Mutual Life Ins. Co. of New York v. Owens

48 P.2d 1024, 39 N.M. 421
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 18, 1935
DocketNo. 4061.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 48 P.2d 1024 (Mutual Life Ins. Co. of New York v. Owens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mutual Life Ins. Co. of New York v. Owens, 48 P.2d 1024, 39 N.M. 421 (N.M. 1935).

Opinion

BICKLEY, Justice.

The Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York filed its bill of interpleader, setting up that Hube# E. Owens at the time of his death had an insurance policy with it. The company acknowledged that the sum called for in the policy was due to the beneficiary, and averred its willingness to pay the proceeds of the policy to the party entitled thereto. The bill alleged that Fay E. Owens (appellee), wife of the insured, was designated as beneficiary on the face of the policy, and that Marthalouise Horton Owens (appellant), former wife of the insured, was holding a request for change of beneficiary, signed by insured and dated March 1, 1934, requesting the company to change the beneficiary to her.

The bill set up that by reason of conflicting claims the company was in great doubt as to which claimant it ought to pay the proceeds of the policy, and that it had paid the money into court, and prayed that the claimants be required to interplead and “settle between them their rights to the money under the policy.”

Fay E. Owens, appellee, filed her answer and cross-complaint setting up her claim to the proceeds of the policy as the beneficiary designated on the face thereof.

Marthalouise Horton Owens, appellant, filed her answer and cross-complaint setting up her claim to the proceeds of the policy by reason of a request for change of beneficiary signed by the insured and delivered to the company the day prior to the death of the insured, which written request designated appellant as beneficiary.

At the conclusion of the case the court found that appellee Fay E. Owens, who is designated as beneficiary on the face of the policy, was entitled to the proceeds of said policy, and entered judgment accordingly. From this judgment the appellant has appealed.

The following findings of fact made by the court show the basis of the judgment, and, since we find them controlling here, will be set out in full:

“1. Hubert E. Owens, the husband of Fay E. Owens, died a few minutes after twelve o’clock noon on the 2d day of March, 1934, leaving' him surviving Fay E. Owens, his widow, who is twenty (20) years of age.”

“3. Hubert £. Owens in March, 1926, was married to Marthalouise Horton; on the 15th day of May, 1926, he took out the policy of insurance in question, designating his then wife, Marthalouise H. Owens, as the beneficiary; on the 11th day of January, 1934, Hubert E. Owens and Marthalouise H. Owens, his wife, entered into a written property settlement by the terms of which each renounced any interest or claim in the insurance on the life of the other; on the 12th of January, 1934, Marthalouise Horton Owens obtained a divorce from Hubert E. Owens in the district court of Bernalillo county, New Mexico, and there being no children of their marriage and no alimony, suit or support money claimed.or adjudged from and after the 12th day of January, 1934, Marthalouise Horton Owens, who resumed her maiden name, Marthalouise Horton, had no legal claim of any kind against the said Hubert E. Owens, nor was he indebted to her in any sum or on any account whatsoever.

“4. On the 15th day of January, 1934, Hubert E. Owens, then a single man. signed and swore to an application to the insurance company to change the beneficiary of the policy to his mother, Bonnie Owens, and delivered the policy to the Albuquerque office of the insurance company, which forwarded the policy and the application for change through the Pueblo office to the home office in New York, where, on the 22d of January, 1934, the company consented to the change and indorsed the same on the policy and returned it by mail through the Albuquerque office to the insured; on the 4th day of February, 1934, Hubert E. Owens married Fay E. Owens, and on the 19th of February, 1934, Hubert E. Owens executed .and swore to a written application to the insurance company to change the beneficiary of the policy to Fay E. Owens, his wife, and delivered the policy with the application to the Albuquerque office of the company, which forwarded the same through Pueblo to the home office in New York, where on the 25th of February, 1934, the insurance company consented to the change and indorsed the same on the policy and returned the same by mail through Pueblo to the Albuquerque office where the policy arrived on the 28th of February, 1934, and on that day Marthalouise Horton, the divorced wife of Hubert E. Owens, who was and had been for several years cashier in the local office of the insurance company in Albuquerque, mailed the policy to Hubert E. Owens at his home address.

“5. The policy was delivered in the mail box at the home of Hubert E. Owens before noon on March 1, 1934, and was received by his wife, Fay E. Owens; Hubert E. Owens worked at the Santa Fé shops and did not come home for lunch; that night, when Hubert E. Owens arrived at home, his wife handed him the letter in which the policy was enclosed, he read the letter, looked at the policy and handed the policy to his wife with instructions to put it away, and she placed it in the chiffonier drawer in his room where it remained accessible to him that night and the following morning, but he made no effort to take it or carry it with him on the morning of March 2d, nor did he say anything to his wife to indicate that he contemplated making any further change in the beneficiary thereof, and before noon on March 2d, he was stricken with edema and died at the hospital a few minutes after twelve o’clock that day.

“6. After his marriage to Fay E. Owens on the 4th of February, 1934, the deceased, Hubert E. Owens, and Fay E. Owens had no discord or trouble in their relations as husband and wife.

“7. Hubert E. Owens, by reason of having made the previous application for change of beneficiary on his policy on the 15th of January, 1934, when, as a single man, he changed it to his mother, and on the 19th of February, 1934, after his marriage, when he changed it to his wife, understood that the company required all applications for change of beneficiary to be accompanied by the policy, which was required to be sent to the home office in New York to have the change of beneficiary endorsed thereon.

“8. On the 1st day of March, 1934, at about nine o’clock a. m., Hubert E. Owens met his former wife, Marthalouise Horton, at the corner of Third and Central in Albuquerque and gave to her a signed application which she had previously prepared and given to him requesting the company to change the beneficiary from his wife, Fay E. Owens, to Marthalouise Horton, his divorced wife, and, at the same time told her that, when the policy got back from the home office to hold it in the local office where she was cashier, and she told him the policy had arrived changed to his wife, Fay E. Owens, the day before, and had been mailed out in the afternoon mail, and that when he went home the night of March 1st, it would be there, and that he was required to bring the policy down to the office so it could be sent back to the home office in New York with the proposed change of beneficiary to the divorced wife; Hubert E.

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Bluebook (online)
48 P.2d 1024, 39 N.M. 421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mutual-life-ins-co-of-new-york-v-owens-nm-1935.