Miller v. McCarthy

270 N.W. 559, 198 Minn. 497, 1936 Minn. LEXIS 784
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedDecember 18, 1936
DocketNo. 31,090.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 270 N.W. 559 (Miller v. McCarthy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. McCarthy, 270 N.W. 559, 198 Minn. 497, 1936 Minn. LEXIS 784 (Mich. 1936).

Opinion

*499 Holt, Justice.

The appeal is from an order denying appellant’s motion for a new trial after a verdict for respondent.

Plaintiff, administrator of the estate of his son Marvin J. A. Miller, brought this action to recover upon a $5,000 life insurance policy issued ^to Marvin, conditioned to pay said sum to his wife, Florence V., upon proof of his death. The company which issued the policy answered admitting its liability, asked leave to pay the amount into court and have the representative of Florence Y. made a party defendant, and the company dismissed out of court. This was ordered as the company requested. Issue was joined by the representative of each estate. It appears conclusively that both insured and the beneficiary perished in a common catastrophe or disaster when the Ford two-door sedan in which they, about midnight on May 29, 1935, were riding north from Bovey, failing to turn to the left to enter the bridge which there spans Prairie Biver, kept straight on over the easterly abutment and turned a somersault, landing top down in some three feet of -water. The next morning Marvin was found crouching in the back part, his hair showing above the water. Florence was found some 500 feet west of the car, the river there flowing westerly, held by her clothing-being caught on a snag, her face down and knees flexed, being so held that her head was upstream. When found rigor mortis had set in as to both bodies. The only issue in the lawsuit was whether Florence survived Marvin. Appellant conceded in the oral argument that unless some of the errors assigned call for a new trial the verdict cannot be disturbed by this court.

Many of the assignments of error challenge the rulings and charge of the trial court that the burden of proof was on the administrator of Florence’s estate to show that she survived Marvin. By demurring to the complaint, by objecting to the introduction of any evidence thereunder, and by taking exception to the instruction that the administrator of Florence’s estate in order to recover must prove that she survived the insured, the vital point as to the burden of proof was raised at the trial and is presented on the appeal. There is no contention but that under the common law *500 there is no presumption of survivorship or of simultaneous death where two or more persons perish in a common disaster. Hence, as between the heirs and representatives of a husband and wife who have lost their lives in one and the same calamity, the burden of proof in an action like the present is of vital importance. In the instant case the insurance company admitted liability, paid the amount of the policy, and interpleaded the administrator of the estate of Florence, the beneficiary. That representative came in and asserted a right to the fund; but Florence, the beneficiary, being dead, he is not entitled thereto unless she died after the insured or survived him. The policy is payable to Florence, not to Florence or the representative of her estate. She had no vested interest in the policy so long as the insured lived, for he had reserved the right to change the beneficiary at any time. In a certain sense she had an interest therein, but it was contingent upon her surviving him. These clauses in the policy are inconsistent with the proposition that Florence had a vested interest in the policy:

“The insured may from time to time change the beneficiary, unless otherwise provided by indorsement on this Policy or unless there be an existing assignment of this Policy. Every change of beneficiary must be made by written notice to the Company at its Home Office accompanied by the Policy for indorsement of the change thereon by the Company, and unless so indorsed the change shall-not take effect. After such indorsement the change will relate back to and take effect as of the date the Insured signed said written notice of change whether the Insured be living at the time of such indorsement or not, but without prejudice to the Company on account of any payment made by it before receipt of such written notice at its Home Office. In the event of the death of any- beneficiary before the Insured the interest of such beneficiary shall vest in the Insured, unless otherwise provided herein. * ':i The Insured, during his lifetime, and without the consent of the beneficiary, may receive every benefit, exercise every right and enjoy every privilege, conferred upon the Insured by this Policy, unless otherwise provided by indorsement hereon.”

*501 There were no indorsements on the policy nor any assignment thereof. So we conclude that there was no vested right of the beneficiary in this policy that would pass to her heirs or representatives upon the perishing of herself and the insured simultaneously in the same disaster. Her representative was interpleaded and substituted as defendant in place of the insurer, which acknowledged liability on the policy and paid the amount thereof into court. The representative set up claim to the fund and ordinarily should prove the claim, and that necessarily would be that she, as beneficiary, survived the insured, her husband. There are decisions to the contrary. Watkins v. Home L. & A. Ins. Co. 137 Ark. 207, 208 S. W. 587, 5 A. L. R. 791; Roberts v. Hardin, 179 Ga. 114, 175 S. E. 362; United States Cas. Co. v. Kacer, 169 Mo. 301, 69 S. W. 370, 58 L. R. A. 436, 92 A. S. R. 641. The last cited case turned on the point that the beneficiary had a vested interest in the policy because the insured had not the right to change beneficiaries. In the Boberts case the dissenting opinion appears more persuasive than that of the majority opinion. The weight of authority is, we think, that where the interest of the beneficiary in the fund payable upon the insured’s death is contingent upon surviving him and they both perished in a common disaster the burden is on the one claiming through the right of the beneficiary that the latter survived the insured. Such is the conclusion stated in 2 Couch, Cyclopedia of Insurance Law, § 341. Much the same reason exists for placing the burden of proof upon the one claiming through a beneficiary in a will where the testator and the beneficiary perish in the same calamity. Young Women’s Christian Home v. French, 187 U. S. 401, 23 S. Ct. 184, 47 L. ed. 233; Cedergren v. Massachusetts B & I. Co. (C. C. A.) 292 F. 5; Middeke v. Balder, 198 Ill. 590, 64 N. E. 1002, 59 L. R. A. 653, 92 A. S. R. 284; Carpenter v. Severin, 201 Iowa, 969, 204 N. W. 448, 43 A. L. R. 1340; Fuller v. Linzee, 135 Mass. 468; Fleming v. Grimes, 142 Miss. 522, 107 So. 420, 45 A. L. R. 618; McGowin v. Menken, 223 N. Y. 509, 119 N. E. 877, 5 A. L. R. 794; Dunn v. New Amsterdam Cas. Co. 141 App. Div. 478, 126 N. Y. S. 229; In re Valverde’s Estate, 148 Misc. 49, 265 N. Y. S. 484, affirmed without opinion 242 App. Div. 653, 273 N. Y. S. 371, and *502 in 266 N. Y. 620, 195 N. E. 229; Paden v. Briscoe, 81 Tex. 563, 17 S. W. 12.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
270 N.W. 559, 198 Minn. 497, 1936 Minn. LEXIS 784, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-mccarthy-minn-1936.