Flournoy v. Sun Life Assur. Co. of Canada

161 So. 646
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 4, 1935
DocketNo. 5064.
StatusPublished

This text of 161 So. 646 (Flournoy v. Sun Life Assur. Co. of Canada) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flournoy v. Sun Life Assur. Co. of Canada, 161 So. 646 (La. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

The Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada, on January 22, 1932, issued to the Missouri Pacific Railway Company a group policy wherein and whereby, on the terms and conditions therein expressed, and for the premiums therein fixed, the lives of all of its employees eligible thereto under the policy’s terms were assured. When this policy became effective, Thomas Flournoy, colored, was, and had been for many years immediately prior thereto, in the railway company’s employ. He was eligible to the benefits and protection the group or master policy was intended to provide, and, accordingly, the insurance company issued to him its formal certificate of assurance for $2,000, in which his wife, Katie M. Flournoy, was designated beneficiary.

The master policy contains the following stipulation touching the assured’s right to change the beneficiary: “XIII. Change of Beneficiary. — The employee shall have the right to change the beneficiary or beneficiaries at will, and this from time to time, by written request on the company’s form furnished for that purpose, provided his interest in this policy be not then assigned, but such change shall take effect only upon receipt of *647 such request at the Head Office of the company.”

The certificate issued to Tom Flournoy contains the following stipulations relative to the change of beneficiary:

“ * * * Any right given by the policy to the employee to change the beneficiary shall continue during the period mentioned in (3) above.”
"Change of Beneficiary. — Whenever a change of beneficiary is required this certificate together with a completed Change of Beneficiary Form should be given to the employer, who will forward both to the Assurance Company in order that the change may be recorded. * * * ”

In Hay, 1933, it was discovered that Flour-noy was in advanced stages of pulmonary tuberculosis. Thereafter, he rendered no service to the railway company, and in February, 1934, after furnishing the assured with required proof, he was pronounced totally and permanently disabled to perform any work and entitled to the “Total and Permanent Disability Benefits” provided in the policy. Two payments on that account were made to him before his death on June 14, 1934. He died in a hospital of the railway company, in Alexander, Ark.

On October 30, 1933, Flournoy changed the beneficiary in his certificate to his mother, Mattie Cyrus, and on November 17th thereafter, he substituted his wife as beneficiary, displacing his mother as such, and on May 10th, he again named his mother as beneficiary. To effect this change in each instance, he signed formal request to the as-surer to make the change, and in each instance the change was approved and duly indorsed on the certificate which had been sent to the assurer for that purpose. The last change was approved on June 4th, ten days before Flournoy died.

Katie Flournoy, surviving wife of the deceased and original beneficiary of the certificate of assurance, instituted this suit against the assurance company and Mattie Cyrus to recover the full amount of insurance stipulated therein. In her original petition, she attacks the validity of the last change of beneficiary on the grounds, viz.: (1) That the assured on that date and for several months prior thereto was mentally incapable of making such change; and (2) that when so afflicted, Mattie Cyras, his mother, visited him while confined in a hospital and, through fraud and trickery, induced him to change the beneficiary to herself, at a time when he was not in a mental condition to realize what he was doing.:

Alter defendants answered the original-petition, filing therewith a copy" of the master policy, plaintiff filed a supplemental and amended petition wherein she alleged that because of the fact that she was not in possession of the certificate of insurance when her counsel prepared her original petition, he, for lack of definite information as to its provisions, in some respects, alleged in said original petition that the last change of beneficiary under the policy “was procured through fraud and trickery,” thereby seemingly, though not intentionally, conceding that the assured had the right to effect such a change at will; that after viewing the copy of the policy filed by defendánt, and learning therefrom that the assured did not reserve the right to change the beneficiary at will, and she having been originally designated beneficiary, and not having consented to -the change, the vested right accruing therefrom to her was unaffected by the attempted change and, therefore, the proceeds of the policy belong to her. In this (first) amended petition, she alleges in the alternative; that should the court find and hold that deceased had the right, under the policy contract, to change the beneficiary at will, the attempted change was abortive because of his mental incapacity at the time to do so. In a second supplemental petition, it is alleged that "she learned for the first time from the assurer’s answer that her deceased husband became totally disabled and had been so rated by the assurer, and that it had acknowledged liability to him on that account for the full amount of the policy, and said amount thereby became due and payable to deceased,' but that the assurer claimed the right under the policy to elect to satisfy its liability thereunder by making 60 equal payments of $36 each, one of which, it is admitted, was made prior to the assured’s death; the balance being deposited in the registry of the court to be paid over to the successful contestant herein.

In view of these facts and circumstances, she alleges and contends, in the alternative, that she is entitled to three-fourths of the proceeds of the policy because when the assured recognized deceased’s total disability and elected to pay him the full- amount of. the policy in monthly installments, said amount then became due and payable to him, and therefore became his property, and fell into his succession' at his death; that being community property, one-half of it devolved upon her, as widow, and the other half was *648 inherited by her and the mother in equal proportions.

Defendants deny the right of plaintiff to recover the proceeds, or any part thereof, of the insurance money in controversy for any reason or on any account. They affirmatively aver that the assured reserved the right in the insurance certificate, as was recognized and provided for in the master policy, to change the beneficiary therein, at will; that he did so at a time he well knew the effect and significance of his acts, then being in full possession of his mental faculties; that the change was made in due form and was approved by the assurer prior to the death of assured; and they argue that the fact that the assurer, in keeping with the provisions of the policy, was obligated to, .and did, agree to pay deceased the amount of the policy in monthly installments, after his total disability had been established, did not strip said insurance of its character' as such, and did not thereby vest in the assured an unconditional and indefeasible property right to the total sum of said installments, such a property right as might be transmitted to his widow and heirs at his death.

There was judgment for defendants, as by them prayed for, and plaintiff appealed.

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Bluebook (online)
161 So. 646, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flournoy-v-sun-life-assur-co-of-canada-lactapp-1935.