Louis Vernon Thomas v. Sharon Lynn Ford Swanson

881 F.2d 523, 1989 U.S. App. LEXIS 11117, 1989 WL 84328
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedAugust 1, 1989
Docket88-2670
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 881 F.2d 523 (Louis Vernon Thomas v. Sharon Lynn Ford Swanson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Louis Vernon Thomas v. Sharon Lynn Ford Swanson, 881 F.2d 523, 1989 U.S. App. LEXIS 11117, 1989 WL 84328 (8th Cir. 1989).

Opinion

ARNOLD, Circuit Judge.

Sharon Lynn Ford Swanson appeals the District Court’s 1 decision to grant one-half of the proceeds from her deceased son John’s Servicemen’s Group Life Insurance policy to John’s father, Louis Vernon Thomas. Swanson and Thomas were defendants in an interpleader suit brought by Prudential Insurance Company of America *524 to determine the proper beneficiary of one-half of John Vernon Thomas’s life-insurance proceeds. Swanson seeks to disqualify Thomas as a beneficiary under 38 U.S.C. § 765(9), arguing that Thomas abandoned the child and willfully failed to support him during his minority. If successful, Swanson would receive the full proceeds of the $50,000 life-insurance policy, for which John did not designate a beneficiary, rather than only half that amount.

On appeal, Swanson contests the Magistrate’s decisions regarding the statutory terms “abandoned” and “willfully failed to support," as well as the determination that several years’ worth of benefits paid to John by the Social Security Administration for his father's permanent and total disability should count as support, and the Magistrate’s use of a “clear evidence” standard to evaluate her claims. We agree with Swanson’s last argument that § 765(9) does not require her to prove her case by clear and convincing evidence, and that proof by a preponderance of the evidence would suffice. Ordinarily, we would remand for new fact-finding under the correct standard of proof. However, having reviewed the entire record, we conclude that Swanson’s evidence cannot satisfy even the less exacting preponderance standard with respect to either abandonment or willful non-support. We further hold that the Magistrate correctly counted the Social Security disability benefits towards Thomas’s support of his child. Hence, we affirm the trial court’s decision without remanding the case.

I.

Swanson and Thomas first met in 1963, and they began living together when they discovered that Swanson was pregnant with John. 2 John Vernon Thomas was born on October 17, 1963, and a second child, Traci Lynn Thomas, was born to the couple on September 29, 1964. Louis Vernon Thomas supported the family, working for a construction company while Swanson attended beautician’s school. In January 1965, according to Swanson’s testimony, she separated from Thomas because they “couldn’t get along.” Tr. 55. He then came to see her a few times, and they reunited when “[h]e told me that he wanted to marry me and make a home and everything for the kids and I.... ” Id. On May 30, 1965, the couple “married,” but the marriage was invalid because Thomas was still married to Levita Green, who had served him with divorce papers that did not result in a final divorce decree until June 28, 1965.

A short while after their attempted marriage, Swanson and Thomas quarreled again. Thomas testified that he had been working seven days a week to cover the family’s bills and came home exhausted. Tr. 36. Swanson testified that she discovered papers Thomas had just received indicating that the divorce was not final. Tr. 56. Both Thomas and Swanson testified that he broke a couple of lamps during the course of the argument, and Swanson stated that she was afraid of him, and that the children “had gotten into some of the glass and were crying and upset.” Tr. 56, 36. While Swanson’s reaction may have been understandable and reasonable, there is no dispute that she was the one to leave with the children the following day, moving them and their belongings to the home of her mother, Muriel Satterfield.

Swanson and the children lived with Sat-terfield “off and on” for approximately two years while Swanson’s “love affairs waxed and waned.” Tr. 104 and Prudential Insurance Co. of America v. Thomas and Swanson, No. B-C-88-15, slip op. at 3 n. 2, 1988 WL 131650 (September 30, 1988). During that period, Thomas made several attempts to reconcile and was repeatedly rebuffed by Swanson and her mother. He managed to speak with Swanson a few times, and she allowed him to see their son once, Tr. 22, 29, but in most instances, the police told him to leave while he was still in his vehicle parked outside the house. Both Swanson and her mother, who worked for the police department, asked for help from the police keeping Thomas away from the *525 property. Tr. 71-72, 103. Thomas testified that he was afraid to venture up to the door, and would simply wait in his car or truck until asked to leave. He also testified, “I was so depressed. I wanted to hold my kids. I wanted back with her.” Tr. 29-30. Swanson did not want him around and prevented him from seeing the children, according to her own testimony and that of her mother. Tr. 58, 103-04. When Thomas called on the telephone to speak with Swanson or to locate her, Sat-terfield would tell him “ T don’t know where they’re at’ ” and hang up. Tr. 40, 103, 120.

After a few months of unsuccessful attempts to reconcile, Thomas came to Swanson and told her he was going to move. Swanson claims that when they separated, she asked him for help supporting the children, and that he replied “no, ... he was going to leave the area, ... I would never see or hear from him again, and there was no way that I could ever get any support from him for the children because we were never legally married.” Tr. 60. Swanson argues that Thomas abandoned the family at that point, in that she had no idea where he moved to and not a clue about where to start looking for him. Tr. 70, 73. She explained to the trial court that she did not have the resources to hire private detectives to track down Thomas. Tr. 73.

There is no indication that Swanson actually had any desire to locate Thomas, having deliberately evaded him while he still lived in the same town. In fact, her mother and her daughter Traci testified that Swanson had never tried to locate Thomas or help him locate her, to their knowledge. Tr. 113, 136. Moreover, Thomas first moved to his mother’s home in San Diego, an address with which Swanson was familiar. Tr. 27-28. When he next moved to Las Vegas, he tried to contact Swanson by telephone, but he could never get through, according to his testimony, because Satter-field would not allow him to talk to her daughter. Tr. 28. Thomas made a trip back from Las Vegas to meet Swanson at the restaurant where she worked and attempted to reunite with her and the children. Tr. 39. He remembered that on that occasion, she told him “ ‘Forget it. You’re never going to see the kids no more,’ and she just laughed at me,” until Thomas went outside and a sheriff suggested that he “ ‘[g]o contact them by mail,’ but ... ‘get out of here because they’re after you.’ ” Tr. 33. Satterfield corroborated Thomas’s account by testifying that her daughter “was really laughing” when she described the encounter, as if it were “a big joke ... how she had really told him off and put him on his way.” Tr. 115,117, 134.

Both Thomas and Swanson made several other moves, he traveling from Las Vegas to Florida, back to San Diego, and finally to Mountain View, Arkansas, and she moving with the children from her mother’s home to two other towns in California, and then to West Plains, Missouri.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
881 F.2d 523, 1989 U.S. App. LEXIS 11117, 1989 WL 84328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louis-vernon-thomas-v-sharon-lynn-ford-swanson-ca8-1989.