Baird v. Wainwright

1953 OK 192, 260 P.2d 1060, 1953 Okla. LEXIS 496
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 23, 1953
Docket35452
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1953 OK 192 (Baird v. Wainwright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baird v. Wainwright, 1953 OK 192, 260 P.2d 1060, 1953 Okla. LEXIS 496 (Okla. 1953).

Opinion

O’NEAL, Justice.

This action was brought by Manila M. Wainwright against George L. Baird, administrator of the estate of E. K. Mabry, deceased, and The Liberty National Bank of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, to recover from the defendant, George L. Baird, as administrator of the estate of E. K. Mabry, deceased, the sum of $11,423.21, and for a judgment requiring The Liberty National Bank to pay plaintiff said sum now held by the Bank in escrow. From the judgment for the plaintiff, the defendant, George L. Baird; administrator of the estate of E. K. Mabry, deceased, appeals.

The defendant, The Liberty National Bank, filed no motion for a new trial, nor has it perfected an appeal.

A loose truncated statement of the facts will sufficiently present the question of law posed for our decision. Manila Mabry and E. K. Mabry were husband and wife for some twenty years prior to the year 1947. On April 7, 1947, Mrs. Mabry obtained a decree of divorce from E. K. Mabry. The decree provided for a division of the community property acquired during cover-ture. Among other provisions, the decree set over to Dr. Mabry a policy of insurance valued at $10,700, the proceeds of which are here in dispute.

Subsequent to the entry of the decree, and on June S, 1947, the trial court undertook to. reshape, modify and correct the divorce decree entered on April 7, 1947. Mrs. Mabry appealed from the court’s judgment of June 5, 1947, to this court. Mabry v. Baird, 203 Okl. 212, 219 P.2d 234. We reversed, holding that the judgment of April 7, 1947, was a final judgment and not subject by order nunc pro tunc to render another and different judgment. Our mandate directed the trial court to vacate its judgment of June 5, 1947, and enter a judgment nunc pro tunc as pronounced by the trial court in its decree of April 7, 1947. The trial court complied with said mandate, under date of September 1, 1950. The judgment entered as of September 1, 1950, in paragraph eight of the Journal Entry,'set over to Dr. Mabry a paid up policy of life insurance on the life of Dr. Mabry (Policy No. 10743107) issued by the New York Life Insurance Company, of the face value of $10,000, and interest and earnings of the sum of $700. Dr. Mabry died one month after the original decree of divorce was granted. Mrs. Mabry, by re-marriage, is now Manila M. Wainwright. On November 4, 1950, she brought the present action in which she pleaded that the New York Life Insurance Company in 1929 issued its life insurance policy to Dr.-Mabry, in which she was named the beneficiary. The policy provided that at its maturity Dr. Mabry would receive $100 per month and. at his -deáth.any residue' would be paid to -the beneficiary therein named. This policy matured in June, 1945, *1062 and was thereupon converted into an annuity certificate which provided for the payment of $100.20 to Dr. Mabry during his lifetime and if the monthly payments did not equal the face value of the certificate the balance in excess of the total amount of the monthly payments would be paid to the beneficiary therein named, or to his personal representative.

The Policy No. 10743107 having matured as an endowment, the insured, Dr. Mabry, elected to receive the monthly payments in lieu of a cash payment of $13,727.81, and thereupon surrendered the policy and the insurer issued the annuity certificate No. S07402 to Dr. Mabry. The annuity certificate bears an endorsement designating Manila M. Mabry, his then wife, as his beneficiary, if living, otherwise his mother or brother and nephews, naming them.

Pending the appeal in Mabry v. Baird, supra, Mrs. Mabry and the administrator of the estate of Dr. Mabry, deceased, entered into a letter agreement, dated August 13, 1947, under which the administrator delivered the annuity certificate to Mrs. Mabry, for the purpose of making proof of death and executing proper papers whereby the proceeds of the annuity certificate might be converted into money and deposited with The Liberty National Bank of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, to be held in escrow to await the final determination of the ownership of the proceeds of said certificate. Upon proof of death, the insurance company paid Mrs. Mabry the sum due under the annuity certificate, as the named beneficiary therein, which money was deposited in the Bank under the letter agreement referred to. On October 8, 1947, Mrs. Mabry and the administrator entered into an escrow agreement in which the form of the deposit in The Liberty National Bank from a special account was changed to an escrow account.

The administrator assumes the position that under the decree of divorce the policy of insurance converted to an annuity certificate was set over to Dr. Mabry, and that the amount due thereunder was an asset of the estate of the deceased, and that Mrs. Mabry, although the named beneficiary therein, was not entitled to the proceeds thereof. The trial court found that Mrs. Mabry was entitled to the proceeds of the annuity certificate on deposit with the Bank in the sum of $11,423.21, and rendered judgment accordingly. To reverse the judgment the administrator argues that the judgment is contrary to the evidence and the law.

As we understand the administrator’s petition, he contends that when the court awarded the policy of insurance to Dr. Mabry, that the decree denied Mrs. Mabry any further interest therein, and that after the conversion of the annuity certificate into money, pending the appeal in the divorce action, in light of the letter agreement and the escrow agreement, that Mrs. Mabry was not entitled to the proceeds of the annuity certificate after Dr. Mabry’s death. This contention fails to give adequate consideration to the terms of the insurance contract and the annuity certificate; that contract, as we have noted, provided that during Dr. Mabry’s lifetime he should receive monthly payments, and upon his death any sum remaining unpaid as shown by the policy would be paid to the named beneficiary, or if no named beneficiary, to the assured’s estate. Moreover, the assured had the privilege of changing the beneficiary as he might elect.

The defendant’s answer discloses that the New York life insurance policy was a paid up policy; that under the terms thereof, if converted, Dr. Mabry was to receive the monthly payments during his lifetime, and that in the event of his death, within twenty years, the remaining balance under the policy should be paid according to its terms.

In the divorce action, Dr. Mabry, in response to questions propounded by his counsel, testified as follows:

“Q. That contract is fixed between you and the insurance company to pay that as long as you live ? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Now in reference to the value of the policy in the event you should die. A. The amount that has not been paid to me the remainder would go to Mrs. Mabry.
*1063 “Q. Before the $10,700.00 is finally paid out to you, if there is any remainder, then under the policy it would go to Mrs. Mabry. A. That is right

In the court’s decree of April 7, 1947, and in the attempted nunc pro tunc decree of June 5, 1947, as well as in our decision in Mabry v. Baird, supra, it was said that the court set over to Dr. Mabry a paid up policy of life insurance on the life of the defendant, Dr. Mabry.

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1953 OK 192, 260 P.2d 1060, 1953 Okla. LEXIS 496, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baird-v-wainwright-okla-1953.