Person C. Cheney in the year 1883 toot out a policy of insurance upon his own life in the defendant company payable to “ Sarah W. and Agnes A. Cheney wife and child of the said Person C. Cheney or if they are not living to the executors, administrators, or assigns of the said Person C. Cheney.” Sarah W. the wife died on April 4,1901, testate, and the plaintiff Agnes A. is executrix of her will and sole legatee under the same. The insured died on June 19,1901, indebted to the defendant upon certain promissory notes unconnected with the con*359tract of insurance. The defendant has paid the daughter one half the amount insured by the policy and has applied the other half to the reduction of the debt due to the company from the insured, upon the theory that the wife’s half of the insurance, by her decease became, by the terms of the policy, payable at the death of the insured to his personal representatives, and so could be set off by the insurer against the debt due to it from the insured. ,
The case was heard below upon an agreed statement of facts and comes here after a judgment for the plaintiff and an appeal, and it is agreed that the plaintiff is entitled to recover unless the defendant has the right to set off its demand against the estate of the insured.
If by the true construction of the policy any part of the insurance was in fact payable to the executors or administrators of the insured in consequence of the death of his wife before his decease the defendant is entitled to the set-off.
In some jurisdictions a policy to the wife and child or children of the insured or to his children is held to give to the beneficiaries a joint interest with right of survivorship. In re Seyton, 34 Ch. D. 511. Robinson v. Duvall, 79 Ky. 83. Farr v. Ancient Order of United Workmen, 83 Wis. 446. The general intention of the insured to provide for his family by means of the insurance makes in favor of such a construction. But there also are decisions that under such a policy the right of each beneficiary is not joint, but an interest in common which becomes vested and transmissible upon the issuance of the policy. Small v. Jose, 86 Maine, 120. Smith v. Ætna Ins. Co. 68 N. H. 405. Simmons v. Biggs, 99 N. C. 236. Andrus v. Fidelity Ins. Association, 168 Mo. 151.
It is not necessary in the present Case to decide whether the beneficiaries in such a policy take a joint interest with the incident of survivorship. The wife and child took vested interests whether several or joint. Small v. Jose, 86 Maine, 120. Smith v. Ætna Ins. Co. 68 N. H. 405. United States Casualty Co. v. Kacer, 169 Mo. 301, 315. Walsh v. Mutual Ins. Co. 133 N. Y. 408. If there had been no second designation of a beneficiary, the interest of the wife under R. L. c. 118, § 73, and the corresponding provisions of earlier statutes, would be in the daughter *360either by force of the will of Sarah W. Cheney or by operation of the statute. The crucial question is whether the interest which vested in Sarah W. upon the issuing of the policy was by its terms divested by her death. It is the whole amount of insurance which by the terms of the policy is to be payable to the executors, administrators or assigns of the insured, in a certain contingency, and not one half of it in each of two contingencies. The contingency is that “ they ” Sarah W. and Agnes A. are not living. That contingency has not occurred.
In neither the application nor the policy is it said in terms that if one of the two beneficiaries named in the first designation is not living one half of the insurance is to be payable to the executors or administrators of the insured. Such a term can be read into the contract only by some implication, and any such implication would be contrary to the intention of a husband and father, who was attempting by means of an insurance upon his own life to provide for his family in case of his death. In our opinion the second designation was intended to be operative only in case both the wife and the child were not living at the death of the insured.
The defendant relies on the case of Andrus v. Fidelity Ins. Association, 168 Mo. 151, 167. In that case the principal contention on the part of the defendant was that the insurance had been forfeited by breaches of the conditions of the policy, and the question as to which of the beneficiaries should take was not of the greatest importance. The decision contains no discussion of that question, saying upon the point merely that the beneficial interests of the mother and the son were several and that as they were several the interest of the mother passed at her death to the legal representative of the assured. It does not appear whether this was by force of some statute of distribution governing the estate of a deceased married woman, or under the terms ok the policy. If the latter, we do not agree with the decision.
Judgment for the plaintiff affirmed.