Cook v. Cook

521 S.W.2d 808, 1975 Tenn. LEXIS 699
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 10, 1975
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 521 S.W.2d 808 (Cook v. Cook) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cook v. Cook, 521 S.W.2d 808, 1975 Tenn. LEXIS 699 (Tenn. 1975).

Opinion

OPINION

HENRY, Justice.

Essentially this is a suit in equity seeking to impress a trust upon the proceeds of a policy of life insurance.

I.

Virginia L. Taylor and James Milton Cook were married in 1956. Mrs. Cook had two children by a prior marriage; Mr. Cook had none. One child, James Perry Cook, was born of this marriage, and at the time of the institution of the suit, he was nine years of age.

In 1967 James Milton Cook applied for and was issued a fifteen year decreasing term policy of life insurance, in the initial amount of one hundred thousand ($100,000) dollars, written by Lincoln American Life Insurance Company. Virginia Taylor Cook was designated as beneficiary. James Perry Cook, son of James Milton Cook, and his two stepsons, were designated as contingent beneficiaries “to share equally or to the survivor.”

The Cooks encountered domestic difficulties and sometime during the year 1971 divorce proceedings were instituted. On April 19, 1971, as a result of their differ- *810 enees, James Milton Cook changed the beneficiary under the life insurance policy. To accomplish this he completed an Application for Change in Policy, indicating a change as follows:

Primary
beneficiary to: Gayle F. Cook (Brother)
(Executor)

This requested change was.approved and on April 30, 1971, an endorsement was placed upon the policy reading as follows:

Beneficiary is changed to read:
Gayle F. Cook, Brother.

The policy thus endorsed was returned to and accepted by James Milton Cook.

It should be noted that the record does not reflect whether Mr. Cook had a will at that time.

On February 15, 1972 a divorce decree was entered. Three days later, on February 18, 1972, James Milton Cook wrote a holographic will, in which he named his brother, Gayle Franklin Cook, as executor and under which he gave his entire estate to his son, James Perry Cook. Gayle Franklin Cook was also appointed guardian of the person of James Perry Cook; however, the record reflects that he has not qualified in this capacity.

Two features of this holograph are worthy of notice. First, it is a model of legal craftsmanship (Mr. Cook was a farmer). Second, no mention is made of this rather substantial life insurance policy.

Mr. Cook, in addition to farming on a large scale, also was a pilot and engaged in commercial crop dusting. He was fatally injured in a plane crash and died on September 30, 1972. On October 3, 1972, his holographic will was probated and letters testamentary were issued on October 4, 1972 to Gayle Franklin Cook.

On October 10, 1972, Gayle Franklin Cook filed a Claimant’s Statement with Lincoln American in order to collect the proceeds of the life insurance policy. In response to question 12, asking “(i)n what capacity, or by what title, do you claim this insurance ? The entered response was

Benificiary (sic) and executor of estate.

On November 7, 1972, Lincoln American issued its draft in the sum of $76,111.25, payable to:

Gayle F. Cook, Beneficiary.

We find all the foregoing to be the facts as revealed by the undisputed proof.

II.

This suit was instituted in January 1973. The original complaint proceeds upon the theory that the insurance proceeds were collected and held by Gayle Franklin Cook, in trust for the use and benefit of James Perry Cook; and that the trustee had converted said funds to his own use and benefit, in violation of instructions given by James Milton Cook in his lifetime.

By Amendment to the Complaint it is asserted that under Sec, 56-1108, T.C.A., the insurance was payable to the executor, and since there was no mention of it in the will, it passed directly to James Perry Cook, through the executor, free from all claims of creditors.

The answer of Gayle Franklin Cook generally denies the theories of relief as asserted by the complaint; however, it contains certain significant admissions and statements which we here set forth:

. . . the defendant also states that he expects to use the money to pay the debts of the decedent and to make such other dispositions of it as his brother wanted him to make.

By answer to the Complaint, as amended, Gayle Franklin Cook, says:

. he expects to use the proceeds for the payment of his brother’s debts, for the decedent’s stepson and for the decedent’s minor son.

*811 Other charges and denials are set forth in the respective pleadings; however, it would serve no useful purpose to elaborate upon them.

III.

Since this case was disposed of by the Chancellor on Motion to Dismiss made at the conclusion of all the plaintiff’s proof, we must review and evaluate the proof with a view to determining the correctness of his conclusions.

Plaintiff’s proof consisted of the documentary evidence hereinabove summarized, the discovery deposition of Larry Page and the oral testimony of Virginia L. Cook. We summarize the pertinent parts of this testimony.

Larry Page, an agent for Lincoln American, wrote the policy. James Cook came to his office in Trimble, on April 19, 1971 and executed the change of beneficiary form. James Cook told him that he and Mrs. Cook were having marital difficulties and said that “he did not wish for his wife to receive the benefits if death occurred.”

He testified to the death of James Cook, the presentation of a claim by Gayle Franklin Cook, and payment to him of the policy proceeds.

Mrs. Cook called him on April 20, 1971 and he confirmed the fact of the change of the beneficiary. He did not talk with her again until after Mr. Cook was killed. In two conversations he confirmed the fact of coverage and advised that payment had been made to Gayle Franklin Cook. Sometime during the summer preceding James Cook’s death, Page advised her that James Cook had told him that Gayle F. Cook “knew about his business and that Frank (Gayle F. Cook) would take care of it.” James Milton Cook had so advised him on the date he changed; the beneficiary.

Page testified that he had no knowledge of any desire on the part of James Cook that the insurance proceeds be held in trust.

Virginia L. Cook testified that she knew of the existence of the insurance policy and that she was the primary beneficiary. After she and Mr. Cook started having domestic difficulties, and at about the time the divorce suit was filed, he told her he had changed the beneficiary to his brother, Frank. At this time he told her:

I don’t want you having any of it. I want to put it in my brother’s name, so that I’ll know that my son will be taken care of the way he’s always lived, and be housed and clothed and educated the way I would want him to be if I was living.

Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
521 S.W.2d 808, 1975 Tenn. LEXIS 699, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cook-v-cook-tenn-1975.