Kavanagh v. New England Mutual Life Insurance

238 Ill. App. 72, 1925 Ill. App. LEXIS 224
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 14, 1925
DocketGen. No. 29,846
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 238 Ill. App. 72 (Kavanagh v. New England Mutual Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kavanagh v. New England Mutual Life Insurance, 238 Ill. App. 72, 1925 Ill. App. LEXIS 224 (Ill. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Gridley

delivered the opinion of the court.

This appeal is prosecuted to reverse a decree of the superior court of Cook county, entered August 8, 1924, wherein the court ordered that the New England Mutual Life Insurance Company of Boston, Massachusetts (hereinafter referred to as the Insurance Co.), pay to complainantvor his solicitor the sum of $4,911.50, and that Lucy Kavanagh pay the costs of the proceeding.

Complainant’s original hill was filed on April 27, 1923, to which the Insurance Co. filed an answer, and, after complainant had filed an amended bill, Lucy Kavanagh filed her answer thereto. It is alleged in substance in the amended bill that Patrick H. Kavanagh, brother of complainant, died at a hospital in Chicago, Illinois, on February 9, 1923, his death being the result of Wounds received on February 3, 1923, when Lucy Kavanagh, his wife, shot him with a pistol; that she was arrested, charged with the crime of murder, and afterwards indicted by the Grand Jury of Cook county on said charge and released on bail; that on January 29, 1921, the Insurance Co. issued to Patrick H. Kavanagh a policy of life insurance, No. 421,051, for the sum of $5,000, by the terms of which, in consideration of the application and the payment in advance of an annual premium of $129.50, it agreed at- his death to pay said sum to Lucy Kavanagh, his wife “(with the right reserved to the Insured to change the Beneficiary) ” less any indebtedness to the company on the policy and less any unpaid portions of the premium for the then current policy year; that the policy provided that “when the right to change the Beneficiary has been reserved, the Insured, subject to any assignment, upon written request filed with the Company at its Home Office, may from time to time designate a new Beneficiary hereunder, or have the Policy made payable to his estate, such change to taTte effect only when endorsed hereon hy the Compcmy”; that upon receipt of the policy Patrick H. Kavanagh delivered it to his wife and she has since had possession of the same; that he paid the premiums required to keep it in force and that there is now due on the policy, after making certain proper adjustments, the sum of $4,911.50; that on February 5, 1923, when he was lying in the hospital suffering from the effects of said pistol shot, but being in full possession of all his mental faculties, he directed a representative to procure from the Chicago office of the Insurance Co. the usual blank in use for requesting a change of beneficiary to be made in a policy; that said blank was procured and on the same day he signed such paper as follows: “In accordance with the right reserved to me under Policy No. 421,051 to change the beneficiary thereunder, I hereby revoke the appointment of my wife, Lucy Kavanagh, as beneficiary, and request that said policy be changed so as to be payable to my brother, Joseph Kavanagh, if he shall survive me, with right of revocation by me”; that such paper was in proper form for making a change of beneficiary according to the rules of the Insurance Co., and on February 6, 1923, was mailed to the Insurance Co. at its home office at Boston, Massachusetts, and accompanying it was a letter written to the Insurance Co. by said representative, in which the latter mentioned the details of the shooting, the serious condition of Patrick, the improbability of his living, his anxiety to have a change of beneficiary made in the policy at once, and stated that Patrick “is unable to procure the policy owing to the fact that his wife is in jail and has possession of the policy,” and that “his wife would not give it up under any circumstances”; that, at the time said request and letter were mailed, the policy had not been assigned to any person and that there was no restriction or impediment to Patrick’s right to change the beneficiary to such person as he might designate; that on February 8, 1923, the Insurance Co. from its home office wrote a letter, signed by its assistant secretary, to Patrick’s said representative in Chicago as follows: “In reply to your letter of the 6th inst. relative to Policy No. 421,051, on the life of Patrick H. Kavanagh, we will state that the form for change of beneficiary executed by the insured, revoking his wife, Lucy Kavanagh, and requesting that the policy 'be made payable to his brother, Joseph Kavanagh, if he shall survive him, with right of revocation, is received, and has been placed on file with our record of the policy. Upon receipt of the policy we will endorse the change in accordance with the request”; that this letter was received by Patrick’s representative in Chicago on February 9, 1923, the day that Patrick died; that by reason of the foregoing Patrick did all that it Was possible for him to do to effectuate the change of beneficiary in the policy; that on February 15, 1923, complainant executed and sent to the Insurance Co. due proofs of the death of Patrick and notice of complainant’s claim; and that .Lucy Kavanagh has also made claim to the whole amount due under the policy. The substance of the prayer of the amended bill is that the court enter a decree that Patrick, during his lifetime, made said change in the beneficiary under the policy, that Joseph Kavanagh became the beneficiary and is entitled to the entire amount due, and that Lucy Kavanagh has no right or interest therein.

There are other allegations in the amended bill to the effect that on February 5, 1923, Patrick duly executed on one of the company’s forms an assignment of all his right, title and interest in the policy to Joseph Kavanagh, which on the same day, together with the affidavit of Patrick on one of the company’s forms and a letter of said representative, were forwarded to the company’s home office. Also other allegations to the effect that on February 5, 1923, at said hospital, Patrick and Joseph entered into a verbal contract whereby Patrick agreed to make Joseph the beneficiary under the policy,' in consideration of Joseph agreeing to pay for the expense of hiring a private room for Patrick and for other hospital expenses, and that said contract was performed on the part of Joseph. In view of the position taken by complainant’s counsel in this Appellate Court, namely, that complainant is not relying for a recovery on said contract or said assignment, except' in so far as the assignment tends to disclose an intention on the part of Patrick to effectuate a change in the beneficiary of the policy to Joseph, we deem it unnecessary to further consider said allegations or the evidence introduced on the hearing relative thereto.

In the answer of the Insurance Co. it admitted the issuance of the policy on January 29, 1921, and that $4,911.50 was due thereunder, but alleged that it did not know whether Lucy or Joseph was the rightful beneficiary, or who had or who has possession of the policy; that no indorsement had ever been made thereon by it for a change of beneficiary.; that when the said written direction or request of Patrick H. Kavanagli of February 5, for a change of beneficiary from Lucy to Joseph Kavanagh was received by it, the policy was not produced, nor had it since been, “so as to enable this defendant to endorse said change of beneficiary on said policy”; that Lucy Kavanagh had made claim on it for the proceeds of the policy; that it had always been willing, without risk to itself, to pay the proceeds to whomsoever was entitled to it; and that it “hereby offers to bring said proceeds into court as the Court may direct.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
238 Ill. App. 72, 1925 Ill. App. LEXIS 224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kavanagh-v-new-england-mutual-life-insurance-illappct-1925.