Haley v. Metropolitan Life Insurance Company

434 S.W.2d 7
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 24, 1968
Docket32863
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 434 S.W.2d 7 (Haley v. Metropolitan Life Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haley v. Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, 434 S.W.2d 7 (Mo. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

DOERNER, Commissioner.

At the time of his death on August 8, 1965 Carl Haley, Sr., a resident of the City of St. Louis, was a federal employee covered in the amount of $6,000 by a group life insurance policy which the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company had issued to the United States Civil Service Commission pursuant to the Federal Employees Group Life Insurance Act, 5 U.S.C.A. § 8701 et seq. No beneficiary was named in the certificate issued to him. Carl Haley, Jr., concededly a legitimate son of the insured, demanded payment of the proceeds, as did cross-claimants Adele Long, Earl Lee, and Jackie Dentman, a minor, all of whom claimed to be children of the insured born out of wedlock. Carl Haley, Jr., hereafter called plaintiff, instituted this action against Metropolitan, which admitted its liability under the policy, pleaded the conflicting claims, and interpleaded the cross-claimants. Ruth H. Dentman, mother of Jackie Dentman, a minor, was appointed her guardian ad litem. Separate cross-claims were filed by the three cross-claimants in which each claimed a share of the proceeds as a natural child of the in *9 sured. The validity of those claims was denied by the plaintiff.

Title 5 U.S.C.A. § 8705 provides in part that when an insured employee dies without having designated a beneficiary the proceeds shall be paid to the person or persons surviving him in the following order:

“Second, if there is no designated beneficiary, to the widow or widower of the employee.
“Third, if none of the above, to the child or children of the employee and descendants of deceased children by representation.”

That statutory provision was also incorporated in the certificate issued to the insured.

Haley was not married at the time of his death, and there are no descendants of any child who predeceased him. Thus the issues which were contested below were two-fold, one of fact and the other of law: (1) whether one or more of the cross-claimants was a natural child of the insured; and (2), if so, whether he or she was a “child” of the insured within the meaning of that word as used in the foregoing statutory provision, and hence entitled to share in the proceeds of the insurance. Issue being thus joined, a trial was held, the case taken under submission, and counsel for each litigant was requested by the trial chancellor to prepare and submit findings of fact and conclusions of law. The transcript contains those submitted on behalf of plaintiff and those filed on behalf of Jackie Dentman. In his judgment and decree the chancellor adopted those of plaintiff, rejected the claims of all three cross-claimants, and ordered $250 of the fund paid to counsel for Metropolitan as their attorney’s fee, $250 to former counsel of plaintiff pursuant to a stipulation previously filed, and the balance to plaintiff. Only Jackie Dentman has appealed, and the judgment has thus become final as to cross-claimants Adele Long and Earl Lee.

In her brief Jackie urges us to decide in her favor precisely the same issues raised below, namely, that she is a natural child of the insured, and as such entitled to a share of the fund. So far as the factual issue, it is pertinent to point out that in a case of this nature, “* * * while we give due deference to the findings of the trial chancellor, we cannot escape the duty and responsibility placed upon us to arrive at our own conclusions as to the weight and value of the evidence and determine the facts accordingly. * * *” Cruwell v. Vaughn, Mo., 353 S.W.2d 616, 624; Ferguson v. Kindle, Mo., 396 S.W.2d 626, 629. That would seem to be particularly true where, as in this case, the findings of fact submitted by plaintiff and adopted by the court are replete with numerous findings which are wholly unsupported by the evidence. For example: it is stated therein :hat the evidence showed that Earl Lee was born in the wedlock of his mother and one Howard Lee, and that his birth certificate, signed and certified by his mother and introduced in evidence, showed that he was the son of Howard Lee. There is not a shred of evidence in the record that Earl Lee was born in wedlock to Howard Lee and his wife; and no birth certificate of Earl Lee was ever referred to, much less introduced in evidence. Another example: It is stated in the findings that “* * * Earl Lee has been convicted of a felony; Jackie Dentman’s mother admitted adultery; and Adell (sic) Long has three illegitimate children of her own.” Again, there is not a scintilla of evidence in the record that Earl Lee was convicted of a felony; Mrs. Dentman testified that she cohabitated with Carl Haley, Sr., the insured, and that he was the father of Jackie, but both she and the insured were not married at the time and while their cohabitation may have been immoral it was not adulterous; and while there was a reference in plaintiff’s testimony to Adele Long having two children, there is absolutely no support in the record for the finding that they were illegitimate.

After a careful review of all of the evidence we have concluded that the weight of the evidence is strongly against *10 the finding of the trial chancellor upon the factual issue, and we find that Jackie Dentman is the natural daughter of Carl Haley, Sr., the insured. The evidence of Jackie showed that Mrs. Dentman, her mother, and Carl Haley, Sr., began to live together in 1956 and that Jackie was born on May 18, 1957; that while Mrs. Dent-man was pregnant Haley told his cousin, Mrs. Cleo Gratz, that Mrs. Dentman was carrying his child; that Haley took Mrs. Dentman to the hospital during the time she was receiving pre-natal care, took her to the hospital for her confinement, came to the hospital to see Jackie after she was born, and brought Mrs. Dentman and Jackie back to his home in St. Louis where they continued to reside until Haley and Mrs. Dentman separated in 1959. Mrs. Gratz, and Charles E. White, a nephew of Haley’s, as well as James Mantia and Robert Pope, friends of Haley’s, all testified that Haley had repeatedly stated to them on various occasions that Jackie was his daughter. Mrs. Gratz related that Jackie attended family gatherings; that Jackie has always been regarded and treated as a member of the family; and that she has invited Jackie to her home and given her presents since Haley’s death. White testified that Haley brought Jackie to his mother’s home and told him he bought Jackie’s clothes and gave her money for her tuition at a Catholic school. Mrs. Dentman testified that Haley was Jackie’s father, and that after she and Haley separated in 1959, Haley until the time of his death contributed $10 or $15 a week for the support of Jackie and paid her tuition at St. Nicholas School.

Plaintiff relied 'primarily on Jackie’s birth certificate, bearing Mrs. Dentman’s signature, in which her former husband, Johnnie Dentman, was named as Jackie’s father. However, Mrs. Dentman denied that she had told the attending physician that Johnnie Dentman was Jackie’s father and insisted she had told him Haley was the father. Her uncontroverted testimony was that she and Dentman had separated in 1948 and had not thereafter had intercourse; that Dentman had been in the Army in Japan for seven and a half years before Jackie was born in 1957; and that they were divorced in 1955. A copy of that decree was introduced in evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
434 S.W.2d 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haley-v-metropolitan-life-insurance-company-moctapp-1968.