Dorsett v. Thomas
Dorsett v. Thomas
Opinion of the Court
On the 30th day of August, 1918, J. Leer Lacombe,, who was then cashier of the First National Bank of Eunice, Eunice, La., took out two policies of life insurance in the New York Life Insurance Company, each for the sum of 810,000, designating -as his beneficiary “the First National Bank of Eunice, La., or its legal representatives.” On or about the 27th day of February, 1919, the First National Bank of Eunice surrendered its charter, liquidated its affairs, and went out of existence. About the same time the stockholders of the First National Bank organized another bank under the state laws of Louisiana, naming it the “American Bank & Trust Company,” and on March 20, 1919, the directors of the new bank by appropriate resolutions assumed all the liabilities and took over all the assets of the defunct First National Bank. It is not disputed that the purpose of the stockholders was to avoid some of the federal restrictions in the conduct of the affairs of national banks, and that the American Bank &. Trust Company succeeded the First National Bank and continued the same business. Lacombe was retained as cashier, and the two life insurance
The present suit was brought by the administratrix against the state bank examiner and the liquidating agent of the American Bank & Trust Company, which is in process of liquidation, for the purpose of having the two insurance policies declared as belonging to the succession and to recover possession of same.
The defense is substantially that the policies were taken out by the First National Bank of Eunice against loss of said cashier Lacombe’s services by death; that they were the property of said bank; that the American Bank & Trust Company acquired the same as part of the assets of the First National Bank, of which it is the successor, and by virtue of said acquisition and succession it is the owner of same, and it prays accordingly.
From a judgment in favor of defendants plaintiff appeals.
The following stipulation appears on each of the policies:
“The insured may at any time, and from time to time, change the beneficiary, provided this policy is.not then assigned. Every change of beneficiary must be made by written notice to the company at its home office, accompanied by the policy for indorsement of the change thereon by the company, and unless so indorsed the change shall not take effect. After such indorsement the change shall relate back to and take effect as of the date the insured signed said written notice of change, whether the insured be living at the time of such indorsement or not. In the event of the death of any beneficiary before the insured the interest of such beneficiary shall vest in the insured.”
It is our opinion that the moment the First National Bank of Eunice surrendered its charter, though it might have continued to exist through its liquidator solely for the purpose of liquidation, it disappeared and lost its existence as a legal entity; that the beneficiary interest in the policies became vested, under the clear and plain language of the contract, in the insured; that the insured never divested himself of that interest; and that the plaintiff as administratrix of his succession is entitled to collect the same.
It may be that defendants are entitled to reimbursement of premiums paid by the banks, but that issue is not tendered by the pleadings.
070rehearing
On Rehearing.
The judgment and decree heretofore entered in this case are hereby reinstated and made final.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- DORSETT v. THOMAS, State Bank Examiner
- Cited By
- 23 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- (Syllabus by Editorial Staff.) 1. Appeal and error The overruling of ail exception of no cause of action was final as to defendants, who filed no answer to plaintiff’s appeal. 2. Insurance A contract of insurance,' like every other contract, is the law between the parties, and every stipulation therein must be construed as written. 3. Evidence t&wkey;450 (5) — Provision for change of beneficiary held so unambiguous that written declarations of one party were-irrelevant. A provision of a life policy that insured might change the* beneficiary by written notice to the company, accompanied by the policy for indorsement of the change thereon, that unless so indorsed the change should not take effect, and that in case of the beneficiary’s death the interest of the beneficiary should vest in insured, was so plain, clear, and unambiguous that letters and writings of insured purporting to show his understanding as to who the actual beneficiary was were irrelevant and entitled to no weight. 4. Insurance Where a life policy named a bank of which insured was cashier as beneficiary, a provision that in case of the “death of any beneficiary” before insured, the interest of such beneficiary should vest in insured, applied when the bank surrendered its charter and went out of existence; such going out of existence being the “death of the beneficiary.” [Ed. Note. — For other definitions, see Words and Phrases, First and Second Series, Death.] 5- Insurance Under a life policy providing for change of beneficiary on written notice to the company and indorsement of the change on the policy, and that in case of beneficiary’s death his interest should vest in insured, where a bank named as beneficiary went out of existence, a new bank, organized to take over its.business, could not acquire the interest of the defunct bank without the written consent of the insurer and insured. 6. Insurance Under a life policy, naming a bank or its legal representative as beneficiary, and providing that in case of the beneficiary’s death its interest should vest in insured, where the bank ceased to exist, a new bank, organized to succeed it, did not become beneficiary as the first bank’s “legal representative”; the policy merely meaning that if the beneficiary died after insured its legal representatives might collect the proceeds, and not that the legal representatives should become beneficiaries in violation of the plain provision that the beneficiary’s rights should vest in insured. [Ed. Note. — For other definitions, see Words and Phrases, First and Second Series, Legal Representative.] 7. Insurance &wkey;>586 — Beneficiary has no vested rights, and cannot transfer rights when right to change reserved. Where a life policy reserves to insured the right to change his beneficiary, no beneficiary can acquire a vested right until after the death of insured, and before such death the beneficiary cannot either assign or transfer to any one any rights in the policy. O’Niell, J., dissenting.