In Re Pan American Life Insurance Company

88 So. 2d 410
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 10, 1956
Docket8535
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 88 So. 2d 410 (In Re Pan American Life Insurance Company) 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
In Re Pan American Life Insurance Company, 88 So. 2d 410 (La. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

88 So.2d 410 (1956)

In re PAN AMERICAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, Praying for Concursus.

No. 8535.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

June 14, 1956.
Rehearing Denied July 11, 1956.
Writ of Certiorari Granted December 10, 1956.

*411 H. Alva Brumfield, Baton Rouge, for Scotts et al.

Julian E. Bailes, Natchitoches, for Corkern et al.

Solomon S. Goldman, New Orleans, for Pan American Life Ins. Co.

GLADNEY, Judge.

The Pan American Life Insurance Company as a stake holder of proceeds of one of its policies issued July 27, 1926, upon the life of Ronald Eston Corkern for $2,000, designating Mrs. Viola M. Scott as beneficiary thereof, provoked this suit, a concursus under the provisions of LSA-R.S. 13:4816, to have legally settled the rights of opposing claimants. On a prior occasion we considered an appeal in this case involving a plea of prescription which this court determined favorably to the heirs of Mrs. Viola M. Scott, and the cause was remanded for further proceedings. See La.App., 75 So.2d 524. Following trial in the lower court on its merits, judgment was rendered awarding the proceeds of the policy to Mrs. *412 Ruby Jones Corkern, widow of Ronald Eston Corkern, and her minor children. Wherefore this appeal.

The facts are not disputed and the issues presented concern legal entitlement to the amount on deposit. On August 27, 1929, Mrs. Viola M. Scott entered into a written contract with R. S. Corkern and his son, Ronald Eston Corkern, wherein Mrs. Scott agreed to loan money for the medical education of Ronald Eston Corkern up to the amount of $2,500, to be advanced over the four succeeding years. It was provided in the agreement, Ronald Eston Corkern:

"In order to secure a payment of the sums advanced to him, in the event of his death he will make the said Mrs. Viola M. Scott beneficiary in a policy of life insurance now carried by him in the sum of Two Thousand ($2,000.00) Dollars, in the Pan American Life Insurance Company, and he agrees that should it be necessary the said Mrs. Viola M. Scott shall have the right to advance any additional sum necessary to pay the premiums due on said policy of life insurance, and for such amounts expended by her he shall furnish his promissory note stipulating the same rate of interest and maturing at the same time as the notes above mentioned. Appearer Ronald Eston Corkern agrees, however, to keep the said insurance in force, to let the dividends accrue thereon and not accept anything from said insurance company that would decrease the cash or loan value of said insurance or otherwise reduce the same without the consent of the said Mrs. Viola M. Scott. Mrs. Scott agrees to reimburse his parents or closest heirs any amount she would receive in event of his death, in excess of amount loaned him."

In conformity with the agreement Corkern wrote the Pan American Life Insurance Company enclosing the policy referred to requesting the beneficiary be changed to Mrs. Viola M. Scott, and directed that the policy be returned to the First National Bank of Oberlin, Louisiana, "with instructions to just hold in escrow as they have already been advised concerning this transaction." Accompanying the letter properly executed was the regular form used by the insurer to designate a change of beneficiary. The form designating the new beneficiary reserved to the insured the right of revocation.

In the years which followed, Mrs. Scott advanced the sum of $2,300 and Corkern executed his five promissory notes totaling $2,300 dated August 26, 1929, September 8, 1930, September 1, 1932, May 1, 1933, and February 7, 1934, respectively, each bearing interest at the rate of 4%. Pursuant to the instruction the assurer forwarded the policy to the bank "to be held in escrow." The First National Bank of Oberlin, perhaps some time during the years of the depression, became insolvent and was closed and placed in receivership. In response to an inquiry, the office of the comptroller of the currency which had supervised the affairs of the bank during its receivership reported that upon liquidation of the bank and under proper authority on January 30, 1940, all of the books, records and papers of the bank had been destroyed. It reported further that that office had been unable to find any reference to the policy in question.

Mrs. Viola M. Scott died on March 1, 1948, and Dr. Ronald Eston Corkern died February 20, 1953, without having designated another beneficiary. In probate proceedings which followed the deaths of said parties, the heirs of Mrs. Scott and the widow and heirs of Dr. Corkern were judicially recognized as such. Upon opening the bank box of Dr. Corkern after his death the policy was found. Mrs. Letitia Kent Bingham, who had acted as the doctor's secretary since about 1940, testified that she knew nothing of the circumstances surrounding the policy, other than she had in the course of her duties paid the premium notices as they were received in her office. No other evidence was adduced to show how possession of the policy was obtained by Dr. Corkern.

*413 The heirs of Mrs. Scott assert the policy was delivered to the First National Bank of Oberlin in fulfillment of Dr. Corkern's obligation to secure payment of the loan and that upon its delivery to the bank with Mrs. Scott designated as beneficiary therein, the transaction either constituted a pledge or an assignment of the policy. They declare no payments were ever made upon the loan and, therefore, they are entitled to the proceeds due under the policy.

The claim of the surviving widow and minor children is based upon a provision of the policy providing that in the event the beneficiary should pre-decease the insured, in the absence of the designation of another beneficiary the policy would be payable to claimants as the widow and the sole and only heirs of the deceased. They deny the policy was pledged or assigned, it being argued that the policy was never actually delivered to nor did it remain in the possession of the pledgee.

None of the witnesses professed to firsthand knowledge that the obligation of Dr. Corkern was satisfied, nor, in truth, was anyone in a position to say how Dr. Corkern came into possession of the policy. The presumption is strong that his possession resulted from the liquidation of the affairs of the escrow agent, the First National Bank of Oberlin. Had Dr. Corkern, in fact, made any payments upon the obligation represented by the notes, it is reasonable to assume there would be residual evidence of such payments such as a written notation of the amount and date of remittance. Further, if he had fulfilled his obligation to Mrs. Scott it is logical to believe that he would have caused the beneficiary to be changed for the interest of his wife and family. Since none of these things was done, it is proper to deduce that someone employed in winding up the affairs of the bank simply handed to or otherwise delivered the policy to the insured.

Appellee also contends the long and continued possession of the insurance policy by Dr. Corkern suggests remission or payment of the debt. The burden of establishing this defense rests upon the party relying thereon. Code of Practice art. 329; LSA-Civil Code art. 2232; J. R. Watkins Company v. Calhoun, 1951, 219 La. 151, 52 So.2d 528; Pitre v. Bourg, La. App.1954, 77 So.2d 113. The amount loaned by Mrs. Scott was represented by five promissory notes which evince no inscriptions to indicate payments were made and these notes remained constantly among the effects of the creditor or her heirs.

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88 So. 2d 410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-pan-american-life-insurance-company-lactapp-1956.