion. Turning to the Articles of the Civil Code, we find that they set forth collation as being the supposed or real return to the mass of the succession which the heir is required to make of property which he has received beforehand on his share in order that it may be divided with the other effects of the succession. This implies a right in the estate to collation of property owned by the de cujus. It arises from the fact that it is considered as having passed from him to the heir. Here there is nothing of the sort. The right to recover was always in the heirs who are beneficiaries of the policy. In our view, the perfect equality sought among the heirs is the equality which requires ordinarily that there shall be an equal division of the property among the heirs. This does not embrace the amount of the policy which never belonged to Ihe one from whom the heirs inherit and that was not, in the eye of the law, obtained from him, and therefore was not transmitted as a right to his estate to compel collation. The Code expressly and clearly declares that the obligation of collating is found in the equality which must be observed among the lawful descendants in dividing the inherited estate, on the presumption that what was given or bequeathed to children by their ascendants was so disposed of in advance of what they might one day expect from the succession. C. C. 1229. The presumption does not arise here. There was no gift of any kind made and no benefit conferred by the policy of insurance which, under our jurisprudence, can be considered as a gift or benefit subject to demand for return by the co-heir not named in the policy and who was not born at the time it was issued. There is no possible vinculum juris between the beneficiaries and the succession by which this amount can be made to figure as part of the assets of the succession. The law regarding collation cannot be construed! so as to include a child born after the policy was issued in favor of others.

We will not discuss the subject much further, for if the proposition be correct that the amount recovered on the policy here is no part of the estate (we do not conceive it possible to arrive at any other conclusion under our jurisprudence), then we must conclude that the insurer never intended it as a donation or as an avancemeni d’hovri, or advance[34]*34ment on the hereditary share of the beneficiaries, to be returned to his estate for partition. In our view, when one takes out a policy as here, it must be inferred that it was taken out with knowledge of the law regarding insurance and that his intention was that it should not be collated, an intention to which we cannot do less than give effect in the pending suit.

This brings us to a consideration of tho demand of plaintiff for a partition to which defendant filed no plea in opposition. The defense, in the briefs, points out that no partition could have been ordered for the Wallace place without making all parties in interest parties to the proceedings.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
105 La. 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vinson-v-vinson-la-1901.