New England Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Harvey

82 F. Supp. 702, 1949 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3079
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedFebruary 8, 1949
DocketCiv. A. 7530
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 82 F. Supp. 702 (New England Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Harvey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New England Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Harvey, 82 F. Supp. 702, 1949 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3079 (D. Mass. 1949).

Opinion

FORD, District Judge.

This is an interpleader suit brought by New England Mutual Life Insurance Company (hereinafter referred to as the Company) under the provisions of Sec. 24(26) of the Judicial Code, 28 U.S.C.A. § 41(26), as amended [now §§ 1335, 1397, 2361], to determine the persons entitled to be paid the amount due from the Company under Income Certificate No. 2798 issued to the late Anna Sherlock Harvey. The claimants are, on the one hand, two daughters of Mrs. Harvey, Anne Harvey Trainer and Ruth Harvey Stead, and, on the other hand, her two grandsons, Kenneth A. Harvey, Jr. and Richardson B. Harvey, children of her son, Kenneth A. Harvey. Ruth Harvey Stead is a citizen of Connecticut, the other claimants are all citizens and residents of Massachusetts.

The facts of the case as I find them from the evidence are as follows:

Income Certificate No. 2798, issued to Mrs. Harvey by the plaintiff Company on June 25, 1934 sets forth the terms of an agreement between them on that date. Under this agreement the Company agreed to retain the sum of $11,090.60 which had become due to Mrs. Harvey as beneficiary of two life insurance policies on the life of her deceased husband, and to pay her in quarterly instalments interest on the sum retained at 3% per annum plus surplus interest earned by the Company. She reserved the right, upon the giving of thirty days notice in writing, to withdraw on any .quarterly payment day either the whole sum or parts thereof in amounts of not less than fifty dollars.

At the death of Mrs. Harvey the amount then held by the Company was to be paid to her daughter, Anne Harvey Trainer, if living, otherwise to the daughter’s surviving issue, if any, otherwise to the executors or administrators of Mrs. Harvey. Mrs. Harvey reserved the right “to change or revoke the appointment of said daughter and said issu'e as Contingent Payees, upon due request made in writing and presentation of this Certificate for endorsement.”

In the exercise of this reserved right Mrs. Harvey thereafter changed the provisions for payment at her death by written request on a form provided by the Company, signed by her on June 23, 1941. The Income Certificate was presented to the Company which endorsed this change thereon on June 24, 1941, and on June 25, 1941 mailed the endorsed Certificate back to Mrs. Harvey. Under the changed provisions the amount held by the Company at the death of Mrs. Harvey was payable in equal shares per stirpes to such of her daughters, Anne Harvey Trainer and Ruth Harvey Stead, as may be living, and to the so living issue of either or both of said daughters who may be deceased, but if none, then to the executors or administrators of Mrs. Harvey. Mrs. Harvey still reserved the right to change the beneficiaries or the mode of settlement to them “upon due request in *704 writing and presentation of the Certificate for endorsement.”

In the.Spring of 1942, according to the testimony of Kenneth A. Harvey, Mrs. Harvey expressed to her son Kenneth A. Harvey an intention of leaving moriey from the insurance left her by her husband to send Kenneth’s sons to college, and requested him to obtain the necessary papers from the insurance company so that she could make the change of beneficiaries. At his request the Company prepared a request for change under which Kenneth’s sons were designated as beneficiaries under Income Certificate 2798 and by which Mrs. Harvey would have relinquished her rights to withdraw any part of the proceeds or to make any further change of beneficiary. This was never shown to her, but, later again at the request of Kenneth, a form was prepared for him under which his two sons, Kenneth A. Harvey, Jr., and Richardson B. Harvey, were named as beneficiaries and the right to change the beneficiaries was still reserved. He gave this to his mother, and, on June 9, 1942, it was received by the Company, signed by Mrs. Harvey. The Certificate was not presented to the Company for endorsement either at this time nor at any subsequent time during Mrs. Harvey’s life. The Company on June 11, 1942 in a letter to Kenneth Harvey informed him that the Certificate must be furnished for endorsement. He discussed this with his mother while visiting her during the Summer of 1942. She said she would look for the Certificate, and, on that occasion, he helped her to search her desk for it, but it was not found there and Mrs. Harvey knew it was not there.

Kenneth Harvey then wrote to the Company that his mother had lost the Certificate and requested a lost certificate form for her to sign. The Company informed him that it would be necessary to furnish a bond to save the Company harmless from claims of other persons which might arise, the bond to be signed by Mrs. Harvey and her two daughters, previously designated as beneficiaries, and by two sureties. The Company furnished a bond to be signed and he delivered it to his mother, telling her it must be signed if the Certificate were not found. She never returned any executed bond to the Company, nor were her two daughters ever asked by anyone to sign the. bond. Late in 1942, when Kenneth asked her if she had found the Certificate, according to his testimony, she told him that everything was “fixed up.” It is significant that she said nothing further about the Certificate she knew was at the bank, as appears later. It seems evident she made this statement knowingly and with an intention to circumvent any further pressure on the part of Kenneth for a change of beneficiaries that would include his two sons.

Mrs. Harvey died October 14,1947. When her safe deposit box in the Wellesley Trust Company was opened by her executors on January 7, 1948, the original Income Certificate No. 2798 was found in it. Since June 25, 1941, when the Company mailed this certificate to her, until her death, she had visited the box several times each year. No one else during that period had access to the box alone except for one visit by her daughter, Mrs. Trainer, who opened the box with her mother’s authorization on September 5, 1947 to obtain papers which Mrs. Harvey wished to look at.

Until the time of her death Mrs. Harvey remained alert and intelligent, capable of understanding and handling her affairs, and of exercising her own independent judgment in regard to them. During this period she frequently told a neighbor that her son Kenneth was urging her to sign papers in regard to the disposition of her property which she did not wish to sign, and that she did no.t worry about Kenneth’s sons because their maternal grandfather would provide for them.

From these facts it is fair to infer, and I find that Mrs. Harvey without question knew, that a surrender of the Income Certificate for endorsement was required by the Company in order to complete the change of beneficiary, that from June, 1941, until her death this Certificate was not lost by any means but was knowingly kept by her in her safe deposit box at the Wellesley Trust Company, and that she did not intend to complete any effective change by which her grandsons would replace her daughters as beneficiaries of the Certificate. Proof of this fact is definitely found in *705 Mrs. Harvey’s statement to Kenneth A. Harvey, her son, that she had everything “fixed up” when, as a matter of fact, she knew she had not.

But even if I were to find, as I do not, that Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
82 F. Supp. 702, 1949 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3079, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-england-mut-life-ins-co-v-harvey-mad-1949.