Haynes v. Warthan

272 S.W.2d 140, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 2151
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 30, 1954
Docket6734
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 272 S.W.2d 140 (Haynes v. Warthan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haynes v. Warthan, 272 S.W.2d 140, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 2151 (Tex. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, Justice.

This litigation involves the right to the proceeds of three life insurance contracts. Pursuant to an agreement of all litigants, the insurance carriers had deposited the proceeds with a trustee to be distributed by the latter upon final adjudication of the issues. A suit on two of the policies was consolidated with another which involved the third policy. This is an appeal from the decree entered in the consolidated action.

Rosa D. Patterson, the wife of H. Patterson, predeceased him some 15 to 30 minutes on August 28, 1950, as a result of injuries received in a common accident. She was the named beneficiary in each of the three insurance policies carried by him at the time. Joe Earl Haynes, her son by a former marriage, was the only child to survive her. H. Patterson was survived by Bobby Dale Patterson and Patricia Ann Patterson, both minors, his children by a former marriage.

*141 In the course of H. Patterson’s employment by the De Laval Separator Company by participating in an employee benefit plan, he was issued a certificate of insurance under Travelers Insurance Company Group Policy No. GA 10959, which was a group accidental death, dismemberment and loss of sight policy. According to his annual wage scale and other provisions of the insurance contract, the death benefits under the policy at the time of his accidental death was recognized by all parties to be $2,500. All the premiums on this policy were paid with' community funds of H. Patterson and Rosa D. Patterson, that is, the premiums were deducted by his employer from the insured’s pay checks' issued to him for labor performed.

Above policy No. GA 10959 contained among its provisions a clause which reads:

“Beneficiary: Indemnity for loss of life of an employee is payable to the beneficiary designated by the employee if' surviving the employee, and otherwise, to the executor or administrator of the employee. All other indemnities of this policy are payable to the insured employee. Any employee insured hereunder may at any time designate a new beneficiary for the indemnity for the loss of life by filing with the employer a written request for such change on forms satisfactory to the company, and such change shall become effective only upon receipt of such request at the home office of the company.”

Grounded on the undisputed evidence that all premiums on this policy had been paid out of his earnings after his marriage to Rosa D. Patterson, that is, out of their community estate, the court concluded that the proceeds of same constituted an asset of the community estate. The.court awarded to J. D. McLaughlin as temporary administrator of the estate of H. Patterson $1,250 and to Hardy Moore as temporary administrator of the estate of Rosa D. Patterson the other half.

At the time of his death, he also carried an insurance policy issued by the Americah National Insurance Company in the face value of $1,000 with double indemnity in the event of the insured’s accidental death, which as a result of his accidental death was of the value of $2,000. A total of $406.-41 premiums had been paid by the insured to carry this one, of which total, the sum of $306,41 had been paid by him prior to his marriage to Rosa D. Patterson; and $100 had been paid out of community funds of. the insured and Rosa D. Patterson.

This policy contained a clause which provided that the indemnity for loss of life is payable to the beneficiary who may be designated in the policy, if surviving, and otherwise to the executor or administrator of the insured. There existed a lien against the policy to secure $198.73 which the court found to be a community debt. The court found the portion of the policy benefits purchased with community funds amounted to $491.40 which after deducting above community debt left $292.67 as an asset of the community estate. The court found that the balance of the policy benefits in the sum of $1,494.79 constituted a part of the insured’s separate estate. J. D. McLaughlin as temporary administrator of insured was awarded $1,641.12, and Hardy Moore as temporary administrator of Rosa D. Patterson was awarded $146.34.

The cross-assignment of appellee J. D. McLaughlin, temporary administrator of the estate of H. Patterson, wherein he asserts error of the trial court in failing to adjudicate that all the proceeds of both above-mentioned policies to be the separate property of the insured is respectfully overruled. Sherman v. Roe, Tex.Sup., 262 S.W.2d 393, 398.

At the time of his death, a certain group life policy No. G6388, issued to the De Laval Separator Company for the use and benefit of its employees, among whom was H. Patterson, and to whom was issued a certificate of insurance in the amount of $2,500, was in full force and effect. The certificate was issued to the insured subsequent to his marriage to Rosa D. Patterson. The premiums on this policy or certificate were all paid with community funds of the insured and- Rosa'D. Patterson)' that is, the premiums were deducted *142 by his employer from the insured’s pay checks issued to him for labor performed.

Based on the trial court’s construction of the beneficiary clause ’ in the master policy No. G6388, next herein set out, the construction of which presents the novel question here, the court awarded to ap-pellee Carl Warthari as guardian of the estate of the two minors the entire proceeds,of the :policy in the sum of $2,500, although reciting, in the decree “that all premiums paid on . said policy were paid from the community earnings of the insured and Rosa D. Patterson, his wife.”

Section 2 in the master policy or contract with De Laval Separator Company pertinent to the disposition of the proceeds of this group life policy, reads

“Modes of SettlementAny claim for death under this policy shall be paid to the. beneficiary designated by. the Employee either- in o'ne amount or in a fixed number of ¡instalments for each One Thousand Dollars according to the following table- upon the written election of the Employer, the first instalment to be paid immediately upon receipt of due proof of death *' * *

“In the event of the death of the beneficiary before payment of the amount of the insurance or of all of the instalments to which the beneficiary may be entitled, either under this provision or under the provision entitled ‘Permanent Total Disability Benefit,’ or in the event that no beneficiary shall have been named, or when the beneficiary is a minor, the amount of the insurance or the remainder of the instalments, as the case may be, shall be paid to the relative by blood or connection by marriage of the insured Employee or to süch other person as the Employer shall designate as equitably entitled to the same.”

Section 6- of the master policy provides that “any employee insured hereunder may designate a new beneficiary at any time by filing with the employer a written request for such change on forms furnished by the Company, but such change shall become effective only upon receipt of such request at. the ,Home Office of the Company.” The certificate issued to insured by his employer provides that “if death shall occur during the. continuance of said policy while the employee.is insured thereunder, the amount.

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Related

Crossley v. Travelers Insurance Co.
314 So. 2d 607 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1975)
Warthan v. Haynes
288 S.W.2d 481 (Texas Supreme Court, 1956)

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Bluebook (online)
272 S.W.2d 140, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 2151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haynes-v-warthan-texapp-1954.