Wuesthoff v. . Germania Life Ins. Co.

14 N.E. 811, 107 N.Y. 580, 12 N.Y. St. Rep. 825, 62 Sickels 580, 1888 N.Y. LEXIS 539
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 17, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 14 N.E. 811 (Wuesthoff v. . Germania Life Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wuesthoff v. . Germania Life Ins. Co., 14 N.E. 811, 107 N.Y. 580, 12 N.Y. St. Rep. 825, 62 Sickels 580, 1888 N.Y. LEXIS 539 (N.Y. 1888).

Opinion

Andrews, J.

Two questions are presented, first, as to the validity of the payment made December 19, 1877, by the-defendant to Eliza F. Wuesthoff, the testamentary guardian of the plaintiffs, of the amount of the policy on the life of their father, Frederick Wuesthoff, and second, assuming that such payment was not a valid discharge of defendant’s obligation under the policy, whether the plaintiffs can now maintain an aption to enforce the defendant’s liability.

The policy provides that in case of the death of the mother of the plaintiffs before the death of .Frederick Wuesthoff, the ■insurance upon his death “ shall be payable to her children for their use, or to their guardian if under age, payment to be* made in sixty days after due notice and proof of the death of’ the said Frederick Wuesthoff.” Frederick Wuesthoff died at - Newark, New Jersey, August 28, 1877. He resided there in 1864, when the policy was issued and continued to reside there-until his death. The policy recites'his residence at that place. His first wife, the mother of the plaintiffs, died in 1870. He-remarried and by his will executed under seal August 16,1877, which was duly proved and recorded in New Jersey, he devised all his real and personal property to- Eliza F. Wuesthoff, his-wife by his second marriage, and appointed her sole executrix of his will, and also the guardian of his three infant children (the plaintiffs), the eldest being then of the age of about sixteen years. On the 14th of September, 1877, Eliza F. Wuesthoff, as guardian, served on the defendant notice and proof of death of Frederick Wuesthoff, stating the date and place of his death, and that she as guardian for the children was the legal owner of. the policy. Hpon the request of the-company she also furnished1 proof of the death of Amalie- *587 Wuesthoff, the wife of Frederick Wuesthoff by his first, marriage, and the names and ages of her children, and also delivered to the company a certified copy of the will. Thereafter, December 19, 1887, the defendant paid to Eliza F. Wuesthoff $5,000, the full amount of the policy, taking her receipt as guardian. Eliza F. Wuesthoff, after the death of her husband, qualified as executrix of the will and assumed the administration of his estate, but she never formally signified her acceptance of the office of guardian or gave a guardian’s bond.

There can, we suppose, be no doubt that the plaintiffs were-the persons who, by the contract of insurance, in the situation existing at the time of the death of Frederick Wuesthoff, were entitled to the benefit of the insurance. They were the legal, beneficiaries of the fund. The contract of the defendant was in legal effect a contract to pay to the plaintiffs in the-contingency which happened, and the clause providing that, payment should be made to “ their guardian, if under age,” did not change the force or effect of the obligation. It. expressed in terms what in the absence of express words would be the legal consequence that an obligation for .the payment of money to infants, may be discharged by payment, to a. guardian. The qualification that the guardian must be duly authorized to receive the payment is implied. It would be contrary to the nature and object of the contract to construe it as authorizing payment of a debt due to infants to be made to a person who although he might in a formal or even in a. legal sense be a guardian, nevertheless had no authority as such to collect or receive the money or debts due to the ward. We think it cannot be questioned that the contract to pay the. guardian of the infant beneficiaries, means a guardian legally-authorized to receive and discharge the debt, and that a guardian possessing this authority, whether a general or chancery guardian, a testamentary guardian or a guardian ad Ktem, is, within the meaning of the policy, a guardian to whom payment could be lawfully made. The payment upon which the defendant relies was made to a testamentary guardian.,

*588 The power of a father to appoint a guardian by deed or will was originally given by statute (12 Chas. II), which has been re-enacted in most of the States and extended in some of them so as to embrace the mother. The power to appoint by deed is construed as meaning a testamentary instrument in the form of a deed, to operate only after the death of the parent. (2 Kent’s Com. 225.) But the power is statutory and does not exist in the absence of a statute conferring it. The power of a testamentary guardian, when not restricted, extends to the control of the person of the ward and the custody and management of her real and personal property. (Chapman v. Tibbits, 33 N. Y. 289.) But as the right to appoint a testamentary guardian depends on statute, it follows that the whole subject is within the control of the legislature, and "that it may not only regulate and restrict the power of .appointment, but may define, limit and regulate the authority of the guardian and prescribe the conditions under which the .authority shall be exercised. The statute of Hew Jersey in force' August 16, 18YY, provides that the father may, by his ■deed executed in his lifetime, or by his last will and testament in writing, dispose of the custody and tuition of his minor ■child or children during their minority, and that the person ■or persons to whom the custody of such child or children may be given, shall and may (among other things) “ take into his, her or their custody for the use of such child or children the profits of all lands, tenements or hereditaments of such child -or children, and also the custody and management of the goods, chattels and personal estate of such child or children till his or her, or their respective age of twenty-one years, and may bring such action or actions in relation thereto as by law a guardian in socage might do.” (Revision of Hew Jersey Statutes, 664, § 1.) By another section it is provided that: “ Every guardian appointed by last will or testament, which ■shall be legally proved and recorded, shall before he exercises any authority over the minor or his estate, appear before the Orphan’s Court and declare his acceptance of the guardianship, which shall be recorded, .and shall give bond with such *589 sureties and in such sum as the said court may approve of and order, for the faithful execution of his office, unless it is otherwise directed by the testator’s will.” (Page 762, § 48.) The will of Frederick WuesthoS gave no direction on the subject, and it is conceded that Eliza F. WuestofE, the guardian, had not at the time of receiving payment on the policy, declared her acceptance of the guardianship, as required in this section, nor had she given any bond\or security as guardian, and that no bond or security has ever been given.

It is insisted in behalf of the defendant'that the authority of the guardian under the Hew Jersey statute is derived from the will or deed appointing her, and that by force of the will, and the section of the statute first cited, Eliza F. Wuesthoff, immediately on the death of her husband, was vested with the character of guardian, or at least she became such on. assuming to act as guardian and could without further qualification lawfully receive and discharge the debt owing by the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
14 N.E. 811, 107 N.Y. 580, 12 N.Y. St. Rep. 825, 62 Sickels 580, 1888 N.Y. LEXIS 539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wuesthoff-v-germania-life-ins-co-ny-1888.