Hooks v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.

171 So. 601
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 11, 1937
DocketNo. 16571.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 171 So. 601 (Hooks v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.) 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
Hooks v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 171 So. 601 (La. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinions

JANVIER, Judge.

When Jeanette Kent died in this city on April 27, 1934, George Hooks, in whose home she had lived intermittently, found, among her meager effects, two policies of insurance which had been issued to her by Metropolitan Life Insurance Company. For some time previous to her death she had not paid premiums on these policies, and, had it not been for the provisions of Act No. 193 of 1906 they would have been worthless.

Hooks, having been advised that, because of the said statute, the policies still had some value, and declaring that since he had paid the burial expenses of the said deceased he was entitled to the proceeds of the policies, presented them to the insurer and made claim thereunder.

The insurer, believing at that time that its liability under the policies was limited 'to the sum of the paid-up values which, at the time of the respective lapses of the policies, the accumulated reserves would have purchased, and believing, also, that Hooks had paid, or obligated himself to pay the burial expenses of the assured, tendered to him $73.53 as the full amount due as the sum of the paid-up values of the two policies. He accepted this. Later the Supreme Court of Louisiana, in Succession of Watson v. Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, 183 La. 25, 162 So. 790, held that under such circumstances the *602 reserve accumulated on a lapsed policy must be applied to the purchase of extended insurance for the full face amount of the policy for such term as the reserve will purchase, rather than to the purchase of paid-up insurance for a smaller amount-Thereafter, as a result of that decision — in the Watson Case — Hooks made claim on the insurer and demanded the difference between the paid-up value, $73.53, which had already been paid to him, and the face value of the two policies. In the meantime, however, Isabell Davis and Frances Spradly presented themselves and, asserting that they were the legal heirs of the said deceased, made written demand on the insurer for the balance which all parties now admit, is due under the said policies to the righful claimant and which is now conceded by all parties to he $290.35.

Because of these conflicting claims, the insurer was unwilling to pay the balance to Hooks and he filed this suit, asserting that, since the insurer had made the original payment of $73.53 to him and had thus recognized him. as the beneficiary, it must pay the additional sum to him also and cannot be heard to deny that he is the rightful owner of the said unpaid balance.

In answer to Hooks’ petition, the insurer, proceeding under the provisions of Act No. 123 of 1922 — the interpleader statute — deposited in the registry of the court the balance admittedly due to the rightful claimant and called upon the rival claimants to appear and assert their respective claims. In .its petition of in-terpleader the said insurer admitted that it had made the original payment of $73.53 to Hooks and alleged that it had done so in the belief that he had “paid a funeral bill of the insured * * * and was, therefore, equitably entitled to the payment. * * * ”

In answer to the petition of interpleader there appeared Hooks, the original petitioner, and four heirs of the assured, to wit, Frances Spradly and Isabell Davis, who had already made written claim, and also Thomas Henry and Rogers Turner, which four alleged heirs, acting together, made joint claim for the proceeds. On October 19, 1936, in the succession proceedings of the insured, there was judgment recognizing the four alleged heirs as heirs-at-law of the said assured and sending them into possession of her estate. Thereafter, in this interpleader proceeding, there was judgment in favor of the said heirs and dismissing the claim of Hooks. He has taken this appeal.

Hooks has made no attack on the judgment rendered in the succession proceedings which recognized the four named persons as heirs of the assured and, if he is to succeed in his attempt to obtain the balance due under the policies, he must do so not because of any defect in their rights as heirs, but solely because of the strength, of his own claim as recognized beneficiary and because of his right as such, if he has such right, to be preferred over the legal heirs.

He does not claim to be a relative of the assured, nor that he was designated by her as beneficiary, but rests his claim solely on the ground that, since the insurer, in making the first payment to him, recognized him as beneficiary, neither it nor'any one else may be heard to question his right to the subsequently discovered unpaid balance.

When the insurer paid to him the amount which all thought was the total amount due, it did so because of the provisions of the so-called “facility of payment” clause under which it was stipulated that the insurer might secure full release of its obligation by making payment to any one or more of certain persons “equitably entitled to the same by reason of having incurred 'expense on behalf of the insured, or for his or her burial.”

On behalf of Hooks it is contended that payment under this clause operates not only as a. full release of the insurer, but also as a full settlement of all conflicting claims among rival claimants, and also that, when the insurer has once determined upon and selected the person to whom it will make payment, 'if that person ■is one who, under that clause, may receive it, the insurer is irrevocably and forever estopped to reverse or, in any way, to alter its decision.

On behalf of the recognized heirs several contentions are made. In the first place it is said that in no case may a creditor be “equitably entitled” to the proceeds of such a policy except in an amount to some extent commensurate with the amount of the debt due to him; in other words'that, if the policy is for a large sum — for instance, $10,000 — and the debt due or the funeral bill incurred is insignificant — say $200 — it cannot be said that the creditor is equitably entitled to the *603 enormous excess which will remain after the payment of the debt.

This contention is interesting and finds some support in logic and among the adjudicated cases. But we need not consider it here.

In the second place, it is asserted that the facility of payment clause was not intended and should not be so interpreted as to operate as a settlement among rival claimants, but was intended solely to afford a defense to an insurer which, in good faith, has made payment to a person apparently equitably entitled to the proceeds, and that when such payment is made the insurer is fully protected, but that the person or persons who were actually entitled to the payment are not estopped to proceed against the person who may have received it if that person, though apparently entitled thereto, was not so entitled as a matter of actual fact. This view finds support, also, in logic and in some previously decided cases, but we need not consider it here.

The third contention of the heirs is that Hooks did not, as a matter of fact, pay or obligate himself to pay the funeral bill of the assured, and that, therefore, even under the facility of payment clause, he is not entitled to the proceeds.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. v. Groue
117 So. 2d 833 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1960)
Brown v. Metropolitan Life Ins.
100 F.2d 98 (D.C. Circuit, 1938)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
171 So. 601, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hooks-v-metropolitan-life-ins-co-lactapp-1937.