Henderson v. First Nat. Bank of Birmingham

159 So. 212, 229 Ala. 658, 1935 Ala. LEXIS 41
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 17, 1935
Docket6 Div. 640.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 159 So. 212 (Henderson v. First Nat. Bank of Birmingham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Henderson v. First Nat. Bank of Birmingham, 159 So. 212, 229 Ala. 658, 1935 Ala. LEXIS 41 (Ala. 1935).

Opinion

*660 THOMAS, Justice.

This is the second appeal. The appeal from the decree overruling demurrers to the bill as amended is reported as American-Traders Nat. Bank et al. v. Henderson, 222 Ala. 426, 133 So. 36. The several aspects of the bill 'were there stated to be: (1) To reform an insurance policy on the life of complainant’s intestate, issued by the American Central Life Insurance Company, in which A. W. Bell, employer, is named as the beneficiary; (2) to declare a constructive trust arising from the fraud of Bell, alleged to have been practiced on Henderson, complainant’s intestate, when the application for the insurance was made; and (3) to redeem the policy from a pledge made to secure an indebtedness due from Henderson to Bell and for an accounting to ascertain the sum of the indebtedness secured by such pledge.

The bill was subsequently amended to the effect (1) that Bell feloniously brought about the unlawful killing of Henderson and thereby forfeited all interest as the named beneficiary under the policy, and which interest complainant averred “reverted by reason of such fraud and felony to the estate of S. H. Henderson” ; (2) that, if the policy was not taken as security for an existing debt, it was taken for the purpose of securing some indebtedness claimed by Bell against Henderson; and (3) that the fact that Bell was named as beneficiary would not avoid “an accounting and a redemption of the policy from any debt which the policy secured.”

Respondent’s answer was made a cross-bill denying the material allegations of the bill as amended; asked the court to award the respondent interest on the amount involved during the pendency of the suit. The complainant answered the cross-bill, denying the wrongful interposition of a claim to the proceeds of said insurance policy.

During the pendency of the litigation, the American Central Life Insurance Company, by agreement, deposited the money in the bank to stand in lieu of the insurance policies, and the final decree directed distribution of this fund contrary to the insistence of the complainant, and denied the allowance of interest as sought in the respondent’s cross-bill.

The law of the case was settled on first appeal. American-Traders’ Nat. Bank v. Henderson, 222 Ala. 426, 133 So. 36. It was established by the admissions of R. P. Henderson, son of decedent S. H. Henderson, and by his letter to the agent of the Pacific Mutual Insurance Company, of date of January 22, 1929, some months after his father’s (the insured) death, that the son knew of the policies of insurance in question and that they were payable to A. W. Bell, as employer, that S..H. Henderson’s estate was not designated as a beneficiary therein, and that he sought to prevent collection of the insurance by the beneficiary designated on the ground of fraud in the procurement of the insurance. It was also insisted that Bell had *661 no insurable interest in the life of S. H. Henderson. -After the death of Bell, July 6, .1929, R. P. Henderson advanced the claim, as indicated, that-said Bell misrepresented or fraudulently concealed from S. H. Henderson, the contents of the application for insurance to Bell, and that the policies were payable to him (Bell) and not to Henderson’s estate; that is, the son — “the moving spirit of this litigation” — several years prior to writing to Fitts on January 22, 1929, and before the death of Bell on July 6,1929, knew the nature and contents of the application for insurance to Bell, and how the policies of insurance were made payable.

It is stated in the decree that—

“If R. P. Henderson knew * * * that the policy of insurance was payable to A. W. Bell, as employer, and it conclusively appears that he did know this because he so stated in his letter to Mr. Fitts * * * and if he knew that four years prior thereto A. W. Bell misrepresented the contents of the application for the insurance, it is inconceivable to me that he would have kept this fact concealed from everybody in the world, so far as this evidence shows, until after A. W. Bell’s death on the 6th day of July, 1929, especially in view of the fact that R. P. Henderson was making such strenuous efforts to collect the proceeds of the policy, or to prevent A. W. Bell from collecting the proceeds of the 'policy. This convinces me that the alleged conversation between A. W. Bell and S. H. Henderson about the application for insurance did not occur. * * *
“Notwithstanding R. P. Henderson’s assertion that he did not know how the policies were payable until he got the information through his attorney * * * the court is forced to the conclusion by his admissions and by the letter that he wrote Mr. Fitts, that he knew-, in January, 1929, that the policy was payable to A. W. Bell, as Employer; that although he was making strenuous efforts to have the policy collected for the benefit of the Henderson Estate and to prevent Bell from collecting the policy, he never intimated or claimed that A. W. Bell had misrepresented the contents of the application for the policy that his father executed some four years previously, until some several months after A. W. Bell died.
“In addition to this very disparaging circumstance, R. P. Henderson testified very positively that his father’s signature to the application for insurance was procured along about the 19th of February, 1925. The wit-mess was positive that the application for insurance was executed in the month of February, 1925. All the other witnesses who testify about the execution of the application for the policy of insurance unequivocally state that' S. H. Henderson’s signature was procured to the application sometime in February, 1925. The first application was dated January 14, 1925, and bears the stamp of the insurance' company indicating that it was received at Indianapolis, Indiana, on January 19,1925. The second application is dated January 21, 1925, and was received at the Home Office of the insurance company on February 5, 1925. It was, therefore, impossible for A. W. Bell to have talked to S. H. Henderson about the application for insurance along about February 19, 1925. Nobody claims that there was more than one conversation between A. W. Bell and S. H. Henderson about signing an application for insurance.”

This view of the lower court is supported by the evidence when considered as a whole. This phase of the evidence, that A. W. Bell did not misrepresent the contents of the application for insurance to S. H. Henderson, was supported by Mr. Brower as a witness, who testified that R. P. Henderson made no claim to him representing the other insurance company (Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Company); that S. H. Henderson’s signature to the applications for insurance had been secured by a false statement or misrepresentation on the part of A. W.

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Bluebook (online)
159 So. 212, 229 Ala. 658, 1935 Ala. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henderson-v-first-nat-bank-of-birmingham-ala-1935.