Any person of lawful age may on his own
initiative procure or effect a contract of
insurance upon his own person for the benefit
of any person, firm, association or
corporation. Nothing herein shall be deemed
to prohibit the immediate transfer or
assignment of a contract so procured or
effectuated.
[A]n assignment of a life insurance policy,
when not made by the insured in bad faith and
with the intention that the assignment is to
be used as a mere cover for a wager policy,
is not against public policy and is
sanctioned. . . . It is undoubtedly true
that, if the policy was taken out by the
parties with a view to its immediate
assignment, the transaction would be nothing
more than a mere subterfuge to avoid the
well-settled rule that a party cannot procure
insurance upon the life of one in whom he has
no insurable interest. The authorities do
not conflict upon this point. But obviously
the question whether the insured lent himself
to one without an insurable interest in his
life as a cloak to a gambling transaction
(Grigsby v. Russell, supra) is not a question
of law, but rather is a question of fact.
Lead Trust Disclaimer - No Charitable Deduction
Supreme Court -- 2% Floor on Trust Fees Upheld
Substantiation For Combined Federal Campaign Gifts