Sulz v. Mutual Reserve Fund Life Ass'n
Sulz v. Mutual Reserve Fund Life Ass'n
Opinion of the Court
This is an appeal by the defendant from a judgment in favor of the plaintiff for the amount of a certain policy of insurance for $3,000 issued by the defendant, an insurance company organized under chapter 175 of the Laws of 1883. The policy of insurance or certificate of membership, as it is sometimes called, was issued by the defendant association January 20, 1891, to Charles H. Sulz, payable to his “legal representatives,” at the home office of the company, in the city of New York, within ninety days, after satisfactory evidence of the death of the insured party. The application for membership aud for a policy of insurance in the corporation defendant was made by the insured, Charles H. Sulz, in December, 1890. In such application, in answer to the requirement to state the name of the beneficiary in full, he answered “ my estate.” Mr. Sulz, at the time of the issuing of the policy to him (Jan. 20, 1891), was at San Francisco in California, and, upon its receipt, he sent it to his wife at their residence in the city of Brooklyn, to which city he soon returned, and it remained in the possession of the wife for about six months, when, on the removal of the family (the husband and wife) from one house to another iu the city of Brooklyn, the wife packed it in a trunk, which was taken by the deceased when he started on
We will assume that the letters of administration granted to the plaintiff by the surrogate of Kings county are conclusive in regard to the status of the plaintiff as being the administratrix duly appointed upon the estate of her deceased husband, and the only question remaining is whether as such administratrix and upon the facts in this case she can maintain this action. We are of the opinion that the courts of this st.ate ought not to take jurisdiction of this action. The defendant issued what it terms in the blank application provided by it a “ certificate of membership or policy of insurance,” by which certificate or policy it insured the
The case of Holyoke v. Union Mutual Life Ins. Co., 22 Hun, 75, is cited by defendant and is somewhat in point. In that case the plaintiff, as executrix of George E. Holyoke, brought an action in this state against the insurance company (a Hew York corporation) for the purpose of recovering the amount of a paid-up policy issued upon the life of one Alfred S. Perkins, a resident of the state of Maine, and by him assigned to Holyoke. The plaintiff’s testator died in Brooklyn, N. Y., May 7, 1875, where he had continuously resided for sixteen years prior to his death and he left a will by which he bequeathed and devised his whole property to his wife, the plaintiff, which will was duly admitted to probate in Kings county, and on June 8, 1875, letters of administration were issued to the plaintiff. After the death of Mr. Holyoke the assignment was found among his effects at his office in the city of Hew York and was delivered to the plaintiff, and had been in her possession up to the commencement of the action. On October 8, 1378, Alfred S. Perkins, the insured person, died and the plaintiff immediately gave proper proofs of his death and otherwise duly performed all the conditions required of her by the policy and demanded its payment. The defense interposed was that the assignment in question was a collateral assignment only to secure Perkins’ indebtedness to Holyoke and that the amount due the latter had been paid and that letters of administration with the will annexed upon the estate of Holyoke had been issued to one Percival Bonney by the probate court of Cumberland county, Maine, and that the policy of insurance was in the state of Maine at the time of Holyoke’s death, and had been by Bonney assigned to and was then held and owned by another person residing in the state of Maine. The court held that at the time of the death of George
The case of Morrison, Public Administrator, v. Mutual Life Ins. Co., 57 Hun, 97; 32 St. Rep. 846, is something like the Holyoke case, and it was held by the general term, first department, that the administrator in Hew York could not enforce the payment of a policy of insurance issued by a company incorporated in this state to a resident of the state of Maine, where the policy had never thereafter been within the state of Hew York, even though the principal office of the company was in the city of Hew York. It was stated that the policy in question not having been in the state could not under the principle of the Holyoke case form any part of
The facts in the case of New England Life Insurance Company v. Woodworth,- cited supra, are as follows : The husband of the insured commenced an action against the insurance company in the state of Illinois, although the party insured (his wife) died in the state of New York, and the insurance company was organized under the laws of the state of Massachusetts, and it was only after the death of the wife that the husband came into Illinois having the insurance policy in his possession. The United States supreme court held that a company may be regarded as present in and an inhabitant of the state where it has an agent upon whom, pursuant to the laws of that state, process may be served, and that an administrator is duly appointed in such state when the policy is brought within the state prior to such appointment, although the person insured died outside the limits of the state and not a citizen thereof. As the company is to be regarded as an inhabitant of the state where its agent is thus served with process, the court held that the principle that a simple contract debt followed the person of the debtor was not invaded, because the debtor was present in the state of Illinois when the suit was commenced by the husband as his wife’s administrator, being at the same time the beneficiary under the policy. Under such facts the policy was assets in the state where it was when the administrator was appointed.
In this case the fact is the same; that is, the state of Washington had enacted a law providingfor the designation of an agent by a foreign company, upon whom process could be served for it, and the company had duly appointed such an agent, and process was properly served upon him in the. action by the Washington administrator upon the insurance policy in question.
Within the above case in the federal court the person of the debtor in this case was within the state of Washington, and the debt could be collected there as well as here. It is a case, therefore, of a concurrent jurisdiction, so far as the general facts go, and in such case the situs of the policy, the death of the insured in Washington and the issuing of letters of administration in that state and the prior commencement of the Washington action are material facts. In this case we do not assert that the courts of this state might not have had jurisdiction to entertain this action, even though the policy were in the state of Washington, provided the courts of that state had not appointed an administrator, and the administrator thus appointed had not commenced an action on the policy prior to tire action in this state. On the contrary, we are inclined to the opinion that jurisdiction of this action would in such event be entertained by the courts here. But in the case of administrators duly appointed in each state, when the foreign administrator first duly commences an action by the service of process upon an agent of the company to recover on the policy, and the policy is found in the foreign state at the death of the assured in that state, we think the courts of the for
It a: claimed, however, that the plaintiff might recover in this action under another aspect and in her own right, irrespective of her character of administratrix. It is said that the policy is by its terms payable to the legal representatives of the insured. Attention is then called to the by-laws of the defendant, which state its object to be “to promote the well-being of ail its members and to furnish substantial aid to their families or assigns in the event of a member’s death.” This, it is said, means the immediate families, or, in other words, the dependents of the members, and not remote relatives and immediate relatives and dependents indiscriminately, and that this provision, coupled with the proof of the dependence of the plaintiff upon her husband and that they had no children, makes the true construction of the policy to be that the amount due upon it belongs not to the general estate of the deceased, but to his widow. Griswold v. Sawyer, 125 N. Y. 411; 35 St. Rep. 396; Bishop v. Grand Lodge, 112 N. Y. ; 627, 636 ;21 St. Rep. 811. We do not think that this argument should prevail. Giving due consideration to the by-laws above quoted, the words “legal representatives” must still have their ordinary meaning. The by-law provides not only for the well-being of its members and for the furnishing of substantial aid to their families, but -it adds the words “or assigns,” showing that the company is not restricted in its objects to the immediate families of its members, but the members are themselves at liberty to designate another than a member of their family as the beneficiary. As the members are not in any way restricted in the naming of a beneficiary by any by-law of the company or by its constitution, if there is any beneficiary named in the certificate or policy itself, that person is the one to whom the money shall be distributed. In the case at bar the insured named his estate in his application for insurance as the beneficiary thereof, and in the policy itself the words used are “legal representatives.” We see nothing in the mere fact that the insured was married and had no children to vary the ordinary significance of the words “legal representatives” when used in a policy of insurance. As was said in Griswold v. Sawyer (supra), the words “legal representatives” mean ordinarily executors or administrators, and that meaning will be attributed to them in any instance unless there be facts existing which show that the words were not used in their ordinary sense, but to denote some other and different idea. The facts in this case are not sufficient to change the ordinary meaning of this language, and wre, therefore, must attribute to the insured an intention in conformity to the ordinary meaning given to those words. We chink that such.meaning is strengthened if resort be had to the written application herein, because there the insured designates the beneficiary
In Bishop v. Grand Lodge, 112 N. Y. 627 at 636 ; 21 St. Rep. 816, we simply held that in the absence of any certificate designating the beneficiary where no policy or certificate had been issued, that there was enough in the constitution and by-laws of that company defendant to enable the court to say that the parties entitled to the moneys arising from the insurance were those to whom the estate of the deceased would pass as in case of intestacy and that the administratrix had sufficient interest in the fund to sustain the action in her capacity as such and that the money while subject to distribution as in case of intestacy, yet still would be a special fund subject to the exemption provided for m the act of incorporation and would not be liable for the payment of the debts of the decedent or to be taken on any process in'the payment of such debts. We did not hold in that case that where an administratrix had been appointed, those who were the next of kin could themselves maintain an action for the recovery of the money due under the policy or certificate of membership, nor did we hold that the administratrix could herself maintain the action in any other character. We cannot, therefore, see any way by which, the plaintiff ought to bo permitted to maintain her action
The judgment in this action ought not to stand, and it must, therefore, be reversed, and, as' the plaintiff cannot in any event succeed upon a new trial, her complaint should be dismissed, with costs oat of the estate.
All concur, except O’Brien, J., not sitting.
Judgment accordingly.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Dina Sulz, as Administratrix, etc., Resp't v. Mutual Reserve Fund Life Association, App'lt
- Status
- Published