DeRyder v. Insurance Company

206 Va. 602
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 29, 1965
DocketRecord No. 6031
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 206 Va. 602 (DeRyder v. Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DeRyder v. Insurance Company, 206 Va. 602 (Va. 1965).

Opinion

206 Va. 602 (1965)

JENNIE MAE GARNER DERYDER
v.
METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY.

Record No. 6031.

Supreme Court of Virginia.

November 29, 1965.

Howard I. Legum and Morris H. Fine (Fine, Fine, Legum, Schwan & Fine, on brief), for the plaintiff in error.

Granger West (Ford, West & Wilkinson, on brief), for the defendant in error.

Present, All the Justices.

1. A second marriage by one of the parties to a former marriage is presumed valid and the first marriage is presumed to have been dissolved by divorce or otherwise. The party attacking the second marriage has the burden of overcoming these presumptions by producing such evidence as, in the absence of counter evidence, will afford reasonable grounds for presuming the allegation of invalidity is true.

2. DeRyder deserted his first wife in 1930 in New York. In 1945 he remarried, having previously told the second wife that he intended to get a divorce. Prior to the second marriage he was domiciled at various places in Virginia where he might have obtained a divorce by having process served on the first wife. She never obtained a divorce but remarried, allegedly in the belief DeRyder was dead, and continued to live with the second husband after she knew the contrary. After DeRyder's death and defendant company's payment to the second wife of the proceeds of a life insurance policy payable to his widow, the first wife sued the company for wrongful payment, claiming that his second marriage was bigamous and that she was the widow. Her testimony, however, did not negate the possibility that she had been served with process in a divorce action begun by DeRyder, nor did she produce evidence showing no divorce was obtained by him in all of the places in Virginia where he was resident prior to the second marriage. She therefore failed to overcome the presumption that the second marriage was valid and summary judgment was properly entered for the defendant company.

3. Plaintiff filed lengthy requests for admissions, under Code 1950, section 8-111.1. To many of these defendant answered that the facts were not within its knowledge, whereupon plaintiff moved the court to strike all such answers as insufficient. This motion was correctly denied. While a party is required to answer even though he has no personal knowledge of the matter if the means of information are reasonably within his power, this was not the case with most of the requests involved. And as to others, the admission sought was as to the ultimate facts at issue, whereas section 8-111.1 is not to be used to obtain admissions of controverted facts.

Error to a judgment of the Circuit Court of the city of Hampton. Hon. Frank A. Kearney, judge presiding. The opinion states the case.

SNEAD

SNEAD, J., delivered the opinion of the court.

On January 13, 1960, Jennie Mae Garner DeRyder, plaintiff, hereinafter sometimes referred to as Jennie, filed a motion for judgment in the Circuit Court of the City of Hampton seeking damages in the sum of $11,000 against Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, defendant. The motion alleged, inter alia, that plaintiff was the beneficiary of a certain policy of life insurance issued by defendant on the life of Leonard Joseph DeRyder, decedent, and that defendant had wrongfully paid the proceeds of the policy to someone other than plaintiff. Upon petition of defendant the case was transferred to the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia. Later, that court remanded the case to the Circuit Court of the City of Hampton because it lacked jurisdiction.

A trial was had, and defendant moved the court to strike plaintiff's evidence at the conclusion thereof. The court stated that it would withhold its ruling on the motion. Whereupon, defendant offered no evidence, rested its case and renewed its motion to strike. Plaintiff's motion for summary judgment was overruled, and the court struck plaintiff's evidence and entered summary judgment for defendant. We granted plaintiff a writ of error.

The record discloses that Leonard Joseph DeRyder, the insured, died in Hampton, Virginia on November 17, 1958. At the time of his death an insurance policy was in effect upon his life in the sum *604 of $5,000. This policy had been issued by defendant pursuant to the provisions of the Federal Employee's Group Life Insurance Act, 5 U.S.C.A., || 2091 et seq. and provided that if, at the death of the insured, there was no designated beneficiary, the proceeds of the policy would be payable to the insured's widow. Decedent had not designated a beneficiary at the time of his death.

On December 1, 1958, Nannette O. DeRyder, hereinafter sometimes referred to as Nannette, filed a written claim with defendant for death benefits under the policy. On the application form Nannette stated that she and DeRyder were married on May 8, 1923, in Elizabeth City, North Carolina. She further stated that she and DeRyder had each been married only one time. All of these statements were subsequently proven to be false. Pursuant to the claim, defendant paid the $5,000 proceeds of the policy to Nannette as decedent's lawful widow. Sometime thereafter, Jennie DeRyder, the plaintiff, claimed that she was DeRyder's lawful widow and entitled to receive the proceeds of the policy. Upon defendant's refusal to honor her claim she instituted this action.

Jennie DeRyder testified that her first marriage was to Henry A. Cross; that this marriage was annulled on June 6, 1924; that she met decedent in 1923, and that she married him on September 24, 1924 in Newburgh (Orange county), New York. Except for a three-month period in 1925, the couple lived in Orange county, New York until 1930. Decedent left Jennie "one time in 1929", but was "picked up" and returned to Newburgh pursuant to an indictment charging him with abandonment and nonsupport of a minor child born of this union. In 1930 DeRyder left Jennie and never lived with her again. Jennie continued to live in Orange county, New York and was living there at the time of the trial.

Jennie further testified that about six or seven months after decedent left her permanently in 1930 she received a newspaper clipping through the mail from an anonymous source which stated that DeRyder had drowned while swimming. At first she did not think that the information contained in the clipping was correct, but after "some years went by" she believed that decedent was dead. However, she did not preserve the news article, and she never obtained any other information to substantiate it. On June 14, 1941, she married a man named Bulson.

In April, 1945, DeRyder, accompanied by Nannette, visited Jennie at her home in New York. (DeRyder and Nannette were not married at the time.) Jennie testified that she was not introduced *605 to Nannette as Mrs. Bulson and that Nannette was not introduced to her as DeRyder's wife. She said "There was no introduction whatsoever, not by any last names. There were no last names mentioned. It was Jennie and Nannette." However, she also said: "That was Nannette and she was expecting at that time. So I knew it must have been his wife or something, or I don't know what it was." She further testified that this was the first time that she had seen DeRyder since he left her in 1930; that it was the first time since receiving the news clipping that she knew him to be alive, and that she did not do anything about her marriage to Bulson after learning that DeRyder was alive because "it was too late." Bulson died sometime after DeRyder and Nannette visited Jennie, but Jennie continued to go by the name of Mrs.

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