Brown v. Home Life Ins. Co.
This text of 3 F.2d 661 (Brown v. Home Life Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
BROWN
v.
HOME LIFE INS. CO. OF NEW YORK (COLVIN et al., Interveners).
District Court, E. D. Oklahoma.
William S. Rogers, of Tulsa, Okl., for plaintiff.
Kleinschmidt & Johnson, of Tulsa, Okl., for defendant.
D. F. Gore and E. J. Lundy, both of Tulsa, Okl., and Julius Moses, of Chicago, Ill., for trustee.
KENNAMER, District Judge.
Mrs. Gertrude F. Brown instituted this action against the Home Life Insurance Company, a corporation, to recover $40,000 alleged to be due upon two ordinary life insurance policies issued by the defendant company upon the life of Curtis C. Brown. Boone Williams, trustee in bankruptcy of Curtis Brown Company, a corporation, bankrupt and H. C. Colvin, trustee in bankruptcy of estate of Curtis C. Brown, bankrupt, have intervened in the action. The defendant insurance company has answered tendering the amount of the policies into court and assumed the position of a disinterested stakeholder of the proceeds due on the policies.
The material facts necessary to be considered in determining this cause are that on the 12th day of August, 1919, the Home Life Insurance Company of New York, in consideration of an annual premium of $724.40 paid by the Curtis Brown Company, executed and delivered to Curtis C. Brown an ordinary life insurance policy in writing in the sum of $20,000, policy No. 239366, in which Curtis Brown Company was named beneficiary. On the 31st day of August, 1921, the defendant insurance company, in consideration of a premium of $755.40, executed and delivered an ordinary life insurance policy to Curtis C. Brown, insured, in the sum of $20,000, Policy No. 263476, in which the Curtis Brown Company was named beneficiary.
On March 26, 1924, Curtis Brown Company was adjudged a bankrupt and Boone Williams was appointed trustee. Curtis Brown was president and managing officer of the Curtis Brown Company. The schedules attached to the petition filed in the *662 bankruptcy proceedings of Curtis Brown Company listed the policies as assets of said company, and the petition was verified by Curtis Brown. On April 24, 1924, Curtis Brown being in possession and control of the insurance policies, returned the same to the head office of the insurance company, together with written directions to change the beneficiary in the policies from the Curtis Brown Company to Gertrude F. Brown, his wife.
On May 27, 1924, the insured, Curtis C. Brown was adjudged a bankrupt, and the following September H. C. Colvin was appointed trustee of the bankrupt estate of the insured. On May 2, 1924, the defendant insurance company in writing acknowledged receipt of the policies and the written request of the insured Curtis C. Brown to change the beneficiaries in the policies and sent to the insured blank forms of direction for change of beneficiary, which the insured Curtis C. Brown filled out and executed in accordance with the request of the insurance company and returned to it. Receipt of same were acknowledged on May 9, 1924. During the time from May 2 until May 9 the defendant insurance company received notice from Boone Williams, trustee in bankruptcy of the Curtis C. Brown Company estate, that the trustee claimed the policies as assets of the estate.
The defendant insurance company on receiving this notice from the trustee of the Curtis Brown Company, bankrupt, notified the insured, Curtis C. Brown, that by reason of the claim having been made by the trustee it was deferring any action in reference to indorsing the name of new beneficiary pending an adjustment of the claim of Boone Williams, trustee in bankruptcy, to the policies. Without any indorsement having been made as provided in the policies, this condition existed until the 6th day of August, 1924, when the insured, Curtis C. Brown died. Gertrude F. Brown claims the proceeds of the policies as the beneficiary asserting that the insured, Curtis C. Brown, having fully complied with all the requirements of the contract of insurance to accomplish a change of beneficiary in the policies, equity will regard the change as having been actually made. Also, the right to change beneficiary having been reserved in the application and the contracts of insurance the first named beneficiary, Curtis Brown Company, had no vested right but only a mere expectancy during the life of the insured. The intervener, H. C. Colvin, trustee in bankruptcy of the estate of Curtis C. Brown, contends that regardless of who the beneficiary may be, that he as such trustee is entitled to the cash surrender value of the policies in question under the provision of sections 6 and 70 of the Bankruptcy Act (Comp. St. §§ 9590, 9654). The intervener, Boone Williams, trustee in bankruptcy of the Curtis Brown Company, contends he is entitled to the proceeds of the two insurance policies in question on the ground that the corporation was at all times the owner of the policies and also for the reason that it was the beneficiary therein, and that the alleged change of beneficiary was ineffectual.
In determining the controlling question in this case it may be well to observe that the policies in controversy contained the following provision:
"When the right of revocation has been reserved, the insured, if there be no existing assignment of the policy filed with the company as herein provided, may, while the policy is in force, designate a new beneficiary, with or without reserving the right of revocation, by filing written notice thereof at the home office of the company, accompanied by the policy, for suitable indorsement thereon. Such change shall take effect upon the indorsement of the same on the policy by the company and not before. If any beneficiary, under either a revocable or irrevocable designation, shall die before the insured, the interest of such beneficiary shall vest in the insured unless otherwise herein provided."
The application for the insurance policy also reserved to the insured the power to change beneficiary, which applications by reference were made a part of the policies.
It is plain the insured reserved the unqualified right to change the beneficiary. The manner of effectuating such change was provided for by only requiring the insured to request such change by filing written notice thereof with the insurance company at its home office and upon returning the policies for proper indorsement. While it is provided that the change is to become effective when the designation of new beneficiary is indorsed on the policy by the company, it is clear the only purpose of this last provision of the taking effect of the change in beneficiary upon indorsement on the policy is for the protection of the company, and I cannot agree that this provision required the assent of the company before the insured would have the right to exercise his power of making a new appointment. It is well settled that where no reservation of a *663 right to change beneficiary exists in an ordinary policy, the interest of the beneficiary is a vested interest, and the insured is without power by deed of assignment or will or any other acts of his to transfer to any other person the interest of the person so named as beneficiary. In such a policy the beneficiary, the moment it is issued, acquires a vested right which cannot be affected by any right of the insured subsequent to the execution of the policy, except it be a breach of the condition. Washington Central Bank v. Hume, 128 U. S. 195, 9 S. Ct. 41, 32 L. Ed.
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3 F.2d 661, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 885, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-home-life-ins-co-oked-1925.