DocketNumber: No. 36738.
Judges: Roberds
Filed Date: 4/12/1948
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/10/2024
The parties hereto are man and wife but have lived separate and apart for a number of years, appellee, the husband, contributing, under order of the chancery court, a monthly amount in aid of support of the wife, the appellant. Five insurance policies, of the face value of $6,800 in case of death, now exist, and for a number of years have existed, on the life of the husband, payable to the wife as beneficiary. She now has, and for several years has had, these policies in her possession, paying *Page 314 the premiums thereon. The assured has the right to change the beneficiary. The husband instituted this action of replevin in the county court to recover from the wife the possession of these policies. She filed the usual plea of not guilty and a special motion challenging the jurisdiction of the county court. The county judge held he had no jurisdiction. The circuit judge, on appeal to that court, reversed the judgment and awarded possession of the policies to the husband. The case, therefore, involves the jurisdiction of the county court and the right of the wife to retain possession of the policies by virtue of being the beneficiary therein and of having paid the premiums thereon. We have concluded the county court had no jurisdiction, and therefore do not decide what right, if any, the wife has to retain possession of the policies, or what interest, legal or equitable, she has in such policies or the proceeds thereof, nor whether, if she has a right or an interest, it can be asserted in this replevin action.
On the question of jurisdiction, the affidavit for writ of replevin gives the value of each policy at $20. The basis for that valuation is not shown. However, the policies themselves were introduced in evidence and are before us. They disclose the cash surrender value, at the time of the trial, to have been more than $2,100 and paid-up insurance greater than $4,350. One policy had a loan against it of $600, so that both the paid-up insurance and the cash surrender value of the policies greatly exceeded one thousand dollars, which is the limit of the jurisdiction of the county court in civil actions under Section 1604, Code of 1942. It is not contended that, if the insured had possession of the policies, he could not immediately surrender them and receive in cash some $2,200, less the existing loan of $600. Therefore, the immediate cash value of the policies to the insured is much greater than the jurisdiction of the county court.
Section 2841, Code of 1942, requires the affidavit for writ of replevin to describe the property and state "the *Page 315
value thereof, giving the value of each separate article." The value of the property involved is the test of jurisdiction in actions in replevin. Biddle v. Paine,
Reversed and case dismissed for lack of jurisdiction.