Life Insurance Company of Virginia v. Cashatt

206 F. Supp. 410, 1962 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3757
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedJuly 12, 1962
DocketCiv. A. 3597
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 206 F. Supp. 410 (Life Insurance Company of Virginia v. Cashatt) 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
Life Insurance Company of Virginia v. Cashatt, 206 F. Supp. 410, 1962 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3757 (E.D. Va. 1962).

Opinion

MICHIE, District Judge.

Mary Elizabeth Cashatt shot and killed her husband, Lola Vance Cashatt, and was subsequently convicted of voluntary manslaughter. At the time of his death, Lola Vance Cashatt was the owner of a policy of insurance issued by The Life Insurance Company of Virginia under which Mary Elizabeth Cashatt was the primary beneficiary and the insured’s children, Donna Lynn Cashatt and Randall Keith Cashatt, were the contingent beneficiaries. Joe James Davis qualified as administrator of the estate of Lola Vance Cashatt in the Corporation Court of the City of South Norfolk. Mrs. Cashatt and the children subsequently *411 returned to North Carolina whence Mr. and Mrs. Cashatt had originally come.

The Life Insurance Company of Virginia filed an interpleader complaint in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, Norfolk Division, making Mary Elizabeth Cashatt, the two children and the administrator parties, all of whom claim the proceeds of the policy. The court appointed Fred W. Bateman as guardian ad litem for the two infant children.

After the case had matured the plaintiff moved to be dismissed upon the payment of the proceeds of the policy into court as it was a mere stake-holder in the controversy. To this the attorney for Mrs. Cashatt objected on the ground that there was no real controversy between residents of different states, Mary E. Cashatt and the children having returned after the death of the father to North Carolina and the administrator having, in the opinion of counsel for Mrs. Cashatt, no possible claim to the insurance proceeds. The court overruled this motion since, as will be seen in the discussion to follow, though there is no Virginia case directly in point, in some states the claim of the administrator to the proceeds of the policy would be allowed while in others the contingent beneficiaries would be entitled to such proceeds. And of course Mrs. Cashatt also lays claim to the proceeds. And under 28 U.S.C.A. § 1335, jurisdiction of an interpleader action exists if there is any diversity of citizenship among the claimants and there is here diversity between the administrator and Mrs. Cashatt and the children. See Barron and Holtzoff, Federal Practice and Procedure, Vol. 1, Rules Ed., pp. 252-55.

There being no dispute about the facts, the case then came on to be heard upon motions for summary judgment filed by Mrs. Cashatt, the guardian ad litem for the infants and the administrator of the estate. And the court now finds that the infants are entitled to the proceeds of the policy.

There can be no doubt that the general rule, followed probably universally, is that a beneficiary of an insurance policy who kills the insured by murder or voluntary manslaughter cannot take the proceeds of the policy. This is because of the ancient common law doctrine that no man shall be allowed to profit by his own wrong. There is no Virginia case on the subject but other cases outside this jurisdiction are numerous and I do not find any case anywhere to the contrary. See 29-A Am.Jur. pp. 725 et seq.; 46 C.J.S. Insurance § 1171, p. 57 et seq.

There was some discussion in the argument, however, as to the effect, if any, of Section 64.18 of the Virginia Code as it stood at the time of Mr. Cashatt’s death. * This section then read as follows:

“When homicide to bar acquisition of estate. — No person shall acquire by descent or distribution, or by will, any interest in the estate of another for whose death such person has been convicted of murder.”

The section took that form by amendment in 1950. Prior to 1950 it read as follows:

“When homicide to bar acquisition of estate. — No person shall acquire by descent or distribution, or by will, any interest in the estate of another whom he has killed in order to obtain such interest.”

It will be observed that the only change was in the substitution of the words “for whose death, such person has been convicted of murder” for the words “whom he has killed in order to obtain such interest”. Apparently the amendment effected two changes in the application of the section. One was to require a corir viction as a prerequisite to the applica *412 tion of the section, it having been held in some states that even though a person were found not guilty when tried for murder the question could nevertheless be retried in a civil suit for the proceeds of the insurance where the burden of proving the murder could be carried by a preponderance of the evidence rather than proof beyond a reasonable doubt as required in the criminal case. See Carter v. Carter (Fla.), 88 So.2d 153. The use of the word “murder” instead of “whom he has killed in order to obtain such interest” extended the application of the section to any murder whether for the purpose of acquiring a property interest from the deceased or otherwise. In neither form does or did the statute extend to voluntary manslaughter since a killing “in order to obtain such interest” would always have been murder.

From the fact that this statute is and always has been applicable only to the acquisition of property by descent or distribution or by will, it is plain that it has no application to the collection of insurance proceeds and it is argued that since the Legislature has not seen fit to extend the statute to include insurance proceeds it did not intend the principle involved to apply to such proceeds.

The argument however overlooks the history of the section. It first appeared in the Code of 1919 as Section 5274 thereof. The revisors' note to the section simply says “This section is new.” But the annotation says, “For discussion of this subject prior to this section see 1 Va.L.R.N.S. 465.”

The reference to 1 Va.L.R.N.S. 465 turns out to be merely a supplemental note to an editorial in 20 Va.L.Reg. 947.

This editorial begins as follows:

“The — we might say almost universal — rule is that no man shall be allowed to profit by his own wrong: Ex turpi causa oritus non actio; and in most jurisdictions one old common-law disability has always attached to homicide — whether murder or manslaughter — i. e., that no felon who has committed homicide, or his assigns, can derive any benefit from the felonious act.”

The editorial then goes on to call attention to a number of American cases in which it had been held that, despite the almost universal rule referred to, that rule as to descent, distribution and wills had been changed by the statutes which determine the course of descent and distribution and the right to take under wills and, these statutes having been enacted in derogation of the common law principle that a man cannot profit by his own wrong, murderers could under the statutes inherit and/or otherwise take property from those they had murdered since there was no exception in the statutes prescribing the general rules for the devolution of property to change the rule as to murderers.

Obviously § 5274 of the Code of 1919 was enacted as a result of that editorial. In fact towards the conclusion of the editorial the author says with reference to the principal case under discussion in the editorial:

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Bluebook (online)
206 F. Supp. 410, 1962 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3757, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/life-insurance-company-of-virginia-v-cashatt-vaed-1962.