Baumet v. United States
This text of 344 U.S. 82 (Baumet v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinions
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Based on conflicting claims to the proceeds of a National Service Life Insurance policy, this is a companion case to United States v. Henning, ante, p. 66, decided today.
The controversy is bottomed on the following facts: At the time of the insured serviceman’s death in 1942, his policy designated John J. Peters, his uncle, as sole beneficiary. Challenging the uncle’s standing as a permissible beneficiary under the statute, William Baumet, the insured’s natural father, instituted an action to claim the proceeds.1 Before that action came to trial, John J. Peters died.2 After a subsequent trial of the cause, the District Court found that John J. Peters and his wife Julie Peters had stood in loco parentis to the insured from 1938 until his death, and that the natural father’s [84]*84contemporaneous conduct had amounted to an abandonment of his son.3 Concluding that John J. Peters, as a person in loco parentis, was a validly designated beneficiary under the Act,4 it dismissed Baumet’s complaint. Accordingly, the court awarded the installments which had matured during John J. Peters’ lifetime to Julie Peters as his personal representative, and the installments thereafter maturing to Julie individually as a person in loco parentis who “last bore” the parental relationship to the insured.5 The Court of Appeals affirmed.6 It agreed that “after 1938 his father never saw him, manifested no interest in his career and contributed nothing toward his support”; in fact, there was “a permanent estrangement between them.” 7 And it approved the District Court’s allocation of the policy’s proceeds. In so holding, the Court of Appeals assumed that estates of deceased beneficiaries were proper takers, and that the foster parents had long supplanted the natural father in the parental relationship to the insured. In any event, the court thought, “the insured can have but one maternal parent and one paternal parent.” 8 We granted cer-tiorari, 343 U. S. 925.
For the reasons detailed in United States v. Henning, supra, we hold that estates of deceased beneficiaries may not take proceeds under the Act. The award to John J. Peters’ personal representative must therefore fall. In regard to the natural father’s claim, the District Court’s findings sharply reveal that William Baumet long before [85]*85his son’s death had “abandoned his son” and ceased to be a parent in truth and fact. He may not now retrieve the discarded paternal robes to lay claim to the policy proceeds; to rule otherwise would foil the plain intent of the 1942 amendments. Since the foster parents, not he, “last bore” the parental relationship, he cannot qualify as a taker by devolution under § 602 (h) (3) (C) of the Act. For that reason we hold that the foster mother, Julie Peters, as the sole survivor of those who “last bore” the parental relationship, in her own right must take all accrued policy proceeds.
Reversed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
344 U.S. 82, 73 S. Ct. 122, 97 L. Ed. 2d 111, 1952 U.S. LEXIS 1517, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baumet-v-united-states-scotus-1953.