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September, 2006 Technical Newsletter
Provided by Leimberg Information Services
See
other issues.
Insurer Acts to Rescind Free
Life Insurance
We've long
predicted that so-called "Free" Life Insurance
(also called stranger-owned life insurance,
SOLI/ STOLI , Investor Initiated Life
Insurance (IILI), or speculator initiated life
insurance, SPIN) and sold in both recourse and
nonrecourse versions would be problematic.
(See Estate Planning Newsletters # 1007 , 914
, and 670). You can listen to my point of view
in a special LISI PodCast entitled "Investor
Initiated Life Insurance - Free Lunch or Acid
Indigestion?" (Scroll down to it).
Congress is already doing a study on the
charitable version of free insurance and has bipartisan legislation in the
hopper that would impose a 100% excise tax on such transactions. (See Estate
Planning Newsletter # 818).
LISI has just received the first of what we
predict will be many signs of adverse reactions by insurers, regulators, and
courts.
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY:
A major insurer, New York Life and Annuity
Corporation, has served notice to the trustee of a trust holding life insurance
that it intends to rescind a $1,000,000 policy on its insured's life.
FACTS:
The complaint, dated July 5, 2006, alleges that
the policy was issued by the insurer in the belief that the trust was created at
the insured's behest for the exclusive benefit of a person or persons having a
familial or economic interest in the preservation of the insured's life.
It further alleges that it has since come to the
attention of the insurer that it was instead created at the behest of an
investor or investors who have no such familial or economic interest in the
insured's continued life and that those non related investors are the
beneficiaries and premium payors.
This, the insurer alleges, violates New York
State's insurable interest law # 3205 – and is therefore voidable.
Because the insurer has no remedy "at law", it is
electing to rescind the policy and return premiums (plus interest).
The insurer has stated that it considers it has
no further liability under the contract.
It has asked for reimbursement of any costs
associated with the recession – as well as any other relief the court thinks
"just and equitable."
COMMENT:
Now the insured has no coverage, is older,
perhaps in worse health.
And what if the documents the insured signed
required certain representations and warranties which the investor group now
claims the insured has breeched?
The ugliness has begun – and there's a lot of it
out there. And more than a little is sure to hit the proverbial fan!
Stay tuned to LISI!
HOPE THIS HELPS YOU HELP OTHERS MAKE A POSITIVE
DIFFERENCE!
Steve Leimberg
CITE AS:
Steve Leimberg's Estate Planning Newsletter #
1013 (August 30, 2006) at http://www.leimbergservices.com Copyright 2006
Leimberg Information Services, Inc. (LISI). Reproduction in Any Form or
Forwarding to Any Person Prohibited – Without Express Permission!
CITES:
The rescission notice was served to Pinchus
Menche as Trustee of the Deutsch Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust. The suit will
take place in the Supreme Court of New York, County of New York.
You'll find more in LISI Estate Planning
Newsletters 619, 671, and 676 , in Wendy Davis's "Death-Pool Donations" in the
May 2004 issue of Trusts & Estates, Leimberg, Gibbons, and Nelson, TOLI, COLI,
BOLI, and Insurable Interests, Estate Planning Magazine, Vol. 28, No. 1, July
2001, Pg. 333; Leimberg, "Stranger-Owned Life Insurance (SOLI): Killing the
Goose that Lays Golden Eggs", Estate Planning, January 2005, Vol. 32, No. 1, Pg.
43; Leimberg, "Stranger-Owned Life Insurance (SOLI): Killing the Goose that Lays
Golden Eggs", Tax Analysts/The Insurance Tax Review, Vol. 28, No. 5, May 2005;
Jones, Leimberg, and Rybka, "'Free' Life Insurance: Risks and Costs of
Non-Recourse Premium Financing, Estate Planning Journal, Vol. 33, No. 7, July
2006, Pg. 3.
Your local EPC may have already purchased a
Leimberg membership on your behalf.
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