Connecticut General Life Insurance v. Hartshorn

238 F.2d 417
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedNovember 2, 1956
DocketNo. 14869
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 238 F.2d 417 (Connecticut General Life Insurance v. Hartshorn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Connecticut General Life Insurance v. Hartshorn, 238 F.2d 417 (9th Cir. 1956).

Opinion

STEPHENS, Circuit Judge.

This action arose out of conflicting claims to the proceeds of a group life insurance policy in the amount of $10,-000.00 issued by the Connecticut General Life Insurance Company on the life of Owen M. Hartshorn, now deceased.

The action was filed by the insurance company as an action in interpleader under Section 1335 of Title 28 U.S.C.A. The proceeds of the policy rest in the [418]*418registry of the court, the insurance company raising no objection to the payment thereof to the party held entitled thereto. The policy in suit was held by the District Court to be payable to the estate of Owen M. Hartshorn. Kathryn Penn Hartshorn, who is here appealing, is the divorced wife of the decedent. J. P. Hartshorn is the brother of the deceased, and administrator of the deceased brother’s estate. The brother was a party to the action below and he is here an appellee in his administrative capacity.

The appellant and the insured had known each other for nearly a third of a century. Each had married and each had lost a mate by death. They were married November 9, 1946. Evidently they experienced difficulty in adjusting themselves each with the other and on April 23, 1948, they entered into a written property settlement. An interlocutory divorce followed on August 24,1948, and a final divorce decree was entered on the 2nd of September, 1949.

During much of the period of time in which the facts of this case were occurring, the insured decedent was office manager of the Collins-Powell Company of Beverly Hills, California, and as such performed the duty of processing and administering an employee-group insurance program which was maintained with the Connecticut General Life Insurance Company. The employees had available to. them a variety of group insurances, inclusive of group life, group accidental death and dismemberment, group hospitalization and surgical expense, and group accident and sickness. The decedent was covered by five group policies, and the group life insurance policy, Number G 7019 for $10,000.00 is directly involved in this case.1

The Property Settlement Agreement The property settlement agreement provided that the wife (appellant here): “ * * * does hereby release,

remise, quitclaim, and relinquish forever any and all claims and rights, present or future, from the estate of the Husband, and any and all other property claims of any kind and character whatsoever against the Husband * * * (there were like releases from the husband to the wife) * * * nor shall the mutual releases herein mentioned with reference to the claims of said parties against the property or estate of the other of said parties in any manner become invalid. The Wife does hereby also release, remise, quitclaim and relinquish forever all right, title, interest and claim of every kind and nature whatsoever, including any and all rights of inheritance or rights as the Wife of the Husband which the Wife now has or may hereafter acquire either as community property rights, courtesy, homestead, family allowance as heir at law of the Husband or as the Wife of the Husband, or otherwise, in and to any property which the Husband now has or may hereafter acquire or which shall be a part of the estate of the Husband in the event of his death, whether [419]*419the same be real or personal property or separate property of the Husband or property of any kind acquired by the Husband in which the Wife might now or hereafter have any interest. The Wife does further hereby waive and relinquish any and all right to act as executrix, administratrix, or administratrix with the will annexed of the estate of the Husband.”

Paragraph nine:

“Each of the parties does hereby assign, transfer and set over to the other all the right, title and interest of each party in and to and under any and all policies or contracts of insurance, if any there may be, wherein the other is named insured, and each of them waives and relinquishes all rights as beneficiary of and every right to claim that any such insurance now is or will hereafter be community property.”

Paragraph ten:

“Each of the parties agree to acknowledge and deliver to the other when so required, any and all documents and papers which may be necessary or which may be required by any purchaser to enable each of the parties to receive, sell or dispose of property acquired by each of the parties under the terms of this agreement, or to otherwise carry into effect any of the terms of this agreement.”

Paragraph fifteen:

“The parties declare that each has had independent legal advice by counsel of his or her own selection; that each fully understands the facts and has been fully informed of all legal rights and liabilities; that after such advice and knowledge each believes the agreement to be fair, just and reasonable, and that each consents to the agreement fully and voluntarily.”

Owen M. Hartshorn, the insured, died intestate on May 30, 1953, and the records of the insurance company showed “Kathryn Geer Penn Hartshorn”, the divorced wife, as the beneficiary of the policy in suit. And there had been no change of beneficiary on the company’s records, and the company could not produce any request for any change of beneficiary and did not claim that there had been any change of beneficiary.

At the trial the brother, J. P. Hartshorn, produced a certificate of group life insurance covering the same insurance as to which the company records showed Kathryn Geer Penn Hartshorn the beneficiary. Upon the certificate there was endorsed in typewriting the words “Beneficiary J. P. Hartshorn” and the words “Effective Oct. 26, 1948”, or just a month after the interlocutory decree. It was then shown that the provision in the policy as to change of beneficiary, so far as the insurance company’s home office records and those of the local Los Angeles office showed had not been complied with. That is, the home office records did not show that insured had requested a change of beneficiary and the local office’s card upon which a beneficiary change would ordinarily be noted showed no change to the brother or to anybody.

It should here be noted that the certificate showing on its face J. P. Hartshorn as beneficiary according to the brother’s testimony, was found by him in insured’s desk in the latter’s apartment after insured’s death. Among the papers so found there were other forms of certificates with no beneficiary named and no effective date upon them. Upon the certificate form bearing the brother’s name appeared a rubber stamp impression as follows:

“All prior certificates of insurance issued for the above named employee under the policy or policies referred to herein are hereby cancelled being replaced by this certificate.”

The other forms had this same wording, not stamped, but printed upon them.

These forms, according to the company’s employee, were kept under lock and key and if a form was given out, it [420]*420contained the word “Specimen”. None of the blanks found in decedent’s desk contained that word. The witness testified her conclusion that because of this rubber stamp impression the certificate must have been issued by the company, notwithstanding the failure of the office records to show that fact.

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Related

Connecticut General Life Insurance Co. v. Hartshorn
238 F.2d 417 (Ninth Circuit, 1956)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
238 F.2d 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/connecticut-general-life-insurance-v-hartshorn-ca9-1956.