Conley v. United States

119 F. Supp. 832, 1954 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4471
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. West Virginia
DecidedFebruary 5, 1954
DocketNo. 1450
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 119 F. Supp. 832 (Conley v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. West Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Conley v. United States, 119 F. Supp. 832, 1954 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4471 (S.D.W. Va. 1954).

Opinion

PAUL, District Judge,

sitting by designation in the Southern District of West Virginia.

Cas-sie B. Conley, as plaintiff, has instituted this action against the United States of America seeking to have the proceeds of a National Service Life Insurance Policy issued to Johnie Ingle Conley paid to the plaintiff as the father of Johnie Ingle Cónley. The United States has filed its answer and has interpleaded certain other parties, who are uncles and aunts of the insured.

It appears that Johnie Ingle Conley, who will be hereafter referred to as the veteran, was born March 5,1924, and entered the navaí service of the United States on January 22, Í942. While in the service he was granted National Service Life Insurance in the amount of $10,000, effective as of April 1, 1942, .and he designated his mother, Goldie Mae Conley, as beneficiary. No contingent beneficiary was named.

Goldie Mae Conley, the designated beneficiary, died on October 17, 1943, before the insurance contract matured, and no other beneficiary was designated in the policy. The veteran was reported missing in action on January 17, 1944, and report of this fact was made to his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles I. [833]*833Richardson, Sr., and his aunt, Mrs. E. H. Richardson, as next of kin. After the lapse of one year the veteran was officially presumed dead, as of January 18, 1945. At that time his maternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles I. Richardson, Sr., were living, but the former died in January, 1948, and the latter in March, 1948. Prior to their death neither of the grandparents had filed a claim for the proceeds of the insurance. The plaintiff, the father, filed his formal claim for the insurance in September, 1948. The veteran was unmarried and left no brothers or sisters. However, an investigation conducted by the Veterans Administration for the purpose of obtaining evidence as to the proper beneficiary of the proceeds of the insurance resulted in a disallowance of the plaintiff’s claim on the ground that he was not the last person who had stood in loco parentis to the veteran prior to the latter’s death.

The background of facts upon which this position of the Veterans Administration was taken and which is determinative of the issues in this case shows substantially the following:

The mother of the veteran was Goldie Mae Richardson, daughter of Charles I. Richardson, Sr., and she was married to the plaintiff, Cassie B. Conley, in 1919. Their son, the veteran, was born March 5, 1924. In 1932, when the child, Johnie Ingle Conley, was about eight years old, his mother came back to live in the home of her father, Charles I. Richardson, Sr., who appears to have been a man of substantial means and good standing in the community. It appears that the plaintiff, Cassie B. Conley, was addicted to excessive drinking and that he worked at his trade, which was that of a barber, irregularly and that he apparently was not able to maintain a home for his wife and child. When Goldie Mae Conley returned to her father’s home in 1932, with her eight year old child, it seems that Cassie Conley also stayed at the home of Mr. Richardson for a short period, probably not exceeding several weeks, after which he left. It is not entirely clear from the evidence whether the plaintiff and his wife ever lived together thereafter, but apparently they did not. Goldie Mae Conley and the child continued from that time to live in her father’s household up until the time when the boy entered the service in 1942, while the testimony seems to indicate that the plaintiff never returned to Mr. Richardson’s home.

During the years between 1932 and 1942 Johnie Ingle Conley was supported by his mother and by his grandfather, Charles I. Richardson, Sr., in whose home the boy and his mother lived. This statement is subject to the following possible exception: The plaintiff testifies that in the year 1936, after he and his wife had separated but before they were divorced, a warrant was issued against him for non-support. He states that no judgment was ever entered on this warrant, but that when it came on for hearing he agreed to and did give to his wife $350 out of a larger sum which he had recently collected from cashing his soldier’s bonus certificate and that he agreed to and did thereafter pay to his wife the sum of $20 a month for the support of his son, Johnie Ingle Conley. This testimony as to paying $20 a month thereafter for the support of the child I am compelled to disbelieve. The plaintiff was quite vague about this and could offer no proof whatever to support this statement, in the form of receipts for money paid, checks showing payment or anything of the sort. Goldie Mae Conley’s sisters and brothers, who lived near-by their father’s home where Goldie Mae Conley was living and who were in intimate contact with their sister from day to day, testified very definitely that they never heard of any such payments being made; that their sister never mentioned them and they are completely sure that no such payments ever were made. It also seems evident that the irregular employment of the plaintiff, due to his alcoholic habits, made him unable to have made any such monthly payments with any regularity whatever.

[834]*834During all these years while he lived in his grandfather’s home Johnie Ingle Conley received his support from his mother, aided in large measure by his grandfather. It was they who provided a home and food for him and bought all of his clothes and who supplied to him all of the needs and comforts and luxuries of his childhood years and who guided his training, both secular and spiritual. His mother paid for all of the expenses of his schooling, such as books, etc., and the school report cards were all brought to and signed by her. When the boy entered the navy in 1942, being slightly under eighteen, it was his mother who signed the consent to his enlistment. It was to the Richardson home that the veteran went whenever he returned on furlough during his service.

In 1938 Goldie Mae Conley procured a divorce from the plaintiff upon the grounds of desertion and under the terms of the decree she was given the custody of their son. At no time following 1932, so far as is shown, did the plaintiff ever come to see his wife or son at the home of Mr. Richardson, where they were living. The plaintiff testifies that he saw his son from time to time when the boy would pay visits to him at such place as the plaintiff was employed at the time. He says that on those occasions he frequently gave the boy money in small sums for some of his youthful needs, such as the price of admission to a ball game or something of that sort, and that on several occasions his son came to see him at the boarding house or other place where the father was living. This testimony is supported to some extent by one of the plaintiff's employers, who states that on several occasions in 1941 the son came to the barber shop where his father was employed and that on these visits their relationship appeared cordial. A nephew of the plaintiff states that during 1941 he worked in a restaurant near the place where plaintiff was then employed and that plaintiff and his son came together into the restaurant on a number of occasions; and that he went with Johnie Conley to the plaintiff’s home on several occasions.

The following are the pertinent provisions of the statute relating to National Service Life Insurance:

38 U.S.C.A. § 802(g)

“The insurance shall be payable only to a widow, widower, child * * *, parent, brother or sister of the insured.

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Related

Seeley v. United States
161 F. Supp. 888 (W.D. New York, 1957)

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Bluebook (online)
119 F. Supp. 832, 1954 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4471, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conley-v-united-states-wvsd-1954.