In re Franklin

709 F. Supp. 109, 1989 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3106, 1989 WL 28918
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedMarch 24, 1989
DocketCiv. A. No. 88-1201-A
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 709 F. Supp. 109 (In re Franklin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Franklin, 709 F. Supp. 109, 1989 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3106, 1989 WL 28918 (E.D. Va. 1989).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

ELLIS, District Judge.

This matter came before the Court for a bench trial on the merits. In addition to the testimony of both claimants, the Court received into evidence the parties’ proffered exhibits and the testimony of a third witness by deposition. The Court here sets forth its findings of fact and conclusions of law, pursuant to Rule 52, Fed.R.Civ.P.

At issue in this interpleader action1 is the right to receive the proceeds of a life insurance policy issued by the stakeholder, Northwestern National Life Insurance Company, to Horace A. Franklin, as the insured, in January, 1950. The insured died on November 20, 1987. His widow, Barbara S. Franklin, one of the claimants here, contends that she is entitled to the proceeds of the policy because she is the named beneficiary. The second claimant, Priscilla B. Ransohoff, contends that she is entitled to the lion’s share of the proceeds by virtue of a $5,000, five percent loan she made to the insured in November 1957. At that time, the insured assigned the policy proceeds to claimant Ransohoff as security for payment of the loan “as her interest may appear.” Assignment of Policy No. B 743 015 dated November 26, 1957.2 Claimant Ransohoff contends that the insured never repaid the principal loan amount or [111]*111any interest, which at the time of the insured’s death totaled $12,812.50, $5,000.00 in principal and $7,812.50 in interest.

The policy’s original face value was $30,-000. By November, 1987, loans and assignments against the policy had reduced the amount payable under the policy to $13,-283.19. By September 19, 1988, this sum had grown with interest to $14,330.83. This is the sum the stakeholder deposited with the Court when it filed its interpleader complaint on September 20, 1988.3

There is a threshold, potentially dispositive statute of limitations issue. The policy beneficiary, claimant Franklin, contends that Ransohoff’s claim is time barred because the alleged loan was made more than thirty-eight years ago and no effort was ever made to collect until now. Franklin’s statute of limitations argument misconceives the gravamen of Ransohoff’s claim and hence focuses on the wrong target. It is the assignment of the insurance policy proceeds that is the basis of Ransohoff’s claim, not the thirty-eight year old loan note. To be sure, a suit on the note would be barred by the applicable New Jersey statute of limitations.4 This is not such a suit; rather, Ransohoff’s claim is based on the assignment of the policy proceeds. In many jurisdictions, it has long been settled that the statute of limitations does not bar collection on an assignment of insurance proceeds given as collateral, even though a separate action on the underlying debt may be barred. An early case illustrating this principle is Hill v. Bush, 192 Ark. 181, 90 S.W.2d 490 (1936). There, as here, the insured assigned his insurance policy to secure a debt evidenced by a note. A suit on the note would have been barred by the statute of limitations. On these facts — facts strikingly similar to those at bar — the Arkansas Supreme Court held that “[notwithstanding the debt is barred, [the beneficiary] cannot maintain an action for the proceeds of the policy without paying the debt.” 90 S.W.2d at 493. In other words, the assignment of policy proceeds as collateral operated as a pledge and therefore remained effective even though the limitations period on the note had expired. The beneficiary could not collect the proceeds without first paying the debt. In the words of the Hill court,

[w]here a debt is secured by a pledge, as in the present case, the running of the statute of limitations destroys, of course, the right of recovery on the debt, but has no effect on the right of the pledgee to retain the property until the debt is paid and to enforce his claim against the property.

90 S.W.2d at 493-94. An authoritative treatise cites Hill and states the operative principle in the following terms:

[t]he fact that the statute of limitations bars the debt which is secured by the assignment does not discharge the assignment. The result is that the beneficiary is only entitled to the excess proceeds of the policy as though the period of the statute of limitations had not run.

Couch on Insurance 2d § 63A:250, at 138 (1983).

A more contemporary application of this principle may be found in Jennings v. Prudential Ins. Co. of America, 402 So.2d 1367 (Fla.App.1981). In that case, a policy beneficiary seeking the policy proceeds sued the insurer and the policy assignee. The assignee was a bank that had made loans to the insured and obtained an assignment of the policy as collateral. There, the loan in question had been discharged in bankruptcy. Notwithstanding this, the [112]*112Florida court held the assignment valid and enforceable, barred by neither the statute of limitations nor the bankruptcy discharge. As that court put it,

[t]he assignment from [the] husband to the Bank vested the legal title of the policy in the Bank, subject to the right of the insured to redeem the policy by the payment of the debt for which the policy was pledged as collateral. The discharge of the bankrupt insured discharged his personal liability. Although the bank can no longer collect from [the] husband, the discharge does not prevent the Bank from collecting its lien on the proceeds of the policy assigned to it as collateral for a debt, to the extent of the unpaid balance of the debt.

402 So.2d at 1369. Given this, the court concluded that “[n]either the estate nor the beneficiary has any right to or interest in the death benefits of the assigned policy except to the extent that these proceeds exceed the debt owed.” Id. The same result obtains here. Although a suit on the note is barred, it does not follow that Ransohoff’s rights in the assignment of the policy are barred. They are not. Those rights may be vindicated, as here, in a claim against the insurer based on the policy assignment. That claim is not barred if, as here, it is asserted in timely fashion after proof of death of the insured.5

New Jersey, whose law applies here, has apparently not decided this precise issue. But analogous decisions point persuasively to the conclusion that New Jersey would follow the Hill v. Bush line of authority. First, New Jersey recognizes that the statute of limitations barring of a remedy does not eliminate the underlying right. Thus, in Duttkin v. Zalenski, 140 N.J.Eq. 200, 54 A.2d 227 (N.J. Ch.1947), the court stated that:

[t]he erroneous notion is sometimes entertained that the statute of limitations of actions, when applicable, absolutely extinguishes the debt. Not so. The function of the statute is merely to bar an action for the recovery of the debt ...

Id., 54 A.2d at 230. In Duttkin, an estate’s beneficiaries sued the executrix for paying one of the decedent’s debts long after the statute of limitations had expired. The executrix prevailed. In that court’s view, the statute of limitations extinguished the right of recovery, but not the underlying debt. Hence, the executrix was not obligated “to reject and exclude a just and honest debt.”

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Bluebook (online)
709 F. Supp. 109, 1989 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3106, 1989 WL 28918, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-franklin-vaed-1989.