Miller v. Miller's Administratrix

99 S.W.2d 720, 266 Ky. 539, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 705
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 11, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 99 S.W.2d 720 (Miller v. Miller's Administratrix) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Miller's Administratrix, 99 S.W.2d 720, 266 Ky. 539, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 705 (Ky. 1936).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Perry

Affirming.

Frank Miller died in August, 1935, leaving in full force and effect a policy of insurance, which had been issued bim by the defendant Continental Assurance Company upon his life, in the amount of $1,000. The appellant, Jessie Miller, was at the time of the issuance of this insurance the legal wife of the insured, Frank Miller, and was by him named in the policy as beneficiary.

After thus taking this insurance in September, 1933, he later instituted a suit against his wife, the appellant and named beneficiary, for an absolute divorce, which was, in December, 1933, adjudged him, the court making as a part of its decree the further order that “each party shall restore to the other such property * * * as either may have obtained directly or indirectly from or through the other during marriage in consideration or by reason thereof.”

Notwithstanding the granting of this divorce, it is pleaded and admitted that Miller and the appellant continued to live together thereafter up until the time of his death in August, 1935.

Following the insured’s death, his widow, the appellant, instituted an action against the defendant, Continental Assurance Company, upon the life policy, wherein she was named as beneficiary, seeking as such to obtain the proceeds thereof. Also, about the same time, the appellee, Cecilia McGhee, a sister of the deceased, having qualified as administratrix of his estate, filed a second action against the defendant insurance *541 company, naming the appellant as codefendant therein, whereby she too sought to recover for deceased’s estate the proceeds of the policy, predicating her suit upon the ground alleged in her petition, that, by reason of the appellant Jessie Miller having been divorced from the insured after the issuance to him of the life policy sued on (notwithstanding she was therein named as beneficiary), she was thereby divested of all insurable interest and right in the policy.

These two distinct actions, brought respectively against the insurance company upon the policy by the insured’s widow and administratrix, were, by order of the court, consolidated and heard together.

The defendant insurance company answered, admitting its full liability for the amount of insurance named in the policy, but alleged that it was unable to determine which of the two plaintiffs, who presented and sued upon conflicting claims as to it, was legally entitled to the insurance or should be paid its amount of $1,000, and asked leave to pay the same into court for distribution between them as their respective rights thereto “should be made to appear” upon adjudication, and that it be allowed to withdraw, with its costs, from the suit, which was so ordered.

To the petition of appellee, suing as administratrix of her brother’s estate, the appellant (his widow and named codefendant therein) filed a general demurrer, which was overruled, when she filed her answer, whereby, without traversing the allegations of the petition, she pleaded that, although she (as in the petition alleged) had been divorced from the deceased after this policy, wherein she was named as beneficiary, was issued him, in the settlement of the property rights between her and her husband at the time of their divorce proceedings in December, 1933, he did, for a valuable consideration, assign to her the proceeds of, and name her as his beneficiary in, the insurance policy.

To this answer, a general demurrer was filed and sustained, when appellant filed an amended answer and counterclaim, by the first paragraph of which she again pleaded more specifically an assignment of the policy and its proceeds to her, as made by her husband for a valuable consideration, and further alleged that, in ac *542 cordance with, an agreement, entered into between them in September or October, 1933 (when her husband was in bad health), to nurse him, the said policy of insurance was obtained by him, the premiums paid thereon by him for her use and benefit, and that she was named beneficiary therein by his indorsement of her name on the face of said policy. Also, by the second paragraph of her answer and counterclaim, she alleged that during ■the intervening period between March, 1933, and August, 1935 (the time of the insured’s death), her husband was. in bad health, and that during all of this time she, at his special request, did render him personal services, care, and nursing and expend money on him, which were of the reasonable aggregate value of $1,000, and all of which were furnished by her with the expectation on her part of receiving compensation therefor from him, and that the deceased did obtain and maintain in force the life insurance policy here involved for the purpose of paying his obligation to her therefor.

To this amended pleading a general demurrer was again filed and sustained by the court, when a further pleading (entitled a second amended and substituted answer and counterclaim) was filed, reaffirming and combining all the allegations of the former pleadings, to which again a demurrer was filed and sustained.

The appellant declining to plead further, the case was thereupon finally submitted upon the pleadings, whereupon judgment was entered denying appellant any interest in or recovery of any part of the proceeds of the' insurance policy, either as beneficiary or assignee thereof.

Appellant appeals from the court’s rulings, in holding that none nor all of her several pleadings sufficiently set out facts to constitute a cause of action, contending that same were thereby sufficiently pleaded. In support of such contention as to the legal sufficiency of the facts alleged in the two paragraphs of her answer and counterclaim to state a cause of action, counsel for appellant argues: (1) That an ordinary life insurance policy on a man’s life is assignable by him to his wife in settlement of property rights during divorce proceedings; and (2) that a divorcee may recover a judgment on quantum meriuit, for care, nursing, and money expended for her ex-husband at his request during his last illness, against *543 his personal representative, each of which legal proposition he insists was pleaded in paragraphs one and two, respectively, of the appellant’s amended answer and counterclaim and to each of which, he insists, a demurrer was nonetheless erroneously sustained.

In other words, the one pivotal question here presented upon these legal issues, arising out of the facts as pleaded (and which appellant insists were sufficiently pleaded), is who of these claimants to the insurance is entitled to receive it under the showing made by these pleadings.

Appellant insists that she is entitled to receive the proceeds of this policy, under its alleged assignment to her, notwithstanding the provision of section 425, Civil Code of Practice (which embraces the provisions of section 2121, Kentucky Statutes), which, so far as here pertinent, is as follows:

“Upon final judgment of divorce from the bond of matrimony the parties shall be restored such property, not disposed of at the commencement of the action, as either obtained from or through the other before or during the marriage in consideration thereof. ’ ’

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Related

Warren v. Spurlock's Adm'r
167 S.W.2d 858 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1943)

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Bluebook (online)
99 S.W.2d 720, 266 Ky. 539, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 705, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-millers-administratrix-kyctapphigh-1936.