Mutual of Omaha Insurance Company v. Walsh

395 F. Supp. 1219, 1975 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11962
CourtDistrict Court, D. Montana
DecidedJune 10, 1975
DocketCV 74-18-GF
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 395 F. Supp. 1219 (Mutual of Omaha Insurance Company v. Walsh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Montana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mutual of Omaha Insurance Company v. Walsh, 395 F. Supp. 1219, 1975 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11962 (D. Mont. 1975).

Opinion

OPINION

RUSSELL E. SMITH, Chief Judge.

This interpleader action, which has been submitted on an agreed statement of facts, involves the defendants’ conflicting claims to the proceeds of an insurance policy.

Alton E. Kraling and Jacqueline Anglin Kraling were husband and wife at the time of their instantaneous and simultaneous deaths in February 1973. At the time of death Alton E. Kraling was the beneficiary of a group life policy issued by Mutual of Omaha Insurance Company (Mutual of Omaha), the plaintiff in this interpleader action.

The policy provided that Mutual of Omaha would pay $50,000.00 on the death of A. E. Kraling and $25,000.00 on the death of Jacqueline A. Kraling. The benefits are payable as follows:

16. Payment of Claims: Indemnity for loss of life will be payable in accordance with the beneficiary designation and the provisions respecting such payment which are prescribed herein and effective at the time of payment. If no such designation is then effective, indemnity for loss of *1222 life of the Insured shall be payable as follows: (a) to the spouse of the Insured, otherwise (b) equally to the then living lawful children of the Insured, including stepchildren and adopted children, if any, otherwise (c) equally to the Insured’s parents or parent then living, otherwise (d) to the estate of the Insured. Any other accrued indemnities unpaid at the Insured’s death may, at the option of the Company, be paid either to the Insured’s beneficiary or to his estate. All other indemnities will be payable to the Insured.

The history of the relationships giving rise to the claims is as follows:

Edna Morris Coleman (hereafter Edna) and E. H. Coleman, during their marriage which was dissolved by their divorce sometime prior to May 6, 1940, became natural parents of Dixie Parker.

Edna and Alton E. Kraling (hereafter Alton), during their marriage which commenced May 6, 1940, and terminated upon the death of Edna in 1969, became the natural parents of Johnnie A. Hausner.

Jacqueline Anglin (hereafter Jacqueline) and Henry Richard Anglin, during their marriage which terminated in 1970, became the adoptive parents of Terry Anglin and Sherry Schneider.

Jacqueline and Alton were married in May 1972.

R. William Walsh is the Administrator of Alton’s estate.

The defendants are entitled to share in the insurance proceeds as follows: The $50,000.00, less a proportionate part of the plaintiff’s attorney’s fees and costs, shall be divided equally among Johnnie A. Hausner, daughter, Dixie Parker, stepdaughter, Terry Anglin, stepson, and Sherry Schneider, stepdaughter. The $25,000.00, (less the es-state’s share of the costs) payable on the death of Jacqueline (Anglin Kraling) shall be paid to the defendant Walsh as administrator.

The reasoning is: To the extent that the policy does not provide for the disposition of its proceeds, the Uniform Simultaneous Death Act (R.C.M. 1947 § 91-423 et seq.) applies. If the amount payable on the death of Alton is paid as though he had survived Jacqueline then she is eliminated as a beneficiary and these words in the policy govern:

Indemnity for loss of life will be payable . . . equally to the then living lawful children of the Insured, including stepchildren and adopted children ....

The problem is not whether as a matter of legal logic the step-relationship with Alton can survive the deaths of Edna and Jacqueline whose marriages to Alton brought the step-relationships into being in the first place. See the comprehensive discussion in In re Bordeaux’ Estate, 37 Wash.2d 561, 225 P.2d 433 (1950). Rather it is a question of intent. What did Alton intend the word “stepchild” to mean? It is unnecessary here to find some common meaning for the word “stepchild” because the quoted language furnishes its own interpretation. In the policy here Jacqueline was described as the primary beneficiary. On her death, prior to that of Alton, there could be no stepchildren of any kind if a meaning is given the word “stepchild” which makes the step-relationship dependent upon the continuance of the marriage that created the relationship. In such a case the word “stepchild” would have no meaning. Rather than read the word “stepchildren” out of the policy, the court should give it a meaning, 1 and since it does no violence to the word “stepchild” to employ it as describing a child of one’s wife by a former marriage, without regard to the death of the wife, that meaning is given.

I do not distinguish between Dixie Parker and Terry Anglin and Sherry Schneider, although the latter two were adopted children of their mother, be *1223 cause of R.C.M.1947 § 61-212 making the relationship of the adopted child to the adopting parent that of a natural child. While the agreed facts indicate that Dixie Parker was closer to Alton than were Terry Anglin and Sherry Schneider, I do not find anything which would justify a finding that it was Alton’s intent to distinguish between the children of his wife Edna and those of his wife Jacqueline.

The problem which arises with respect to the $25,000.00 payable on the death of Jacqueline is whether she should be treated as an insured with payments going to the children and stepchildren, or whether the amounts payable on her death are to be paid under the language:

Any other accrued indemnities unpaid at the Insured’s death may, at the option of the Company, be paid either to the Insured’s beneficiary or to his estate. All other indemnities will be payable to the Insured.

Alton purchased the policy, paid the premiums, and is the named insured in the policy. Jacqueline is described as a dependent spouse. If the word “dependent” is substituted for the word “Insured” in paragraph 16 of the policy, then benefits are payable to her children and stepchildren; otherwise they are payable under the language last quoted. Part A of the policy describes the injuries for which payment will be made. The last paragraph of Part A is as follows:

When coverage is provided to a dependent, the above definition of injuries applies to such dependent by substituting the word “dependent” for the word “Insured” wherever it appears. A dependent is a person eligible for coverage hereunder and insured in accordance with General Provision 5.

It is argued by all of the children and stepchildren that, by virtue of the last-quoted language, the word “dependent” should be substituted for the word “Insured” in paragraph 16. The exact language of Part A of the policy confines the substitution to “the above definition of injuries” and the policy taken as a whole does not require a wider substitution. The general purpose of the policy is to indemnify the insured. Only dependents may be insured and when persons cease to be dependents, the insurance as to them ceases. This indicates that the purpose of the policy is to protect the insured against losses which he might sustain by reason of the injury or death of the dependents.

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Bluebook (online)
395 F. Supp. 1219, 1975 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11962, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mutual-of-omaha-insurance-company-v-walsh-mtd-1975.