Confederation Life Ass'n v. Allinson

187 A.2d 528, 95 R.I. 402, 1963 R.I. LEXIS 11
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJanuary 24, 1963
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 187 A.2d 528 (Confederation Life Ass'n v. Allinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Confederation Life Ass'n v. Allinson, 187 A.2d 528, 95 R.I. 402, 1963 R.I. LEXIS 11 (R.I. 1963).

Opinion

Paolino, J.

This is a bill in equity praying that the respondents be directed to interplead for the proceeds of a [403]*403policy of insurance on the life of Mavis W. Allinson. Each of the respondents filed an answer and after a hearing on the bill, answers and proof, a decree was entered in the superior court awarding the sum due under the policy to the respondent Eileen W. Feehan, a sister of the insured. The cause is before us on the appeal of the respondent Wayne C. Allinson, a stepson of the insured.

The principal issue raised by appellant is whether the trial justice erred in deciding that Mrs. Feehan was the lawfully designated beneficiary of the insured at the time of the latter’s death.

At the January session, 1960, the general assembly enacted P. L. 1960, chap. 119, providing group life, accidental death and other insurance benefits for state employees. The act was approved on May 6, 1960, effective as of July 1, 1960. On August 18, 1960, pursuant to the provisions of the act, the state entered into a contract with complainant whereby the latter issued a group life insurance policy covering state employees, effective as of July 1, 1960.

The insured had been for many years an employee of the division of women and children in the state department of labor. On May 27, 1960 she elected to be included in the group life insurance policy by filling out a certain form entitled “Selection Of Beneficiary” wherein she named the appellant as beneficiary. These forms were distributed, executed and returned wholly within the offices of the division of women and children and were then turned over either to the director of the department of labor or to the division of accounts and control.

Pursuant to the terms of the policy complainant was to issue to the insured a certificate entitled “Group Insurance Certificate” certifying that she was insured in accordance with and subject to the terms of the group policy. A copy of said certificate is in evidence. Under the terms of the [404]*404policy, the right to change beneficiaries was reserved to the insured and the state was to act as the administrative agent for complainant and was to maintain the records relating to the beneficiaries of the individual certificates issued to the employees.

In June 1960 the insured went on sick leave from her job because of a serious illness necessitating hospitalization and major surgery after which she died on November 16, 1960. Upon her death each of the respondents made claim upon complainant for payment of the proceeds of the policy. The complainant raised no question of its liability, but because of the conflicting claims made by respondents it filed in the superior court the instant bill of interpleader making both claimants respondents. By decree entered on October 13, 1961 complainant paid into the registry of the superior court the amount of the policy, less costs and counsel fees, and was thereby discharged of all liability to respondents under the policy. The respondents were ordered to interplead for the balance of the proceeds.

It appears from the transcript of the hearing in the superior court that this controversy results from certain events which occurred in July, August and September of 1960. Mrs. Feehan bases her right to the proceeds of the policy on the following events. In July 1960, after her discharge from the hospital, the insured went to a nursing home in the town of Lincoln where she remained until August 5, 1960. While there she told her sister that she had taken out a new group' insurance with the state and that she was going to make her the beneficiary. On August 5, 1960 she went to stay with her sister at the latter’s home in Lincoln where she remained until August 21, 1960.

According to the testimony of Mrs. Feehan, Miss Anne E. Dolan and Mrs. Margaret F. Ackroyd the following events took place during the insured’s stay at her sister’s home. On August 8, 1960 the insured telephoned Miss [405]*405Dolan, a co-worker in the division of women and children, and told her that she wanted to change the beneficiary on her group life insurance policy and make Mrs. Feehan the beneficiary. She asked Miss Dolan to send her the necessary papers. The following morning the insured received in the mail a form similar to the one she had originally filled out on May 27, 1960. She filled it out and mailed it back to Miss Dolan. Mrs. Feehan testified that she did not see the form after it was completed.

The next day Miss Dolan received the form in the mail. It named the insured as the beneficiary. Mrs. Feehan’s name did not appear. Miss Dolan assumed that it was incorrectly filled out and she thereupon conferred with her supervisor, Mrs. Ackroyd, the chief of the division of women and children, and was instructed to take another form to Mrs. Feehan’s home and see to its proper execution by the insured. Miss Dolan telephoned the insured and informed her that she had named herself as beneficiary whereupon the insured asked her to bring another form.

On the afternoon of the same day, August 10, 1960, or on the following day, Miss Dolan went to Mrs. Feehan’s home with another selection of. beneficiary form. The insured filled it out and named her sister, Mrs. Feehan, as beneficiary and then handed the form back to Miss Dolan.

After Miss Dolan left, Mrs. Feehan told the insured that someone could say that she asked her to change the beneficiary whereupon the insured said she would take care of that. She wrote a note, which is in evidence, stating that she had named her sister as her beneficiary in the new death policy which had recently been issued by the state and that she was “in sound mind and body and fully aware of what” she was doing. The insured antedated the note July 22, 1960 so that it would appear that she had written it whilé she was at the nursing home in Lincoln and not while she was at her sister’s home and possibly exposed to undue influence by her sister.

[406]*406On the following day Miss Dolan took the completed form to her office and left it on Mrs. Ackroyd’s desk for countersignature by her or the director of the department. After it was countersigned it was returned to Miss Dolan’s desk. She put the form in an envelope together with a memo asking that the change of beneficiary be noted and she then sealed the envelope and placed it in a basket on her desk for collection by the interoffice or interdepartmental mail carriers. The envelope was addressed to the Division of Accounts and Control which was then handling all records pertaining to beneficiaries of the group life policy. She never ■checked to ascertain if this form had been recorded. She was the last person to see it. There is no record of its having been received by the division of accounts and control. The form has never been found. At the time of the insured’s death the only beneficiary form on record was the one dated May 27, 1960 designating the appellant as beneficiary.

The appellant relies on the following evidence to support his claim as beneficiary. It appears from the evidence that on August 21 or 22, 1960, the insured left her sister’s home for a two-week visit with her stepson at his summer home. While there the insured discussed her personal and financial affairs with him and his wife. She told them she wanted him to be the beneficiary of her group life insurance policy and she thought he was, but she had done something concerning insurance while at her sister’s home. She asked him to check on it to ascertain who the beneficiary was.

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Bluebook (online)
187 A.2d 528, 95 R.I. 402, 1963 R.I. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/confederation-life-assn-v-allinson-ri-1963.