Kaplan v. Copeland

32 S.E.2d 678, 183 Va. 589, 1945 Va. LEXIS 205
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 15, 1945
DocketRecord No. 2871
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 32 S.E.2d 678 (Kaplan v. Copeland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kaplan v. Copeland, 32 S.E.2d 678, 183 Va. 589, 1945 Va. LEXIS 205 (Va. 1945).

Opinion

Eggleston, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

In November and December, 1929, the New York Life Insurance Company issued to Samuel Kaplan, aged twenty-two, of Hampton, Virginia, two policies of insurance insuring his life in the sums of $5,000 and $3,000, respectively. Each policy provided for monthly payments to the insured, in the event of his total and permanent disability, with the added provision that should disability result from “insanity,” payment would, be made to the “beneficiary in lieu of the Insured.” At the time the two policies were written, the insured was the beneficiary thereunder, but on October 13, 1930, he executed and filed with the Insurance Company the required forms changing the beneficiary in both policies to his sister, Bessie R. Kaplan.

On February 27, 1931, upon the petition of Bessie R. Kaplan, a lunacy commission was held on Samuel Kaplan in the city of Newport News, where the parties then resided. Kaplan was adjudged insane and was ordered committed to the Eastern State Hospital at Williamsburg. On March 12, 1931, he entered the hospital where he remained until November 25, 1933. Except for the period from January 5, 1934, to June 6, 1935, when he was at a private sanatorium, Kaplan has lived either with his sister, Bessie (who in the meantime had married one P. Copland, sometimes spelled “Copeland”), or another sister, Mrs. Rosenberg. It is conceded that at the present time he is still mentally incompetent, and that Mrs. Copeland is his duly appointed and qualified committee.

Early in January, 1931, a claim for total and permanent disability on account of Kaplan’s insanity was filed with the Insurance Company, which, according to the terms of the [592]*592"policies, has regularly paid to Mrs. Copeland, the beneficiary, the sum of $80 per month.

Because of this disability Kaplan himself has received from other policies of insurance, in which he was the beneficiary, monthly payments of $60. These latter payments were made to Mrs. Copeland as his committee.

In January, 1941, Samuel Kaplan, suing as an incompetent person, through his sister and next friend, Esther Kaplan, with the approval of the court,1 filed a bill in the court below against Bessie Kaplan Copeland, setting out the main facts hereinabove related, and alleging that the change in the beneficiary in the two policies was void because, it was said, Samuel Kaplan was mentally incompetent to have effected a valid change therein, and that it had been procured through the undue influence'of Mrs. Copeland over her incompetent brother. The prayer of the bill was that the change of beneficiary be canceled and that Mrs. Copeland be required to account for and pay to the estate of Samuel Kaplan, the incompetent person, the disability benefits received by her from the Insurance Company under the two policies. Later two amended bills of complaint were filed, but for our purposes the supplemental allegations need not be detailed.

Mrs. Copeland answered the bills. While she admitted the issuance of the policies, the subsequent change of the beneficiary therein to herself, and the receipt by her of the disability benefits thereunder, she denied her brother’s mental incompetency at the time the change in the beneficiary was made, or that such change was procured through her undue influence over him.

The evidence of the respective parties was taken by depositions, and the trial court concluded that it failed to show that Kaplan was mentally incompetent at the time the change in the beneficiary of the policies was made, or that such change had been procured through the undue influence [593]*593of Mrs. Copeland. Accordingly, it entered a final decree dismissing the bill, and from this decree the present appeal has been taken.

We agree with the conclusion of the trial court that there is no evidence that the change in beneficiary was brought about by any undue influence of Mrs., Copeland over her brother. There is no evidence whatsoever that she requested her brother to make the change in the policies. It is uncontradicted that she was not present at the time and did not know until some time afterwards that the change had been made. She and her brother had' lived together for a number of years and were devoted to each other. Both of their parents were dead and the other brothers and sisters had established their homes elsewhere. If Kaplan desired and was competent to make a change in the beneficiary, it was but natural that he should have designated her as such.

This brings us to the single issue in the case. Was Kaplan mentally competent on October 13, 1930, to have effected a valid change in the beneficiary under the policies? The change, in effect, constituted a gift by him to his sis-, ter of valuable benefits which would accrue and be payable to him in the event of his permanent and total disability. In Lohman v. Sherwood, 181 Va. 594, 607, 26 S. E. (2d) 74, 80, we defined “the measure of one’s capacity” to execute a deed of gift as being “sufficient mental capacity to under-, stand the nature of the transaction he was entering into”. The same ápplies here.

Whether Kaplan possessed, at the time in question, sufficient mental capacity to meet this test is a question of fact, and, as is usual in cases of this character, the evidence thereon is conflicting. Since the evidence before the trial court was in the form of depositions, and it did not see and hear the witnesses, its finding of fact, while “highly persuasive” and entitled to “great weight,” is not binding on us. McClintock v. Royall, 173 Va. 408, 416, 4 S. E. (2d) 369, 372; Barnard v. Barnard, 132 Va. 155, 160, 111 S. E. 227.

Considering the evidence as a whole, as we should under [594]*594the circumstances indicated, we are of opinion that the preponderance is in favor of.the contention of the appellant that Kaplan was mentally incompetent on October 13, 1930, to have effected a valid change in the beneficiary in the policies.

It will be observed that the evidence was taken more than ten years after the date in question, and hence, as might be expected, the verbal testimony of the various witnesses for either side is not entirely harmonious. However, such documentary evidence as exists clearly prepondetates in favor of the contention of the appellant.

Samuel Kaplan seems to have quit school at the age of fourteen years to go to work. He was employed in various neighboring stores (including one operated by his brother, Frank), as a groceryman, down to August, 1930. He was discharged by a grocer in the summer of 1930 because “he was not mentally right,” and his fellow-employees, as well as his employer, were “afraid of him.” At that time, and even before, his conduct was queer. He talked foolishly, laughed aloud to himself, foolishly and without reason, and displayed other well-recognized symptoms of dementia praecox.

Kenneth Arch, a real estate agent and next-door neighbor, testified that five or six months after Samuel’s father died, in October, 1929, Samuel appeared “worried” and began .to talk foolishly, and that this condition progressed “until he got really bad.” This witness was of opinion that Samuel was “losing his mind” and was not able to transact business'.

Dr. Paul J.

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32 S.E.2d 678, 183 Va. 589, 1945 Va. LEXIS 205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kaplan-v-copeland-va-1945.