Holmes v. the Met. Life Ins. Co.

3 Tenn. App. 80, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 73
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 15, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 3 Tenn. App. 80 (Holmes v. the Met. Life Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holmes v. the Met. Life Ins. Co., 3 Tenn. App. 80, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 73 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

CROWNOVER, J.

The original bill was filed in this cause by Amanda Holmes against the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, *81 Joseph Gooch, a minor, and Melinda Dillard, his guardian, to recover on $1,000 insurance policy on the life of Frank Holmes.

The bill alleged that a policy for $1,000 was issued on the life of Frank Holmes and was made payable to his step-son, Joseph Gooch; that the policy contained a clause reserving the right of the assured to change the beneficiary at any time he desired; that sometime after the issuance of said policy, the assured desired to change the beneficiary and to substitute his mother, the complainant, Amanda Holmes, and in pursuance of this desire, he filled out and signed a blank notifying the Company of the desired change and delivered the same together with the policy to the defendant Company’s agent to be sent to the Home Office of the Company for the required endorsement of change on said policy; that the Company or its agent had negligently kept said policy, and that, after her son’s death, the same was found in or behind -the agent’s desk in the local office of the Company at Nashville, Tennessee; and that whether the Company had actually endorsed on the policy the change of beneficiary was immaterial, as the assured liad done all that was required of him and all that was necessary to effect the change, and therefore, she was entitled to the proceeds of said policy. She further alleged that the said Insurance Company was about to pay the proceeds of said policy to the original beneficiary, Joseph Gooch, and she asked for an injunction restraining the payment to Joseph Gooch, and for a decree for the proceeds of said policy.

The defendant, Joseph Gooch, answered and denied that a change of beneficiary had been effected as required by the policy, as no written notice of the change had been given the Company at its Home Office and the change endorsed on the policy as required. He insisted that his interest as beneficiary in said policy had become a vested right on the death of the assured, and that the Insurance Company could not waive that right, and that whatever had been done in attempting to change the beneficiary had not been done in accordance with the restrictions of the policy. He further insisted that the delivery of the policy to the agent, DeHart, was ineffectual to change the beneficiary, as DeHart became the agent of the assured, and if he was guilty of any negligence that negligence must be imputed to the assured as the agent acted in the matter for the assured and not for the Company.

.The defendant, Insurance Company, filed an answer and cross-bill in the nature of an interpleader, in which it admitted that the policy on the life of Frank Holmes was in force' on the date of his death, and that it had been informed that Frank Holmes had expressed to a former agent of the Company a desire to change the beneficiary, and that said agent, at his direction, obtained the policy but informed him that he must sign a formal application to change *82 tlie beneficiary; that the formal application was not filled out or signed by said assured, although he had expressed a desire to change the beneficiary by substituting his mother, Amanda Holmes; and that the policy was in the office of the Company at Nashville awaiting the necessary completion of the change of beneficiary at the time of the death of the assured. The defendant admitted its liability and desire to pay the proceeds of the policy to the party rightly entitled thereto, but alleged that a controversy had arisen between the parties as to who was the real beneficiary, therefore, the said Insurance Company asked to be permitted to pay the proceeds of the policy into the court and to be discharged.

Later, by agreement, an order was entered permitting the Insurance Company to pay the money into court in this cause and the bill was dismissed as to said Company. This order was entered upon agreement that none of the rights of the parties were to be prejudiced thereby.

Several depositions were taken and read at the hearing to the Chancellor, who decreed that the change of beneficiary had been effected in contemplation of equity, and awarded complainant a decree for the proceeds of the policy.

The defendant, Gooch, excepted, appealed to this court, and has assigned six errors, but all of them go to the one proposition that the court erred in decreeing the proceeds of said policy to complainant, Amanda Holmes, because the assured had not changed the beneficiary in substantial accordance with the provisions of the policy; it being insisted that the • assured had not done all that was reasonably in his power to formally effect a change of beneficiary necessary to invoke the doctrine that equity will treat that as having been done which should have been done.

The assured, Frank Holmes, procured the defendant, Insurance Company, to issue a policy for $1,000 on his life payable to his stepson, Joseph Gooch, a minor, which policy was in force at the date of his death on October 15, 1922.

The said policy had a printed clause about the change of beneficiary as follows:

“This Policy is written with the right of the Insured to change the Beneficiary. When such right has been reserved, and if there be no written assignment of this Policy on file with the Company, the Insured may (while the Policy is in force) designate a. new beneficiary, with or without reserving right of change thereafter, by filing written notice thereof at the Home Office of the Company accompanied by the Policy for suitable endorsement. Such change shall take effect upon the endorsement of the same on the Policy by the Company and *83 not before. If any beneficiary shall die before Insured the interest of such beneficiary shall vest in the Insured.”

The policy was issued on November 12, 1921, and had been in the possession of Melinda Dillard, guardian of the minor Joseph Gooch, but in the summer of 1922, the assured desired to make a change of the beneficiary and to substitute his mother, Amanda Holmes, and told his mother, and his sisters and others of his intention. He saw the Insurance Company’s agent, a Mr. DeHart, and told him of the desired change. The agent informed him fully in detail of the requirements of the policy as to the change of beneficiary, that it was necessary to sign a written request and to have it sent to the Home Office accompanied by the policy for endorsement of the change.

The assured had some trouble in regaining possession of the policy, and in the meantime, he decided to remove to the city of St. Louis, Missouri. After regaining possession of the policy he left it with Belle Smith to be delivered to said agent, and then left for St. Louis in June, 1922, where he remained until his death.

Belle Smith delivered the policy to said agent, DeHart, who placed the same in his desk where it was found after the- death of the assured. No written request for change of the beneficiary was made to the Company at its Home Office in New York City or elsewhere, and no change of beneficiary was endorsed on said policy.

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Related

Republic National Life Insurance v. Sackmann
324 F.2d 756 (Sixth Circuit, 1963)
Mutual Savings Life Insurance v. Cowan
188 F. Supp. 148 (E.D. Tennessee, 1960)
Holmes v. Interstate Life & Accident Ins.
197 S.W.2d 551 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1946)
Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Bryant
191 S.W.2d 449 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1945)
National Life & Accident Ins. v. Bryant
179 S.W.2d 937 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1943)

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Bluebook (online)
3 Tenn. App. 80, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holmes-v-the-met-life-ins-co-tennctapp-1926.