Elledge v. Aetna Life Ins. Co.

406 S.W.2d 374, 241 Ark. 106, 1966 Ark. LEXIS 1116
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 3, 1966
Docket5-3955
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 406 S.W.2d 374 (Elledge v. Aetna Life Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Elledge v. Aetna Life Ins. Co., 406 S.W.2d 374, 241 Ark. 106, 1966 Ark. LEXIS 1116 (Ark. 1966).

Opinions

Carleton Harris-, Chief Justice.

Aetna Life Insurance Company, on August 1,1929, issued Policy P648527, in the amount of $5,000.00, and on October 21, 1934, issued Policy P722610, in the amount of $6,000.00, upon -the life of William Gustavus Elledge, Helen N. Elledge, wife, being named as beneficiary. Some time in 1956 Mr. Elledge became disabled; under terms of the policy, premiums were waived, and these policies were in full force and effect on July 12, 1964, when Mr. Elledge died.

Pertinent facts in this litigation are as follows:

On May 30,1959, Mr. and Mrs. Elledge entered into a property settlement agreement in contemplation of divorce, in which these two policies, along with other policies, not here at issue, are referred to as follows:

“It is mutually agreed and understood that as to the insurance policies described in item No. 6 above, each of same is on the life of Husband and have as beneficiary Wife. It is further agreed and understood that Husband will not change the beneficiary on any of said policies and will not borrow on same nor surrender same for cash value, they being hereby considered and designated as the property of Wife.”

The parties were subsequently divorced in Monroe County, Arkansas, the decree incorporating the property settlement agreement, and reciting

“ * * * that the property settlement agreement hereinabove set out be, and hereby is, approved and ratified in all respects and is hereby declared by the court to be finally conclusive of any and all property rights between the parties hereto.”

Thereafter, in March, 1961, Elledge, who had previously obtained loans from the company on these two policies,1 made a request that Aetna grant to him the maximum loan on each policy. The company complied with this request, and increased the loan on P722610 by $2,258.91, and also increased the loan on P648527 by $2,048.27.

. ' On December 12, 1961, and January 8, 1962, Elledge directed letters to the insurance company, advising that he desired to change the beneficiary of these policies, and the company sent him Chance of Beneficiary forms. He also advised that his wife had the policies. Elledge completed the forms, naming Ruby E. Patton, one of the appellees herein, as the new beneficiary. Aetna declined to make the change until the policies were surrendered for endorsement. This was never done, and the endorsements, changing beneficiaries, were never made.

On December 18,1963, Mrs. Elledge wi’ote to Aetna, advising that the policies, here in litigation, had been assigned to her as of July 9, 1959, and Aetna promptly informed appellant that it was necessary that a certified ■copy of the property settlement be sent to it, if the company was to be governed by the terms of the agreement. On February 10, 1964, Mrs. Elledge mailed a certified copy of the settlement to the insurance company, and receipt was subsequently acknowledged.

On July 6, 1964, appellant instituted suit against Mr. Elledge in the Monroe County Chancery Court, alleging that Elledge had violated the property agreement, inter alia2 by borrowing upon the policies, and by attempting to change the beneficiary. Mrs. Elledge asked that Mr. Elledge be held in contempt of court, because ■of his acts, and further, that all property owned by plaintiff and defendant be sold, and she be awarded $24,-'000.00 out of his portion of the proceeds from the sale to compensate her for her loss due to the acts complained of. -Six days after this suit was filed, Mr. Elledge ■died, and on August 19, appellant instituted an action against appellee, Atena Insurance Company, seeking recovery for the face amount of the policies herein (except for the first loans obtained by Elledge during the time •of the marriage), together with penalty, interest, and a reasonable attorneys’ fee. Aetna answered, setting out that Ruby Patton was claiming to be beneficiary under the policies, and the company. offered to pay into the registry of the court the difference between the face value of said policies and the amount of money due the company, because of the loans made to Elledge. It asked that Mrs. Patton be made a cross-defendant. Mrs. Patton then pleaded that Elledge had changed the beneficiary, and she prayed that the proceeds of both policies, less the amount of indebtedness to Aetna, on account of the loans, be paid to her; she also asserted that the purported property settlement between Elledge and appellant was not binding on either Aetna or herself, and the contract was ineffectual as an assignment of deceased’s rights. On trial, the court found that Mrs. Elledge was entitled to the proceeds of Policy P722610, less the amount of indebtedness due Aetna on the two loans made by her ex-husband, and further found that Mrs. Patton was due the proceeds from Policy P648527, likewise less the amount of indebtedness due Aetna because of the loans. Prom the judgment so entered, Mrs. Elledge appeals from that portion finding that Mrs. Patton was due the proceeds under Policy P648527, and also appeals from that portion of the judgment allowing her only $2,835.57 under Policy P722610, instead of the face value of the policy (less the first loan). Mrs. Patton cross-appeals from that portion of the judgment finding that Mrs. Elledge was due the proceeds (after deductions to Aetna) from Policy P722610.

We will first dispose of appellant’s contention that Aetna, in tendering the amount due under the policies, was not entitled to deduct the amounts of the second loans made to Mr. Elledge. This contention, of course, is based upon the argument of Mrs. Elledge that the policies had been assigned to her; that Elledge therefore had no right to borrow on these policies, and it is contended that the company made these loans at its own risk, since they were made without the policies being sent in to the company office.

In the “Policy Loan Agreement” executed by Mr. Elledge when applying for the second loans on the policies, the statement appears, “I hereby certify that I am not involved in any insolvency or bankruptcy proceedings. I further certify that this policy is not now assigned or transferred to any person or party except as followsA blank space is then provided. On these particular applications, no words are set out in the blank space. Mrs. Elledge contends that this omission should have raised the suspicion of the company to the extent that it should have made inquiry (as to whether any assignment had been made) before granting the loans.

It is difficult to see how the word, “none,” would have added anything to the applications. The blank was only required to be completed m case an assigmnent or transfer hacl been made (by setting out the assignment or transfer), and it might well be considered that the failure to answer at all had the same effect as to write in the Avord, “none.” It must be remembered that the validity of this argument depends on whether the company owed a duty to Mrs. Elledge. This will be subsequently discussed. It is also argued that the company should have required the policies to be sent in before making the loan. Since this could not have been done, such a requirement, says appellant, would have disclosed the fact (later disclosed when Elledge sought to change beneficiaries) that he did not have the policies, because they had been assigned.

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Related

Elledge v. Aetna Life Ins. Co.
406 S.W.2d 374 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1966)

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Bluebook (online)
406 S.W.2d 374, 241 Ark. 106, 1966 Ark. LEXIS 1116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elledge-v-aetna-life-ins-co-ark-1966.