Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. May

10 Tenn. App. 221, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 26
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 23, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 10 Tenn. App. 221 (Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. May) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. May, 10 Tenn. App. 221, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 26 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

HEISKELL, J.

This is a bill of interpleader. It was sustained as such and the claimants of the proceeds of a $5000 insurance policy *222 were ordered to interplead. They have done so and it is not necessary to notice the interpleader further.

0. IT. May on January 19, 1918, took out a $5000 insurance policy in the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, making his wife, Bernice Lillian May the beneficiary. On August 3, 1927, O. H. May shot and killed his wife and on August 8, 1927, he died. James May qualified as administrator' of the estate of O. H. May, representing his next of kin and Melvin Standifer representing the next of kin of the wife, Bernice Lillian May, became her administrator. The administrator of the wife contends that the husband having feloniously killed the wife, those claiming under him can take nothing of the proceeds of this policy. The administrator of the husband admits that O. H. May killed his wife, but says (1) ITe was insane at the time, and therefore the killing was not felonious within the meaning of the law and those claiming under him are not precluded from taking. (2) The policy provides that the insured may change the beneficiary at any time, therefore the wife had no property right in said policy, but a mere contingency, while the husband remained the owner of the policy, and therefore, those claiming through the husband, seek to take nothing under and through the wife and are not precluded from taking by reason of the killing, even conceding it to have been felonious.

The Chancellor held that O. H. May was not insane when he killed his wife, therefore the killing was felonious and the husband and those claiming under him could not claim any benefit from said policy. From the decree James May, administrator of O. H. May, has appealed and assigned errors.

As indicated in the foregoing statement, the assignments of error present two contentions. First: That O H. May was insane at the time he killed his wife, therefore the killing was not felonious, and Code 4171al, does not apply. Second: That even if the killing was murder, that by reason of the right reserved to the insured to change the beneficiary, the wife took no property in the policy and therefore the husband upon her death took nothing from her but took by virtue of his ownership of the policy and those claiming under him are not prevented from taking the proceeds of the policy by virtue of the killing, conceding it to be felonious. As to the first contention there is much controversy and much conflicting evidence. Almost the whole record is built around this issue.

As to the second proposition, there is no dispute about the controlling facts. It is not denied that 0. II. May killed his wife and that she was the beneficiary designated in the policy at the time of her death. It is admitted that the policy contains the following provision:

*223 “This policy is written with the right of the insured to change the beneficiary. When such right has been reserved, and if there be no written assignment of this policy on file with the company, the insured may (while the policy is in force) designate a new beneficiary, with or without reserving right of change thereafter, by filing written notice thereof at the home office of the company accompanied by the policy for suitable endorsement. Such change shall take effect upon the endorsement of the same on the policy by the company and not before. If any beneficiary shall die before the insured the interest of such beneficiary shall vest in the insured.”

It is undisputed that O. H. May paid the premiums, retained the policy and did not assign to any one. It is contended upon this state of facts that Mrs. May did not have any property in this policy and therefore even if 0. H. May was not insane when he killed her, that his next of kin and not hers must take the proceeds of the policy.

In Life Association v. Winn, 96 Tenn., 226, it is held under a policy containing such a provision where the wife of the assured was made beneficiary, that she took no vested interest. The court says:

"Until this event takes place, owing to the right of revocation, which is, by the condition, reserved to the assured, the beneficiary has a mere expectancy, depending upon the will and act of the assured. Martin v. Stebbins, 126 Ill., 387; Mason Mutual Benefit Association v. Burkhart, 110 Ind., 189; Supreme Conclave v. Cappella, 41 Fed. Rep., 1; 1 Bacon on Ben. Soc., Sec. 306 ; Proly Mutual Association Fund v. Allen, 106 Ind., 593; Mutual Association v. Montgomery, 70 Mich., 587. And this expectancy does not rise to the dignity of a property right. Byrne v. Casey, 70 Tex., 247; Manning v. A. O. U. W., 86 Ky., 136; Mason Mutual Benefit Association v. Burkhart, supra.
"As is said by the court of last resort in New York: ‘Where the right of the payee has no other foundation than the bare intent of the assured, revocable at any moment, there can be no vested interest in the named beneficiary any more than in the legatee of a will before it takes effect.’ In such a case, ‘the designation’ of the beneficiary ‘is in the nature of an inchoate or unexecuted gift, revocable at any moment by the donor, and remaining wholly under his control.’ Smith v. N. B. Society, 123 N. Y., 85.
"Mr. May, in his work on Insurance, Vol. II, See. 399m, adopts this view, and this court has already distinctly recognized it as sound in Catholic Knights v. Kuhn, 91 Tenn., 214, *224 following in this the intimations in the earlier case of Tennessee Lodge v. Ladd, 5 Lea, 720.”

The following Tennessee cases are to the same effect: Handwerker v. Diermeyer, 96 Tenn., 619; Fisher v. Fisher, 99 Tenn., 629; Lane v. Lane, 99 Tenn., 639; and authorities outside of the State follow the same rule. Mutual Benefit Life Ins. Co. v. Swett, 222 Fed., 200; Lowenstein v. Koch, 152 N. Y. S., 506; Ellis v. Fidelity & Casualty Co., 165 Iowa, 713, 144 N. W., 574.

The provision of the policy: “If any beneficiary shall die before the insured, the interests of such beneficiary shall vest in the insured” might be very important in the absence of a provision for the right of the insured to change the beneficiary. With this latter provision in the policy, the other provision would seem to have no force unless it be as a mere equivalent of a change of beneficiary. As between the insurer and the insured there might be some reason in saying the company should not be obliged to recognize a new beneficiary unless the name was endorsed on the policy, but the death of a beneficiary before the death of the insured should authorize the company to recognize the insured as sole owner of the policy. But as between the insured and a designated beneficiary, the beneficiary, by reason of the reservation in the insured of the right to change the beneficiary, takes no property right until the death of the insured before that of the .beneficiary. So the death-of the beneficiary puts an end to the expectancy, just like the death of a devisee under a will before the death of the testator. The result follows in each case from the fact that the expectancy does not take effect until the death of the creator of the expectancy.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Tenn. App. 221, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metropolitan-life-ins-co-v-may-tennctapp-1929.