Bibb Distributing Co. v. Stewart

519 S.E.2d 455, 238 Ga. App. 650, 99 Fulton County D. Rep. 2320, 1999 Ga. App. LEXIS 790
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMay 26, 1999
DocketA99A0426
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 519 S.E.2d 455 (Bibb Distributing Co. v. Stewart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bibb Distributing Co. v. Stewart, 519 S.E.2d 455, 238 Ga. App. 650, 99 Fulton County D. Rep. 2320, 1999 Ga. App. LEXIS 790 (Ga. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

Judge Harold R. Banke.

Winburn Stewart, Sr. (“Stewart”), and his wife Mary Stewart, as trustee of an irrevocable life insurance trust, brought this tort and *651 contract action against Bibb Distributing Company and Winburn Stewart, Jr. (known as “Brother”). In its verdict, the jury determined the contractual rights and obligations of the parties and awarded the Stewarts tort damages, both actual and punitive, as well as attorney fees and litigation expenses. Bibb and Brother appeal.

Stewart founded Bibb Distributing Company in 1956, became its sole owner, and caused the company to prosper. Brother, who is Stewart’s oldest son, later became employed by Bibb. In 1979, Stewart gave Brother all of the company’s common stock, while retaining majority voting control.

In 1988, Stewart agreed to cede complete ownership and control of the company to Brother in consideration of Bibb’s payment of $4,600,000 to Stewart over a ten-year period and its provision of a $6,868,782 death benefit to Stewart’s three other children through purchase of an insurance policy on Stewart’s life. The parties to this suit effectuated these transactions through a series of agreements entered into in 1988 (the “1988 agreements”). As a result of an investigation conducted by Bibb’s CPA Taylor, an insurance policy on Stewart’s life was obtained from Executive Life Insurance Company through payment of a $2,500,000 premium. Stewart established the life insurance trust with his wife as trustee to serve as owner of the policy. His other children were the beneficiaries.

The $6,868,782 death benefit payable to Stewart’s three other children was the face amount of the policy. The policy also contained a “Return of Premium Benefit Rider” in the amount of $2,500,000 to be used to return to Bibb its premium payment upon Stewart’s death. Under two of the 1988 agreements — a “split dollar insurance agreement” and “collateral assignment” agreement — the trustee was made the owner of the policy, Bibb agreed to pay the $2,500,000 premium, and the policy was assigned to Bibb as security for its premium payment. Importantly, these agreements also provided that the $2,500,000 premium payment would be returned to Bibb upon the death of Stewart prior to disbursement of the remaining funds to the trust beneficiaries.

After the Executive Life policy was acquired, Taylor forged the trustee’s name to a change-of-address form so that correspondence concerning the policy would be sent to him. He did this because Executive Life had paid a commission of over $900,000 on the sale of the policy; and unbeknownst to Stewart, Brother, or Wallace, Taylor’s brother-in-law was employed as the local insurance agent, received $400,000 in after-tax commissions, and provided Taylor with a $200,000 kickback. Taylor did not want his brother-in-law’s involvement to become known.

When the Executive Life policy was acquired, Stewart, his attorney Wallace, and Brother were under the impression that the total *652 death benefit was being obtained through Bibb’s payment of a lump-sum premium. Insofar as Stewart was concerned, this was vital as he did not want the availability of the death benefit to his other children in any way dependent on the solvency of Bibb under Brother’s control. But neither Stewart nor Wallace read the policy and were thus unaware of a fact known by Taylor, to wit: the insurer was authorized to require payment of additional premiums if interest rates declined.

In 1990, that is precisely what happened. After Taylor advised Brother that Bibb was entitled to be reimbursed for all premium payments under the collateral assignment agreement, Brother instructed Bibb’s chief financial officer to pay the additional premiums pursuant to whatever instructions Taylor gave.

Executive Life was later declared insolvent and placed in conservatorship. Under a rehabilitation plan approved in 1993, the Executive Life policy was restructured so that the $2,500,000 return of premium rider was deleted and replaced with a return of accumulation account (“RAA”) providing a $456,739 death benefit, thereby resulting in a loss of approximately $2,000,000 in insurance coverage. Aurora National Life Assurance Company assumed the restructured policy (“Aurora I”). To replace the lost coverage until it could be reinstated by Aurora, Bibb paid for a $2,000,000 policy on Stewart’s life issued by Manulife.

In 1994, the trust was presented with the decision of whether to opt-in to Aurora I, or to opt-out in exchange for a payment in the approximate amount of $600,000 to the trust. The power to decide belonged to the trustee, but she agreed to leave the decision to Bibb with the understanding that it would take sole responsibility for maintenance of the existing insurance coverage. Bibb decided to opt-in, based at least in part on Taylor’s advice to Brother that this would provide the best chance for recovery of Bibb’s premium payments.

Aurora later informed Brother through Taylor and others that it would issue an additional $2,141,000 of permanent life insurance coverage on the life of Stewart to restore the death benefit that had been lost. After Aurora indicated that it would place ownership of the additional death benefit in whomever Bibb designated, Brother and Taylor secretly arranged to have the $2,141,000 death benefit converted into a separate policy on Stewart’s life with Brother named as sole owner and beneficiary. Brother accomplished this conversion by forging Stewart’s name to the insurance application. Through efforts of both Brother and Taylor, Brother’s ownership of the new policy (“Aurora II”) was kept secret. For his part, Taylor instructed the insurance agent that “under no circumstances” should Stewart “ever get any documentation on this.”

As a result of issuance of Aurora II, the $456,739 RAA was deleted from Aurora I. After Aurora II was issued, Bibb allowed the *653 Manulife policy to lapse. Contrary to the parties’ agreements, all of this would have caused Bibb and Brother to receive approximately $4,650,000 in life insurance proceeds on Stewart’s death, thereby resulting in an approximate $2,150,000 loss to the trust beneficiaries. This was described as a “sweet deal” for Brother.

The complaint charged Brother with forgery, theft, and conversion. The Stewarts stipulated that their actual damages were $236,000, the cash value of the return of premium benefit rider when Brother’s forgery took place. In the liability phase of the trial, issues were presented to the jury as to whether there is an ambiguity in the 1988 agreements on the question of whether Bibb and/or Brother are required to keep the $6,868,782 policy in force by paying premiums due thereon, and whether the parties later entered into an oral agreement imposing such a requirement. The jury returned a verdict finding that Bibb and Brother are required to pay the additional premiums to keep Aurora I in effect; that Bibb is entitled to a return of premium payments on Aurora I, but not Aurora II or Manulife and not so as to reduce the net death benefit to the trust below $6,800,000; and that the Stewarts are entitled to actual damages of $236,000, punitive damages, and litigation expenses. In the punitive damages phase, the jury awarded the Stewarts $12,500,000. Held:

1.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
519 S.E.2d 455, 238 Ga. App. 650, 99 Fulton County D. Rep. 2320, 1999 Ga. App. LEXIS 790, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bibb-distributing-co-v-stewart-gactapp-1999.