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Col. C. Castro v.

Insurance Commissioner -
Insurable Interest

GR. 55836, Feb. 16, 1981


Facts:

> Castro applied for insurance on the life of his driver. On the basis of such application, Insular Life
issued policy No. 934943 effective July 18, 1979.

> The policy applied for and issued was on a 20-yr endowment plan for the sum of P25T with double
indemnity in case of accidental death.

> Castro paid the first quarterly premium of P309.95. About 3 months later, on Oct. 16, 1959, the
insured driver was allegedly shot to death by unknown persons. (hmmm sounds fishy)

> Castro then filed a claim for the total benefits of 50T under the policy.

> Insular life denied the claim on the ground that the policy was VOID. Insular instead refunded to
Castro the premiums he had paid.

Issue:

Whether or not Castro has an insurable interest in his driver.

Held:

NO.

The requirement of insurable interest to support a contract of insurance is based upon consideration
of public policy which renders wager policies INVALID. To sustain a contract of this character it
must appear that there is a real concern in the life of the party whose death would be the cause of
substantial loss to those who are named as a beneficiary.

Mere relationship of uncle and nephew, employer and employee is NOT sufficient to provide an
insurable interest on the life of the insured. It must be shown that the destruction of the life of the
insured would cause pecuniary loss to the complainant. This, Castro failed to prove.

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