Allen v. Cunningham

143 Tenn. 11
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 143 Tenn. 11 (Allen v. Cunningham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. Cunningham, 143 Tenn. 11 (Tenn. 1919).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hall

delivered the opinion of the Conrt.

This is a contest between the complainants and the defendant Joseph H. Cunningham as to who is entitled to the proceeds of a certain benefit certificate issued by the defendant United Order of the Golden Cross of the World (a mutual benefit society) on the life of Mrs. Sarah J: Allen for the sum of $4,000.

Mrs. Allen died a resident of the city of Nashville, Dla-vidson county, Tenn., leaving as her only surviving children and heirs at law the complainants, Ernest and Charles B. Allen. Soon after her death the complainant Ernest Allen qualified as the administrator of his mother’s estate, and filed the bill in this cause, both in his representative .and individual capacities, and in which bill his brother, Charles B., also joined as complainant.

It appears that, some time prior to the year 1890, Mrs. Allen secured a benefit certificate in the United Order of the Golden Cross of the World, of which she was a member in good standing, for the sum of $4,000. She had named in this certificate, as sole beneficiaries, her three children, the complainants, Ernest and Charles B. Allen, and her daughter, Allie L. Allen. The daughter married the defendant Joseph Hi Cunningham, in 1890. After the marriage of the daughter to the defendant Cunningham, Mrs. Allen became a member of the Cunningham family, continued to live with her daughter and son-in-law until the death of the daughter in September, 1915, after which time, it being her daughter’s wish that she do so, she continued as a member of [15]*15defendant’s family until her death, which occurred in December, 1916. Dfiring the time that Mrs. Allen lived in the home, of the defendant Cunningham, she was entirely cared for and supported by him, she being without means to support herself. It appears that the relations between the two were at all times cordial, pleasant, and affectionate, and they were apparently devoted to each other.

After the marriage of the defendant Cunningham to the insured’s daughter, for a short time, he paid one-half of the assessments due on the benefit certificate held by Mrs.. Allen, after which he began paying all of the .assessments ■ due on said certificate for Mrs. Allen, and .continued so to pay them up until her death, thus keeping the certifi-. cate in force. When he first began paying the monthly assessments, they were |3'.82, but thereafter, were.gradually .increased until they reached the sum of $24.35, and. thus remained for the last five or six years of her life. Mrs. Allen knew that defendant was paying these assessments on said certificate for her, and often expressed her appreciation for his kindness in doing so; she .being with- • out money to pay them.

After the death of-defendant’s wife in September, 1915, Mrs. Allen had the certificate, in which her daughter was named as beneficiary, canceled and a new. one issued, in which she had the defendant Cunningham named as the sole beneficiary, and this certificate was in fqr.ce at the time of her death, and the defendant Cunningham .paid the assessments on it up to the time o-f Mrs. Allen’s death, believing that the designation as to the beneficiary was [16]*16valid and sufficient to pass the benefit of said certificate to him upon the insured’s death.

The evidence shows that the consideration prompting Mrs. Allen to have said certificate made payable to defendant was that he had paid the assessments on it and had kept it in force since soon after his marriage to her daughter in 1890, and she wanted him reimbursed for the payments so made; the amount of the assessments paid by defendant between the date of his marriage to the insured’s daughter and the date of the daughter’s death was more than $3,000, and including those paid by him after the new certificate was issued, in which he was named as beneficiary, amounted to $3,852.

It appears that the certificate naming defendant as beneficiary was immediately after its issuance delivered to him by Mrs. Allen, and he held the same at the time of her death; and after Mrs. Allen’s death he caused proper proofs of her death to be made to the defendant order, who was about to pay the same to defendant, when enjoined from doing so by the injunction issued under the prayer of complainant’s original bill.

Complainants resist the right of defendant' to collect and receive the money due and payable under said certificate, in their original bill, on the ground that he had, at the time he was named as beneficiary in said certificate, no insurable interest in the life of the insured, and was not, therefore, eligible to be named as beneficiary in said certificate; and they claim the proceeds of said certificate as the children and only heirs at law of Mrs. Allen. The daughter, Mrs. Cunningham, died without issue.

[17]*17In their amended and supplemental bill filed on July 27, 1917, complainants resist payment to the defendant upon the further ground that, at the time the certificate issued naming the defendant beneficiary therein, the insured, Mrs. Allen, was of unsound mind and mentally incapable of consenting to a change in beneficiaries; that she had been addicted to the use of morphine for many years before said change in beneficiaries was attempted to be effected; and that the use of said drug had so affected and impaired her mind that she was incapable of comprehending and understanding any business transaction, and was, therefore, incapable of understanding the nature and effect of her act when she consented that the defendant be named as beneficiary in said certificate, if she did so consent; and that she was procured and induced to consent to said change by the fraud and imposition of the defendant, in whose home she had lived for many years before her death, and who had been administering to her the drug which had affected and impaired her mind.

The original and amended and supplemental bills prayed that a decree be rendered in complainants’ favor against the defendant order for the amount of said certificate, together with interest and penalties.

The defendant Cunningham filed au answer and cross-bill. In his answer he denied that he was without insurable interest in the life of the insured, Mrs. Allen, at the time he was named as beneficiary in said certificate; denied that he was ineligible to become beneficiary in said certificate, that said certificate naming him as beneficiary [18]*18was not legally issued, or that the same was invalid and ineffective to vest the benefits of said certificate in him upon the death of the insured. He also denied that the insured was of unsound mind, and incapable of fully understanding and comprehending what she was doing, when she directed and consented that said certificate be changed l. : II I5C1 so as to name him beneficiary therein, and averred that she fully understood and comprehended the nature and effect of the transaction and of her act, and that the nam: ing of defendant as the beneficiary in said certificate was in accordance with her direct order, and in accordance with her expressed desire that he receive the benefits of said certificate, because he had kept the assessments paid, on it and had kept the certificate alive and in force; and, further, that the change and naming of defendant as beneficiary in said certificate was in accordance with the often expressed desire of the insured’s daughter, defendant’s, wife, to whom the insured was greatly devoted.

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Bluebook (online)
143 Tenn. 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-cunningham-tenn-1919.