Easterling v. Weedman

922 S.W.2d 735, 54 Ark. App. 22, 1996 Ark. App. LEXIS 366
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedMay 29, 1996
DocketCA 95-014
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 922 S.W.2d 735 (Easterling v. Weedman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Easterling v. Weedman, 922 S.W.2d 735, 54 Ark. App. 22, 1996 Ark. App. LEXIS 366 (Ark. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

Wendell L. Griffen, Judge.

Following a trial on May 25 and 26, 1994, in the Pulaski Circuit Court, Fifth Division, a jury returned verdicts upon written interrogatories that Mark Weedman, Sr., deceased, intended that his son Mark Weedman, Jr., be the beneficiary of a $200,000 annuity issued by Financial Benefit Life Insurance Company, and that Douglas Easterling, the insurance agent who sold the annuity, negligently failed to implement that intent. The jury also found that Mark Weedman, Jr., was entitled to recover $225,692.04 in damages from Easterling because of his negligence concerning the Financial Benefit Life Insurance annuity. The jury further found that Mark Weedman, Sr., intended for Mark Weedman, Jr., to be the beneficiary of a $300,000 annuity issued by Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, and that Douglas Easterling had failed to implement that intent. The jury assessed Weedman’s damages for that negligence at $332,718.42. The trial court entered judgment in favor of Weedman and against Easterling for $558,410.46 in damages, prejudgment interest of $120,058.15, plus court costs of $45.00.

Easterling has appealed from the judgment entered against him and in favor of Weedman upon the verdicts, and contends that the trial judge erred by excluding proffered testimony concerning the decedent’s intent to give Weedman anything. Easterling also asserts that the trial judge erred by admitting into evidence a probate court estate inventory regarding the Estate of Inza Weedman, the decedent’s widow, for the purpose of proving Weedman’s damages. On cross-appeal, Weedman contends that the trial judge erred by granting summary judgment in favor of Financial Benefit Life Insurance Company and by granting a pretrial motion for dismissal filed by Metropolitan Life Insurance Company.

We hold that the trial court erred by excluding testimony from Easterling, Delores Waymire, and Hazel Cruthirds concerning the decedent’s intent not to give anything to Weedman, and that it erred by receiving the probate inventory into evidence. As to the cross-appeal, we hold that the trial court committed no error in granting the dismissal motion filed by cross-appellee Metropolitan Life Insurance Company. However, we hold that the trial court erred when it granted summary judgment in favor of Financial Benefit Life Insurance Company. Therefore, we reverse and remand for new trial as to Easterling’s direct appeal, reverse and remand for new trial as to Weedman’s cross-appeal regarding Financial Benefit Life Insurance Company, and affirm as to Weedman’s cross-appeal regarding Metropolitan Life Insurance Company.

FACTUAL HISTORY

In October 1987, Mark Weedman, Sr., purchased a $300,000 annuity from Metropolitan Life Insurance Company. In December 1988, the decedent purchased a $200,000 flexible premium annuity from Financial Benefit Life Insurance Company. Douglas Easterling sold both contracts to the decedent in his capacity as a licensed insurance agent appointed by Metropolitan Life Insurance Company and Financial Benefit Life Insurance Company. In January 1989, the decedent exercised the right to receive payments under the Metropolitan annuity. Mark Weedman, Sr., died February 17, 1990, survived by his widow, Inza Weedman, and his son, Mark Weedman, Jr., Inza Weedman, the decedent’s fifth wife and Mark Weedman’s step-mother, died on March 21, 1990, slightly more than a month later, and was survived by her sister, Hazel Cruthirds, and her brother, William (Bill) Selby.

Mark Weedman, Sr., died intestate, and Inza Weedman inherited the bulk of his estate. After Mark Weedman, Sr., died, his son discovered that the proceeds from the Metropolitan Life and Financial Benefit annuities were paid to Inza Weedman. This lawsuit arose from the dispute over the proceeds from those annuities and the confusion that exists because of the alleged negligence by Eas-terling in completing the annuity applications. Mark Weedman, Jr., is identified on each application as the annuitant (the person by whose life the term of the contract is measured). The application for the Financial Benefit flexible premium annuity contains the name of Mark Weedman or Inza Weedman as the beneficiary, and does not indicate which Mark Weedman was intended (Mark Weedman, Sr., or Mark Weedman, Jr.). That application listed Mark D. Weedman as the annuitant and contains a signature purporting to be that of Mark Weedman as annuitant. Easterling signed appellee Weedman’s name as annuitant without Weedman’s knowledge or consent. Although he listed appellee Weedman as the annuitant, Easterling inserted the decedent Weedman’s social security number on the Financial Benefit annuity application in the space that provided for the annuitant’s social security number.

Easterling also prepared a request for an optional income plan for the Metropolitan annuity in January 1989. That request listed “Mark Weedman” as payee, and listed Mark or Inza Weedman, father and stepmother of the payee, as contingent payees. It also showed the payee’s date of birth to be 1-11-27 (that of .appellee Weedman), but showed the payee’s address as 715 North University in Little Rock, an address where appellee Weedman had not lived since 1950. The request that Easterling prepared contains the purported signature of Mark Weedman as payee, and his correct birth date. However, appellee Weedman denied signing the request, consenting to his signature being placed on the application, or knowing that the request had been made. He also never received monthly payments from the Metropolitan annuity.

Appellee Weedman, acting in his personal capacity and as personal representative of the estate of decedent Weedman, sued Easterling, Metropolitan Life, and Financial Benefit in an declaratory judgment action, and alleged that because of the negligence, fraud, and misrepresentation of Easterling in his capacity as agent for Metropolitan Life and Financial Benefit, all benefits payable under the annuities had been wrongfully paid to other parties, including the administrator of Inza Weedman’s estate. Appellee Weedman contended that the benefits payable under the annuities were intended by decedent Weedman to go to appellee Weedman after the deaths of Mark Weedman, Sr., and Inza Weedman, and he requested that the court determine the rights to those benefits. Alternately, appellee Weedman contended that the annuities should be reformed to carry out the intent of the owner (decedent Weed-man) that appellee Weedman receive the benefits upon the death of Mark Weedman, Sr., and Inza Weedman. Easterling denied the allegations of fraud, misrepresentation, and negligence. Financial Benefit and Metropolitan Life denied liability to appellee Weedman on theories of vicarious liability. As trial approached, Financial Benefit filed a motion for summary judgment, and Metropolitan Life filed a motion to dismiss. The trial court granted both motions. For sake of clarity, we shall first address the issues in the appeal, followed by those presented by the cross-appeal.

EASTERLING’S APPEAL

Hearsay Testimony.

Easterling argues that the trial court erred by excluding his testimony concerning whether the decedent Weedman intended for appellee Weedman to receive the proceeds from the annuities.

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Bluebook (online)
922 S.W.2d 735, 54 Ark. App. 22, 1996 Ark. App. LEXIS 366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/easterling-v-weedman-arkctapp-1996.