Miller v. Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance

36 A.2d 517, 183 Md. 19, 1944 Md. LEXIS 133
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 23, 1944
Docket[No. 15, January Term, 1944.]
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 36 A.2d 517 (Miller v. Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance, 36 A.2d 517, 183 Md. 19, 1944 Md. LEXIS 133 (Md. 1944).

Opinion

Bailey, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

By its ordinary life policy No. 584078, issued on September 15, 1922, Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company, the appellee, insured the life of one Frank O. Miller for $5,000. The insured’s wife, Bertie P. Miller, the appellant, was named as beneficiary therein. However, the insured reserved the right to change the beneficiary and on November 10,1939, the policy was amended to read as follows:

“If the policy shall mature ás a death claim the proceeds shall be payable in monthly .installments (240 stipulated) as provided in Option ‘C’, to my wife, Bertie P. Miller (born June 4, 1888).
“Upon the death of the survivor of myself and my said wife, any funds then retained by the Company shall be paid in one sum to my brother, George W. Miller, and my sister, Florence G. Miller, equally or to the survivor of them, if living, otherwise to the executors or administrators of such last survivor.”

The approval of this amendment by the Company was, on November 13, 1939, indorsed upon the policy and signed by J. L. Márchese, Assistant Secretary.

A subsequent amendment was made on August 24, 1942, approved by the Company and the policy indorsed on August 25, 1942. This amendment reads as follows:

“If the policy shall mature as a death claim, the proceeds shall be payable in monthly installments of $100.00, as provided in Option ‘A’, to my wife, Bertie P. Miller if living as said installments respectively fall due, otherwise the proceeds, or any balance thereof, shall be paid in one sum to my brother, George W. Miller, and my sister, *22 Florence G. Miller, equally or to the survivor of them, if living, otherwise as provided in the optional methods of settlement.”

The insured died on August 25, 1942, and the net proceeds of the policy, including the face amount and the 1942 dividend, is the sum of $5,026.10. It is conceded that the date of birth of Bertie P. Miller is stated incorrectly in the first amendment and that the correct date is June 4,1886. It is further conceded that under Option “C”, referred to in the first amendment, monthly payments in the amount of $25.08 would continue during the lifetime of Bertie P. Miller, with 240 monthly payments guaranteed, and in the event of the death of Bertie P. Miller prior to the completion of said 240 monthly payments, the commuted value of the remainder thereof would then be payable in one sum to the other beneficiaries designated in said amendment, but that under Option “A”, referred to in the second amendment, the monthly payments of $100 would continue until the proceeds of the policy were exhausted, that is to say, for approximately 53 months, or until the earlier death of the said Bertie P. Miller, in which event any balance then remaining would be payable in one sum to the other designated benficiaries.

The appellant has demanded that the Company pay to her the monthly installments of $100 as provided by the second amendment and Option “A” of the policy. The other beneficiaries, George W. Miller and Florence G. Miller, claim that the second amendment is invalid, void and of no effect and have demanded that the Company pay to the appellant only the monthly payments accrued and to accrue under the first amendment and Option “C” of the policy.

Confronted by these conflicting claims and demands, the Company, on November 23, 1942, filed its bill of complaint in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City against Bertie P. Miller, George W. Miller, and Florence G. Miller. The record does not contain a copy of the bill, but it does appear that on the same day and without notice to the defendants, the court entered a preliminary or interlocu *23 tory decree, providing among other things, that the plaintiff pay into court the sum of §201.78 and that the defendants interplead. On December 18,1942, Bertie P. Miller appeared and answered. On April 5, 1943, leave was granted her to withdraw her answer and file a demurrer to the bill. The demurrer was filed on the following day. On May 19, 1943, the demurrer was sustained with leave to file an amended bill within 30 days. The amended bill, which was filed on June 25, 1943, after setting forth substantially the facts with respect to the policy and its amendments and the conflicting claims and demands of the defendants which we have recited above, further alleges that the plaintiff “has no interest, partiality, or favor towards any of said Defendants, and claims no interest in the proceeds of said policy other than its desire faithfully to perform its duty with regard thereto under the terms of said policy, and any valid amendment of the contract embodied therein and while Plaintiff stands ever ready, willing and anxious to perform its said duty, and to satisfy the claim and demand of that Defendant or those Defendants who lawfully establish the right thereto, this Plaintiff, under the circumstances hereinbefore set forth is exposed to the possible hazard, vexation, and expense of several actions at law or equity, and is unable without danger to itself to ascertain which of the claimants, said defendants, is entitled to be satisfied in their said demands”.

The Company, in said amended bill, then tenders itself ready and willing to pay into court either the sum of §272.96 under the first amendment or the sum of §1,103.13 under the second amendment, as the court might direct, and further tenders itself ready and willing to continue to make such further payments out of the policy proceeds to the clerk of the court, pending the determination of the cause, and thereafter until the same are thereby exhausted to such of the defendants and in such manner as the court, by its decree, might direct after adjudicating the respective claims and demands of the defendants. The prayers of the amended bill are that the defendants interplead, *24 that the court determine the manner and amount in which monthly payments thereafter accruing should be paid by the plaintiff out of the proceeds of the policy, that the defendants be restrained from prosecuting any action, either at law or in equity, against the plaintiff for or in respect to the proceeds of the policy, and for general relief.

Again, without awaiting answers from the defendants to the amended bill, the court on the same day passed a preliminary or interlocutory decree directing that the parties defendant interplead, that “the plaintiff pay into the Court the further sum of $800.00, said fund to be deposited in a National Bank, and that the plaintiff continue to pay into this Court each month the further sum of $100, pending the further order of this Court, and that the plaintiff redeposit or repay into the Court the fee and costs heretofore withdrawn or paid out”, that all further proceedings in this case be stayed as regards the plaintiff, that an injunction issue restraining the defendants from prosecuting any action against the plaintiff in respect of the proceeds of said policy, that in the interpleader pro-, ceedings George W. Miller and Florence G. Miller be the plaintiffs and Bertie P. Miller, the defendant, that the decree passed on November 23, 1942, be rescinded, and that the questions of court costs and counsel fees be reserved for the further determination of the court.

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Bluebook (online)
36 A.2d 517, 183 Md. 19, 1944 Md. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-massachusetts-mutual-life-insurance-md-1944.