The plaintiff in error, as beneficiary, sued the defendant on two policies of insurance, for $7,000 and $3,000, respectively, issued on the life of her husband.
The premiums due for the year 1910 were not paid, and the insured failed to exercise within the time limit any of the options provided in such event, and the policies consequently lapsed. Several months later, however, without any new examination, the policies were reinstated and the premiums receipted for. The premiums were not paid in cash, but in two separate certificates executed by the insured, in each of which he acknowledged a loan and stipulated a lien on the respective policies to cover same. The amount borrowed on the $3,000 policy was just sufficient to pay the premium due. The amount borrowed on the $7,000 policy was sufficient to pay the premium due on the policy and that d.ue on another policy not involved in this litigation.
The following year the insured paid neither the loans nor the new
She denies the right of the insured to assign or incumber with any lien the policies without her consent, she being the beneficiary, claiming: a vested right, and she. contends that, when the policies lapsed in 1910 and the insured failed to exercise any of the options granted him under the terms of the policies, she automatically acquired such paid-up term insurance.
[1, 2] These contentions might have been sound, had the policies been ordinary life contracts; but it was plainly stated in the policies that the insured reserved the right to change the beneficiary. Thus, as was held by this court in the case of Malone v. Cohn, 236 Fed. 882, 150 C. C. A. 144, the beneficiary acquired only a contingent interest, subject to be extinguished at any time by the insured.
While admitting the right of the insured to change at will the beneficiary, she denies his right to create a lien on the policies without her consent. It would seem that the greater right included the lesser. If the insured could have changed the beneficiary to another person, or even to his own estate, he could have assigned or incumbered the policies to secure a loan. An assignment, in fact, to secure a debt greater than the face of the policies, would have been, in effect, a change in the beneficiary, which the policies specifically give the insured the right to make. The beneficiary could not complain if her rights had been entirely blotted out by such an assignment, and she should not be heard to complain when her rights are only partially affected by the act of the insured. Certainly she had little cause to complain when the very purpose of the loans was to prevent the lapsing of the policies, and thus preserve her rights, and the case is not affected by the remarkable circumstance that the policies would have been in force under the automatic term extension insurance clause of the contracts at the time of her husband’s death, had he not borrowed the money to pay the premiums and prevented their lapse in 1910.
The cash surrender value of the policies at the time of the default in payment of the premiums in 1910, or at the time of the second default in 1911, could have been claimed by the creditors of the insured, had he then been in bankruptcy. Malone v. Cohn, 236 Fed. 882, 150 C. C. A. 144; In re Bonvillain (D. C.) 232 Fed. 370; Bonvillain v.
The insured at all times prior to his death had complete domination and control of the policies by reason of his reserved right at any time to change the beneficiary. As was well said by the Court of Appeals. Sixth Circuit, in the case of Mutual Ben. Life Ins. Co. v. Swett, 222 Fed. 204, 137 C. C. A. 644, Ann. Cas. 1917B, 298:
“As the policy to Swett stipulated that he might, on Ms written request of the company for its appropriate indorsement on the policy, change the heneiiciary, his wife did not acquiie a permanent, or vested interest in it. TOo existence of such an interese during her husband’s lifetime was made impossible by the control over ihe contract of insurance given to him, independent of her will. Her right was inchoate, a mere expectancy during his lifetime. dependent on the will and pleasure of her husband as holder of the policy, and could not vest umil his dealb happened with the policy unchanged. Hiss control over ihe policy was. subject to Us items, as complete as if he himself had been the beneficiary.”
The insured clearly might have changed the beneficiary to himself, or to his estate, without the consent of, or even notice to, the beneficiary, and might then have made the assignment, or granted the lien to file company, and thereafter reinstated his wife as beneficiary. Had he gone through this circumlocution, her interest would undoubtedly thereby have been made subject to the assignment. What he might have done by indirection and circumlocution, he had the right to do by direct action.
The judgment is affirmed, with costs.