Jones v. Patty
Jones v. Patty
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
The appellants, creditors of E. C. Patty, deceased, exhibited
The breaches of the bond alleged are:
1. That the administratrix failed to return, within the time required by law, a true inventory of the property, money and rights in action of the intestate.
2. That when the inventories were made the administratrix failed and refused to return or account for certain personal property of said estate of the value of $700.
3. That the administratrix failed and refused to put upon her inventory certain specified sums of money collected by her after the death of her intestate on choses in action which belonged to him.
i. That at the time of his death the life of the intestate was insured by policies aggregating $12,000, the premiums on all of which the intestate had paid, all of which policies were payable to the said Ella H. Patty as beneficiary thereof, and that on said policies there had been paid to her the sum of $11,999, of which sum $10,000, and no more, was exempt by law from the claims of creditors of said intestate. But said Ella H. Patty, claiming the whole sum realized from said policies as her individual money, had failed and refused to account for any part thereof as administratrix of said estate.
This bill was filed in October, 1893. In September, 1893, the administratrix had reported the estate as insolvent, and at the October term of the court it was declared insolvent. The
By the decree it is found that the administratrix bad, before the institution of this suit, and in the course of administration, been directed and required to account for the property and money named in the second and third assigned breaches of her bond in this cause, and had failed' and refused so to do, but had wasted and misappropriated said property and money, by reason of which her bond had become forfeited; that the insurance money referred to in the bill was not assets of the, estate, and therefore the complainants were not entitled to any relief touching that fund. The court further decreed that the recovery decreed against the administratrix and the sureties on her bond, should inure to the benefit of all creditors of the estate equally, and denied to complainants the right to priority of satisfaction of their demands.
The defendants do not appeal or assign error, nor do the complainants "assign for error any other action of the court below than, first, in ruling that the proceeds of the insurance policies were not assets of the estate; second, in denying to complainants priority of satisfaction out of the recovery on the bond.
Of the policies of insurance upon the life of the intestate, two were in benevolent secret societies, one in the Knights of Pythias for $8,000, and one in the Knights of Honor for $2,000. Under the charters and by-laws of these societies it is provided that the proceeds of policies issued by them shall not be subject to the claims of the creditors of the assured. The chancellor was of opinion that this limitation was effectual to exclude the creditors from résorting to the proceeds of the policies, and since excluding the sum of these policies — $5,000—there remained only $7,000 of insurance, while the statute (code, § 1964) exempts $10,000 of insurance, there was no part of the fund liable to the creditors of the assured.
We have reached the same conclusion as the chancellor in
But the bill in this cause is not framed for the purpose of subjecting the money the intestate illegally invested in the purchase of the policies. There is no averment that Patty was insolvent when the premiums were paid, nor does it appear when they were paid, nor in what amounts, nor whether the complainants were then his creditors. _ The bill proceeds upon the postulate that, because the intestate paid the premiums, the policies were his property, and their proceeds assets of his estate. But it is well settled that a policy of insurance, payable to another than the insured or his legal representatives, is not a part of his estate. Bishop v. Curphey, 60 Miss., 22; Cables v. Prescott, 67 Me., 582; Simmons v. Biggs, 99 N. C., 236; Conigland v. Smith, 79 N. C., 303; 2 Woerner’s Law of Admin., 647; In re Van Dermoor, 42 Hun (N. Y.), 326.
2. The court did not err in holding that the recovery upon the bond inured equally to the benefit of all creditors of the intestate.
Appellants invoke the decision in Burruss v. Fisher, 23 Miss., 228, in support of their contention that their claims should be preferred in the distribution of the sum recovered in this proceeding upon the bond of the administratrix. The decision in that case is supposed by counsel to be of controlling effect in the present one, and, while appellant’s counsel rely on it, we
The estate here is insolvent, and its assets have been wasted by the administratrix. If the complainants are permitted to apply the recovery on the bond to the payment of their demands, other creditors equally entitled to the security of the bond will be left without remedy, and this is what the statute is designed to prevent.
The decree is affirmed.
Suggestion of error overruled.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- W. M. Jones v. Ella H. Patty, Admr.
- Cited By
- 6 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Life Insurance. Proceeds belong to beneficiary. Exemption. Code 1893, l 1964; code 1880, \\ 1361. The proceeds of life insurance policies payable at death to the wife of the insured are not, upon his death, assets of his estate, but belong to the wife, and she and the sureties on her bond as administratrix of his estate are not liable as for a devastavit by reason of her having appropriated the whole amount, which included the sum of $3,000 in excess of the $10,000 exempted by statute from liability for his debts. Code 1893, g 1964; code 1880, \\ 1361. 3. Same. Pleading. Insufficient amerments of bill. Case. Creditors of a decedent who proceed by bill in equity against his wife and the sureties on her bond as administratrix of his estate, seeking a recovery for a devastavit in respect to so much of the proceeds of policies of insurance on his life, payable to her at his death, as exceeds the $10,000 exempted by statute from liability for his debts, are entitled to no relief where the bill does not seek to subject the avails of the insurance for money illegally invested in the policies by the decedent, but proceeds on the theory that, because he paid the premiums, the policies were his, and their avails assets of his estate, and fails to alleg-e that he was insolvent when the premiums were paid, or when and in what amounts they were paid, or that the complainants were then his creditors. 3. Same. Benevolent orders. Contracts insuring members. Provisions therein for exemption of proceeds. The conclusion that creditors of the decedent were precluded from resorting to the proceeds of his life insurance because of the fact that $5,000 of the $13,000 received on account thereof by the wife was from benevolent orders, by whose charters and by-laws it is provided that the proceeds of their policies or certificates shall not be subject to the debts of the insured, is not involved in the decision herein, or conceded to be correct. 4. Administrator’s Bond. Insolvent estate. Rights of creditors. Recoveries on administrator’s bonds. Apportionment of proceeds. Code 1893, § 1854. Under g 1854, code 1893, providing for successive recoveries on administration bonds by all who may have been injured by the breach thereof until the whole penalty has been recovered, and, where the whole penalty has been recovered, for apportionment of the recovery according to the rights of the parties, the creditors of an insolvent estate, who recover in equity on a bill against the administratrix and the sureties on her bond for a devastavit, are not entitled to priority of satisfaction out of such recovery, although the same does not equal the whole penalty of the bond, but the recovery inures equally to all the creditors of the estate. 5. Same. Object and pm'pose of the statute. Code 1893, g 1854. The manifest purpose of \\ 1854, code 1893. is to provide that one or more creditors shall not exhaust the security afforded by the administrator’s bond to the exclusion of the demands of other creditors which are equally protected by the bond, but that the recovery on the bond, like the distribution of an insolvent estate, shall be made among all the creditors “according to their rights.”