Kotch v. Kotch

251 S.W.2d 520, 151 Tex. 471, 1952 Tex. LEXIS 416
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 1, 1952
DocketA-3674
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 251 S.W.2d 520 (Kotch v. Kotch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kotch v. Kotch, 251 S.W.2d 520, 151 Tex. 471, 1952 Tex. LEXIS 416 (Tex. 1952).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Garwood

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The action under review may be taken as one of interpleader by Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, insurer in a group life insurance policy covering employees of the Texas and New Orleans Railroad Company and in particular Bruno Adam Kotch, a retired brakeman of advanced age, who died from cancer of the throat on December 27th, 1948, holding a certificate for $1200 under the policy. This sum, which the insurer, describing itself as disinterested, duly paid into court, is the subject of conflicting claims of the other two parties to the suit, Mrs. Frances Kotch, widow of the insured and beneficiary named in *473 the certificate, and Joe Kotch, a middle-aged son by an earlier marriage. The dispute as between these two parties is the sole matter in litigation and turns on whether certain conduct of the insured shortly before his death effectively substituted Joe Kotch as beneficiary in lieu of Frances. The trial court, without a jury and on fact findings hereinafter mentioned, gave judgment for Mrs. Kotch, the Court of Civil Appeals reversing this action and entering judgment for Joe Kotch. 247 S.W. 2d 587.

The relevant policy provision reads as follows:

“Any Employee insured hereunder may, from time to time, change the Beneficiary by filing written notice thereof with the Employer accompanied by the Certificate and Certificate Riders —if any — of such Employee. Such change shall take effect upon endorsement thereof by the Employer on such Certificate and Certificate Riders — if any — and unless the Certificate and all Certificate Riders, — if any — are so endorsed, the change shall not take effect. After such endorsement, the change shall relate back and take effect as of the date the Employee signed said written notice of change, whether or not the Employee be living at the time of such endorsement, but without prejudice to the Company on account of any payment made by it before receipt of such written notice.”

As hereinafter more fully discussed, the certificate naming petitioner, Mrs. Kotch, as beneficiary was never delivered up for endorsement, nor was any recognition made of respondent Joe Kotch, as a beneficiary by either the railroad company or the insurer. ,

The other facts — undisputed, unless as indicated otherwise —are substantially as follows: The insured and petitioner were married in 1929 and lived together at their apartment in San Antonio until about two months before the death of the insured at Houston, where he had gone to live with the respondent. The illness of the insured, which began about a year previously, was critical during at least the latter part of his residence in San Antonio. At this time petitioner had been under some strain in looking after him, including earning money to supplement his retirement pay, and among herself, a half brother of the insured and respondent, it was decided that she should go to visit her relatives in Florida, and the insured should be taken to Houston. (The testimony of respondent is that petitioner “deserted” her stricken husband, and indeed, her later conduct indicates little devotion to him, but her version of the matter— *474 not altogether improbable — is that she left for a desperately needed rest at the suggestion of respondent himself and never intended to abandon the insured). The assured was taken to Houston by respondent in the automobile of the former and remained there in the care of respondent until his death on December 27th, while petitioner went by train to Florida and remained there until about December 7th, when she returned to San Antonio, where evidently their apartment was still maintained, and never saw the insured again. About three years before his removal to Houston, the insured, who had several times previously made beneficiary changes regarding his certificate, thereby progressively increasing the fraction thereof payable to petitioner, made a final one, designating her as sole beneficiary, and then delivered the certificate to her. Thenceforward she kept it in a trunk at the apartment, along with the title papers to his automobile and other business papers and personal belongings of each spouse, both of them having access to the trunk at all times, and both trunk and contents (except as below stated) remaining at the apartment at all times until after the death of the insured. In the latter part of November, 1948, petitioner received in Florida a special delivery letter written from Houston by the insured stating that respondent, Joe Kotch, who was caring for him, was in need of funds, that the insured wished to give respondent the automobile and requesting that petitioner write at once to the landlady of the San Antonio apartment to send the trunk to the insured so that he might have the automobile title papers. Petitioner did not write the landlady, but, as stated, did return to San Antonio about ten days later and, apparently soon thereafter, got the title papers out of the trunk and sent them— keeping the trunk (and the insurance certificate) in her possession. There were sundry other letters written to petitioner by the insured, and also by respondent, before December 27th, but none of them said anything that might be construed as a request for, or even a reference to, the certificate, nor did the insured or anyone on his behalf make any other attempt to get possession of either the trunk or the certificate; (while the letter requesting the trunk may, in the light of later matters belowmentioned, have been intended to result in procuring the certificate, the express mention of the title papers as the sole reason for wanting the trunk is clearly at variance with such an assumption). The only evidence as to knowledge of the insured at relevant times of the whereabouts of the certificate is the proof introduced by respondent that the insured had turned it over to its accessibility to him, as well as the strong proof that he be-petitioner, her testimony of the use made of the trunk and of *475 lieved it to contain the automobile title papers not long before he died. In the same connection, the pleadings of the respondent are pitched on the theory, not that the insured was ignorant of the whereabouts of the certificate or thought it lost, but that petitioner had refused to surrender it.

Some three weeks after his letter to petitioner about the automobile papers, that is, about December 13th, 1948, the insured duly executed two appropriate form documents bearing that date, one being for change of the beneficiary in favor of respondent and the other for issuance of a duplicate certificate on the ground that the existing one had been lost. These forms were procured from the railroad company and are admitted by petitioner to have been returned to it promptly after their execution, though there is no proof as to whether they ever reached the insurer. As before stated, no responsive action was ever taken one way or another by the railroad company or the insurer, although some two weeks elapsed between the admitted filing date and the death of the insured.

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Bluebook (online)
251 S.W.2d 520, 151 Tex. 471, 1952 Tex. LEXIS 416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kotch-v-kotch-tex-1952.