Minnesota Mutual Life Insurance v. Leach

716 F. Supp. 34, 1989 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8647, 1989 WL 83181
CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedJune 8, 1989
DocketCiv. A. No. 88-2358
StatusPublished

This text of 716 F. Supp. 34 (Minnesota Mutual Life Insurance v. Leach) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Minnesota Mutual Life Insurance v. Leach, 716 F. Supp. 34, 1989 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8647, 1989 WL 83181 (D.D.C. 1989).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

GESELL, District Judge.

This is an interpleader action initiated by Minnesota Mutual Life Insurance Company (“MML”) which comes before the Court on fully documented cross-motions for summary judgment filed by the defendants, who are conflicting claimants to the policy proceeds now on deposit in the Registry of the Court. The controversy has been fully briefed and argued.

Robert L. Leach II and Deborah Leach were married in 1967, and in 1979 they purchased a home in Kenwood, Maryland. In 1983 MML issued them a joint Group Mortgage Life insurance policy obligating MML to pay the balance of the mortgage to Perpetual American Bank in the event of the death of either Robert or Deborah Leach, and providing that any balance would be paid to the “surviving wife” in the event the husband died first. The policy provision reads as follows:

DEATH BENEFIT

What happens upon the death of a jointly insured debtor?

Subject to the terms of the group policy, the death benefit for the first joint insured to die will be paid.
If the jointly insured debtors are married and the wife is the first joint insured to die or if the jointly insured debtors are unmarried, the group insurance on the life of the surviving joint insured will be automatically converted to an individual policy of decreasing term insurance ... If the jointly insured debtors are married and the husband is the first joint insured to die, the group insurance on the life of the surviving wife will be automatically converted to a survivor’s benefit and will be paid immediately on behalf of the surviving wife ...
Another provision reads:
To whom will we pay the death proceeds?
We will pay the death proceeds to the lender to be used to reduce or extinguish your loan. Any remaining proceeds will be payable to a beneficiary named by you, or to your estate if no beneficiary has been named ...
When a survivor’s benefit is also payable, we will pay the survivor’s benefit to the lender to reduce or extinguish any amount still remaining on the loan. Any remaining proceeds will be payable to the surviving wife.

Later, while the policy was still in effect, the Leaches separated under a voluntary formal agreement in 1984 and were promptly divorced. As part of the separation agreement, Robert conveyed “all of his right, title and interest” in their jointly owned Maryland home to Deborah. The agreement1 provided:

11. Residence. The parties are joint owners of certain real property located at 6411 Brookside Drive Chevy Chase, Maryland. As soon as is practicable after the execution of this Agreement, the husband shall convey all of his right, title and interest to said real property to Deborah.
The wife, in turn, shall indemnify and hold harmless the husband from any and all expenses relating to said property, including the mortgage, interest, taxes and insurance, repairs and maintenance on said property.
The husband shall use his best efforts to ensure that the present first deed of trust shall be maintained despite the transfer of his interest to the wife.

The separation agreement explicitly provided for the maintenance of Robert’s disability and health insurance, and another life insurance policy, but made no other mention of the MML policy on the home.

Deborah thereafter lived in the house, had custody of the children, and continued the policy by paying the premiums. The mortgage was paid off in December 1986 [36]*36when Deborah sold the house and moved to a house on Reservoir Road in Washington, D.C. Deborah wanted to continue the policy coverage on the Reservoir Road home and upon learning from MML that this could be done under a change of beneficiary form, she filed such a completed form in her own name only in January 1987. Shortly thereafter Robert died, on March 28, 1987. He had not remarried.

When a dispute developed between Robert’s estate, which claimed the policy proceeds, and Deborah, who insisted upon her rights under the change of beneficiary arrangement, MML paid the proceeds, approximately $180,000, into the Registry of the Court after filing this interpleader complaint in this case.

By the time the summary judgment motions were argued, the parties did not dispute that the policy continued in effect after the Maryland house was sold.2 The sale would seem to have triggered a termination of the insurance, as the policy provided that “The insurance on your life will terminate on the earliest of: (1) the date your loan is paid in full;..” Under this provision, Perpetual American was no longer a beneficiary. The ownership rights of the policy continued, however, because not all the provisions for winding up had occurred and the parties had the option to receive continued insurance under an “individual decreasing term life insurance policy,” although the policy did not specify exactly how this was to be effected.

When Deborah sought in 1987 to transfer coverage to the Reservoir Road house, MML sent a change of beneficiary form to her, which she executed. She asked that it be continued in both of their names, designating United Savings Bank, the holder of the Reservoir Road mortgage, as the new beneficiary. Robert did not execute any form.

After Robert died, Deborah again contacted MML, requesting appropriate claim forms. By this time, MML was aware of the divorce, and MML advised Deborah that it wished to examine the divorce documents to determine, among other things, whether they designated “ownership of the policy” to Deborah. The policy did not provide for the respective rights of husband and wife in the event of their formal separation and divorce while the policy was in effect and did not request notification in the event of divorce or separation.

Because both insured debtors had not effected a mutually agreed designation of a beneficiary, MML lawyers eventually reached the view that there was no surviving wife, no new beneficiary had been named after Perpetual American’s loan was paid, and that therefore the remaining proceeds should be paid to the estate of the husband. That is, MML focused on an event which the policy did identify, namely, death of the male insured, ignoring all intervening events that could not fit easily within its scanty policy provisions. This approach ignored the realities of what had taken place as well as the realities of modern society where divorce can hardly be deemed an unexpected contingency.

Thus, the issue before the Court is whether, viewing all the facts and circumstances it appears that, although he did not do so expressly, Robert in fact at the time of formal separation shifted ownership of the policy to his wife by an assignment of his entire interest in the policy, thereby making Deborah the sole owner of the policy and her single designation of beneficiary effective.

Clearly the policy itself is riddled with ambiguities, and the Court cannot rely on traditional contract principles and simply construe these ambiguities against MML, as the contest in the case is between the estate and Deborah Leach — not MML. No case with identical facts has been cited, but the underlying principle is well established.

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Related

Zachary v. Security Life and Trust Company
166 S.E.2d 495 (Court of Appeals of North Carolina, 1969)
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Williams v. Sistare
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
716 F. Supp. 34, 1989 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8647, 1989 WL 83181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/minnesota-mutual-life-insurance-v-leach-dcd-1989.