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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Schumann v. Scottish Widows' Fund [1886] ScotLR 23_474 (5 March 1886) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1886/23SLR0474.html Cite as: [1886] ScotLR 23_474, [1886] SLR 23_474 |
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Page: 474↓
Held that a policy of assurance effected by a husband on his own life for the separate use of his wife, under section 2 of the Married Women's Policies of Assurance (Scotland) Act 1880, was capable of being surrendered during the joint lives of the spouses.
Marcus Schumann, domiciled in Hamburg, obtained on 12th August 1882, from the Scottish Widows’ Fund and Life Assurance Society, a policy of assurance on his life for £1000, for the benefit of his wife Mrs Clara Leon or Schumann, which bore to be in pursuance of the Married Women's Policies of Assurance (Scotland) Act 1880 (43 and 44 Vict. cap. 26).
The policy proceeded on the narrative that Mr Schumann desired to effect an assurance on his own life for the benefit of his wife, for her separate use in pursuance of the said statute, and
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bore that in consideration of a single payment of £570, 13s. 4d. he had been duly admitted a member of the society, and that “he and his legal representatives, as trustee or trustees in terms of said Act for his said wife, for her separate use, and in the event of her predeceasing the said Marcus Schumann, he, his heirs, executors, or assignees shall be entitled to receive out of the funds thereof, at the end of three months after the decease of the said Marcus Schumann, the sum of One thousand pounds sterling.” The policy also contained a clause which provided “that the Society shall have no concern, directly or indirectly, with the purposes or conditions of any trust under which this policy may at any time be held, whether by the terms of the policy itself or by the terms of any assignment or conveyance thereof; but that in all dealings with the society the act and deed of the party or parties in whom the said policy shall be vested for the time shall be good, valid, and effectual to the society, without reference to any such purpose or conditions, or to any obligations to third parties to which the holders may be liable. “ By the Married Women's Policies of Assurance (Scotland) Act 1880 (43 and 44 Vict. cap. 26) it is provided—“Sec. 1. A married woman may effect a policy of aasurance on her own life or on the life of her husband for her separate use, and the same and all benefit thereof, if expressed to be for her separate use, shall, immediately on being so effected, vest in her, and shall be payable to her, and her heirs, executors, and assignees, excluding the jus mariti and right of administration of her husband, and shall be assignable by her either inter vivos or mortis causa without consent of her husband, and the contract in such policy shall be as valid and effectual as if made with an unmarried woman. Sec. 2. A policy of assurance effected by any married man on his own life, and expressed upon the face of it to be for the benefit of his wife, or of his children, or of his wife and children, shall, together with all benefit thereof, be deemed a trust for the benefit of his wife for her separate use, or for the benefit of his children, or for the benefit of his wife and children; and such policy, immediately on its being so effected, shall vest in him and his legal representatives in trust for the purpose or purposes so expressed, or in any trustee nominated in the policy, or appointed by separate writing duly intimated to the assurance office, but in trust always as aforesaid, and shall not otherwise be subject to his control, or form part of his estate, or be liable to the diligence of his creditors, or be revocable as a donation, or reducible on any ground of excess or insolvency: And the receipt of such trustee for the sums secured by the policy, or for the value thereof, in whole or in part, shall be a sufficient and effectual discharge to the assurance office: Provided always that if it shall be proved that the policy was effected and premiums thereon paid with intent to defraud creditors, or if the person upon whose life the policy is effected shall be made bankrupt within two years from the date of such policy, it shall be competent to the creditors to claim repayment of the premiums so paid from the trustee of the policy out of the proceeds thereof.”
This was a Special Case to which Mrs Schumann, and her husband as her administrator-in-law, and for his own right and interest, and also as trustee for his wife under the said policy of assurance, were the first parties; and the Scottish Widows’ Fund and Life Assurance Society were the second parties. It was stated in the Case that Mrs Schumann desired to surrender the said policy of assurance, and that her husband, as trustee thereunder, and for any other interest he might have, concurred; but that the second parties had doubts whether the policy could legally be surrendered by the first parties, and that they declined to pay over the surrender value to the first parties jointly, or either of them, on their receipt.
On all ordinary policies of the Society surrender values are allowed.
The questions of law were—“Are the second parties bound to accept a surrender by the first parties, or either of them, of the said policy of assurance? Or, Is the said policy incapable of being surrendered so long as the first parties are both alive?”
Argued for the first parties — The second parties were put to show not only (1) that the policy of assurance and the terms of the statute constituted a trust; but also (2) that the trust came within the rule of the law laid down in Menzies v. Murray, March 5, 1875, 2 R. 507. But it was not constituted by an antenuptial marriage-contract, and the Court had never before protected a beneficiary under a trust that was not antenuptial— Thornhill v. Macpherson, January 20, 1841, 3 D 394, per Lord Jeffrey at p. 401. The series of cases beginning with Young Anderson v. Buchanan, June 2, 1837, 15 S. 1073, upon which the case of Menzies was decided, proceeded on the peculiar nature of an antenuptial marriage-contract. The principle which led to those decisions was inapplicable here— Smitton v. Tod, December 12, 1839. The words in section 2 of the Act “in whole or in part” must refer to surrender, and the receipt of the trustee was to be a sufficient discharge to the society. It was part of the agreement that Schumann would, after surrender, still be trustee for his wife as regarded the surrender value. Even supposing it would be a breach of trust on his part to surrender, the Court was not put to consider that. The Court would only take cognisance of a trust in a question between truster and trustee or truster and beneficiary, not in a question between the truster and the party with whom the contract was made. The wife was here consenting— Standard Property Investment Company v. Lowe, March 20, 1877, 4 R. 695. Besides, the Court was not concerned with the trusts of domiciled foreigners. The state of the law before the Married Women's Policies of Assurance Act was that if a husband effected a policy on his own life, payable to his wife, that would have been good as a provision— Craig v. Galloway, July 17, 1861, 4 Macq. 267; Muirhead v. Muirhead's Factor, December 6, 1867, 6 Macph. 95; Pringle's Trustees v. Hamilton, March 15, 1872, 18 Macph. 621; Wight v. Brown, January 27, 1849, 11 D. 460; Smith v. Kerr and Others, June 5, 1869, 7 Macph. 863; Thomson's Trustees v. Thomson, July 9, 1879, 6 R. 1227. The objects of secs. 1 and 2 of the Act was to enable married persons not only to make provisions but to establish a fund of credit. On the construction of the corresponding English Act (33 and 34 Vict. cap.
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93). They referred to Thicknesse on Husband and Wife, 286. Argued for the second parties—It was conceded that after the death of the wife there would be no objection to a surrender; the trust would fly off. But stante matrimonio the trust subsisted and could not be destroyed. The contemplation of the policy was that it should continue until the death of the husband. This was not an ordinary trust, but was a provision to the wife (1) to take effect after the husband's death; which was (2) fenced by a trust; and (3) in its nature irrevocable. To such a case the principle of Menzies, supra cit., applied, and this was to be distinguished from such cases as the Standard Property Investment Company, supra cit.; Ramsay v. Ramsay's Trustees, Nov. 24, 1871, 10 Macph, 120; and Newlands v. Miller, July 14, 1882, 9 R. 1104. It was not of the essence of the decision in Menzies' case that the contract should be antenuptial. Here there was a provision which was by statute as effectual as if it was contained in an antenuptial marriage-contract, because by the statute creditors were excluded and the provision was made irrevocable.
At advising—
The proposal now on the part of Mrs Schumann and her husband is to surrender this policy at the surrender value, and the Insurance Society object to receive that surrender, being doubtful whether they are entitled to do so. And accordingly the parties have presented this Special Case for the purpose of obtaining an answer to these two questions:—“Are the second parties bound to accept a surrender by the first parties, or either of them, of the said policy of assurance? Or is the said policy incapable of being surrendered so long as the first parties are both alive?” Now, under ordinary circumstances of course there could be nothing to prevent the party who effected an insurance from surrendering it, or the party for whose benefit it was made from surrendering it at any time. And therefore the difficulty of the Insurance Society must of course arise entirely from the terms of the statute referred to, the 43d and 44th of Vict. c. 26. There are two sections in that statute, by the first of which married women may effect policies of insurance themselves for their own separate use, and it has not been suggested that there would be any difficulty at all in the case of a married woman with her own funds purchasing a policy as this has been purchased, or effecting a policy and paying the annual premiums out of her own funds, surrendering that policy at any time whatever. There is nothing in that first section to suggest the slightest difficulty in that respect. But this policy was effected under the 2d section of the statute, and it provides that “a policy of assurance effected by any married man on his own life, and expressed upon the face of it to be for the benefit of his wife, or of his children, or of his wife and children, shall, together with all benefit thereof, be deemed a trust for the benefit of his wife for her separate use, or for the benefit of his children, or for the benefit of his wife and children.” Now, so far it appears to me that the language of the statute suggests no difficulty about the surrender of a policy so effected, because it gives the beneficial interest in the policy entirely to the wife. In the case of the policy being effected for the wife's behoof, it is to be a trust for her benefit, for her separate use, which I understand to mean that it becomes beneficially her property, and at her disposal. But then the enactment proceeds further:—“And such policy, immediately on its being so effected, shall vest in him and his legal representatives in trust for the purpose or purposes so expressed, or in any trustee nominated in the policy, or appointed by separate writing duly intimated to the assurance office.” Now, the creation of this trust no doubt is an essential part of the enactment, but the trust is not necessarily to be in the husband. He is selected in the first place as being the most natural trustee for his wife, and failing him his legal representative may be made the trustee; or a trustee may be nominated in the policy itself—that trustee of course would be nominated by the husband who effects the policy; or a trustee may be appointed by a separate writing duly intimated to the insurance office. In short, the personality of the trustee has nothing to do with the purposes of the statute or with the object in view. It is a mere convenient arrangement, Then the clause proceeds further, that this trust is to be a trust as aforesaid, that is to say, for the separate use of the wife, “and shall not otherwise be subject to his (the husband's) control, or form part of his estate, or be liable to the diligence of his creditors, or be revocable as a donation, or reducible on any ground of excess or insolvency.” Now, that again shows how completely the husband is excluded from all beneficial interest in the policy, and that it is devoted exclusively to the benefit of the wife. But further it is provided that “the receipt of such trustee for the sums secured by the policy, or for the value thereof, in whole or in part, shall be a sufficient and effectual discharge to the assurance office.” I shall have a word to say immediately upon the effect of that provision on the question immediately before us, but in the meantime I observe that there is a proviso at the end of this section that if the husband who has effected this policy shall become bankrupt within two years, then it shall be competent to his creditors to claim repayment of the premiums so paid out of the proceeds of the policy. Now, the question comes to be, whether there is anything in this clause to suggest that this policy, unlike any other effected at common law, and not under the provisions of this statute, is incapable of being surrendered? It seems to me, on the contrary, that everything contained in this section points to the opposite conclusion. I do not repeat what I have said already about the interest in the policy belonging exclusively to the wife for her separate use; but it is most important to observe that that provision that the receipt of the trustee for the sums secured by the policy, or for the value thereof, in whole or
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The Court found and declared that the second parties were bound to accept a surrender of the policy of assurance by the first parties, and that the policy was not incapable of being surrendered during the joint lives of the parties.
Counsel for the First Parties— Graham Murray— Dundas. Agents— Graham, Johnston, & Fleming, W.S.
Counsel for the Second Parties— D.-F. Mackintosh— Jameson. Agents— John Clerk Brodie & Sons, W.S.