Maryland National Bank v. Naomi Bauer Tower

374 F.2d 381, 1967 U.S. App. LEXIS 7269
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 28, 1967
Docket10797
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 374 F.2d 381 (Maryland National Bank v. Naomi Bauer Tower) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maryland National Bank v. Naomi Bauer Tower, 374 F.2d 381, 1967 U.S. App. LEXIS 7269 (4th Cir. 1967).

Opinion

HAYNSWORTH, Chief Judge.

In imposing a constructive trust upon the proceeds of an insurance policy in the hands of the widow of the insured in favor of the pension plan trustee, we think the District Court was quite correct to the extent that the proceeds represented the cash surrender value but incorrect as to the excess which would constitute a windfall to either claimant.

The National Life Insurance Company filed an impleader action, paying into the registry of the Court $11,500, representing the proceeds of an insurance policy issued upon the life of Crestón H. Bauer. The contending claimants are Bauer’s widow and the trustee under a pension plan created by Bauer’s employer. To the extent that the proceeds exceed the cash surrender value of certain earlier insurance policies, they will be a pure windfall to whichever claimant prevails, as will be seen from a recitation of the very novel factual background.

Parlett Gas Company, Bauer’s employer, established a pension plan in 1953 for the benefit of its employees. It provided both retirement and death benefits. The death benefits were funded by insurance. Under the pension plan, Bauer was entitled to a death benefit of $11,500, and, in December 1963, the trustee held three Continental American Life Insurance /Company policies, having an aggregate I face value of $11,500, insuring Bauer’s '.life. Those policies were owned and held by the trustee. Mrs. Bauer was the designated beneficiary, but the trustee had the right at any time to change the beneficiary.

In December 1963, the pension plan committee, upon the advice of its insurance consultant, decided to switch the funding insurance policies from Continental’s straight life policies, with accruing cash values, to renewable term life policies issued by National. National policies were procured, including one on Bauer’s life for $11,500, effective January 1, 1964. The policy year on Continental’s policies ended on December 28, 1963, and in order to avoid any gap in the coverage between December 28, 1963 and January 1,1964, the Continental policies were allowed to run into the grace period. Indeed, Continental was not 'advised that its policies would not be continued until January 15, 1964, when the pension committee’s insurance consultant wrote to Continental, informing it that they would be surrendered and requesting an appropriate form for the surrender of the policies and the collection of their cash surrender values. An appropriate form was mailed by Continental to the consultant on January 24, 1964, but this form was not executed and completed for forwarding by the trustee to Continental until February 10, 1964.

Meanwhile, Bauer died on January 31, 1964, after the expiration of the grace period on the Continental policies, but, because of an automatic premium loan provision in the Continental policies of which everyone connected with the administration of the pension plan was either unaware or was not consciously aware, those policies had not lapsed.

*383 Under the circumstances, Continental readily agreed to pay the face amount of its policies aggregating $11,500, oddly deducting nothing for the premium loan which had maintained those policies in effect after January 27, 1964. The entire proceeds of the Continental policies were paid to Mrs. Bauer with the consent and approval of the pension plan trustee. 1

National’s policy on Bauer’s life, of course, had been effective from January 1, 1964. Under that policy, the proceeds were payable to Mrs. Bauer as beneficiary, though, again, the trustee was the owner with the right to change the beneficiary. Sometime after the proceeds of the Continental policies had been paid to Mrs. Bauer, with the approval of the trustee, the double coverage occasioned second thoughts and the trustee claimed the proceeds of the National policy.

Under the circumstances of the unintended double insurance coverage at the time of Mr. Bauer’s death, if Mrs. Bauer receives the proceeds of the National policy in addition to the proceeds of the Continental policies which she has already obtained, she will receive exactly twice as much as she was entitled to under the governing pension plan. This seemed to the District Judge an unjust enrichment of her, and it assuredly would be a most unexpected windfall.

If the trustee is held entitled to the proceeds of the National policy, it, too, will receive a most unexpected windfall to the extent those proceeds exceed the cash surrender values of the Continental policies. Those amounted to $2,337.23. The trustee had informed Continental of its purpose to surrender those policies, had obtained the surrender form and expected the Continental policies to lapse on January 27, 1964, so that their only value to anyone would be the cash surrender value payable to the trustee.

If the trustee obtains the entire proceeds of the National policy, it will not inure to the benefit of the other beneficiaries of the pension plan, except to the extent that they would provide additional security for immediate retirement claims. Their presence in the hands of the trustee would enter into the computation of subsequent contributions by the employer to the trustee to maintain the funding of the entire plan on an actuarially sound basis. The ultimate effect of the trustee’s obtaining the proceeds of the National policy would be to reduce subsequent employer contributions by the approximate amount of those proceeds.

/ We thus have an unusual situation in ; which the disputed fund, in major part, will be a windfall to any of the claimants. With respect to the excess proceeds over the cash surrender value of the Continental policies, neither claimant comes to the court with any substantial equity on his side. With respect to those funds, neither has suffered any deprivation which the other should restore and neither has done any wrong, neglected any duty or violated any right of the other.

Maryland’s Court of Appeals has said: 2

A constructive trust is imposed where a person holding title to property is subject to an equitable duty to convey it to another person on the ground that he would be unjustly enriched if he were permitted to retain it. The duty to convey the property may arise because it was acquired through fraud, duress, undue influence, or mistake, or through a breach of fiduciary duty, or through wrongful disposition of another’s property.

It seems well-settled in Maryland that a constructive trust will be imposed to avoid unjust enrichment arising out of mistake in the absense of fraud, the *384 violation of any fiduciary duty or any other wrongdoing. 3 Professor Scott is of the same view, 4 and this is the general approach of the American Law Institute in the Restatement of Restitution. 5

In the usual case in which a constructive trust is imposed to avoid unjust enrichment resulting from mistake, the beneficiary of the legal duty of transfer has suffered a concomitant detriment.

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Bluebook (online)
374 F.2d 381, 1967 U.S. App. LEXIS 7269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maryland-national-bank-v-naomi-bauer-tower-ca4-1967.