New York Life Ins. v. Federal Nat. Bank

151 F.2d 537, 162 A.L.R. 536, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 2989
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedOctober 29, 1945
DocketNo. 3147
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 151 F.2d 537 (New York Life Ins. v. Federal Nat. Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New York Life Ins. v. Federal Nat. Bank, 151 F.2d 537, 162 A.L.R. 536, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 2989 (10th Cir. 1945).

Opinion

HUXMAN, Circuit Judge.

The New York Life Insurance Company 1 issued its fifteen-year endowment insurance policy on the life of Allen J. Cammack in the sum of Ten Thousand Dollars. The policy was made payable to him if living on January 10, 1943, or to his wife, Minnie O. Cammack, if he died prior to that date. The policy gave Cammack the right to change the bene'ficiary and also the right to assign the policy. He did not change the beneficiary, but on July 11, 1940, he assigned the policy to Benjamin F. Fields by written assignment, which was in due form and regular in all respects. Minnie O. Cammack, the beneficiary, joined in this assignment. -The assignment contained the following provision: “Absolute — This assignment gives the assignee the right to borrow against this policy, use the dividends, or surrender same at any time in accordance with the rules of the Company, without the consent of the insured.” Fields immediately borrowed the full loan value of the policy, and after the death of Cammack in January, 1941, made proof of loss and thereupon received the balance due on the policy from the Company. Thereafter, the proper county court in Oklahoma, in a proceeding pending therein, found that Minnie O. Cam-mack “is an incompetent person and is mentally incompetent to manage her property,” and appointed the Federal National Bank of Shawnee,2 Oklahoma, guardian of her estate.

The Bank, as her guardian, brought this action against the Company to recover the face amount of the policy. The ground on which recovery was sought was that Cam-mack was completely without mental capacity at the time he executed this assignment, and that the assignment was therefore void and conveyed nothing to Fields, the assignee. The cause was tried to the court without a jury. Judgment was entered for the plaintiff, and the Company has appealed. A number of assignments of error are urged for reversal. These will be noted separately hereafter.

The Company _ defended on the ground that Cammack was mentally competent at the time he assigned the policy, and that the beneficiary, Minnie O. Cammack, also was mentally competent at the time she joined in the assignment and was estopped to claim the benefits of the policy.

The trial court found that on the date of the assignment Cammack was wholly without mental capacity or understanding, and that while Minnie O. Cammack was incompetent to the extent that she could not manage or care for her property unassisted, she was, however, not wholly without understanding. The court concluded .as a matter of law that the assignment of the policy by Cammack was void by reason of his lack of mental capacity; that Minnie O. Cammack as beneficiary had no interest in the policy which she lawfully could assign, and that the Company acquired no right by reason of her joinder in the assignment; that no estoppel had arisen, against her, and that the rule of law that where one of two innocent persons must' suffer loss by the acts of a third party, the one who enables the third party to occasion the los9 must suffer, was not applicable under the evidence in the case.

The court’s finding as to the mental capacity of both Cammack and his wife is challenged. It was one of the issues in the trial. Not much needs to be- said on this point. It is sufficient to say that there is substantial evidence in the record which supports the findings of the trial court, and that its findings as to the mental capacity of each of these parties are therefore binding upon this court.

The court concluded as a matter of law that Minnie O. Cammack had no interest in the policy at the time she joined in the assignment, which she could assignand was therefore not estopped by joining therein. Oklahoma apparently has never passed upon the right of a beneficiary to assign an expectancy under an insurance policy. In our opinion the decision in this case does not turn upon her right to make an effective assignment of her expectancy, or upon whether her joinder in the assignment in any event estopped her from maintaining. this action, and we therefore do not pass upon this question.

The weight of authority is to the effect that if a depositor in a bank, after he opens an account, becomes insane and thereafter draws a check, or if he draws a check while sane and becomes insane before it is paid, the bank is protected in either case if it pays the check in good faith and in ignorance of the depositor’s insanity. These cases hold that unless there are present facts which put -the bank [539]*539upon inquiry, it is under no obligation to investigate the drawer’s mental status, and that advanced age imposes no duty upon the bank to investigate his mental capacity.3

The relationship between a policy-holder and his company is in many respects analogous to that between a depositor and the bank. When a policy of insurance is issued, the company becomes indebted to the insured for the amount of the policy. In the contract the company agrees to pay the amount of the policy to the insured or to his order. A life insurance contract differs from a contract resulting from a deposit in a bank in that the policy designates the persons to whom payment is directed. But it also gives the insured the right to give further or different orders for the payment of the amount due by giving the insured the right to change the beneficiary, and 'the further right to assign the policy.

No case has been cited, and our search has failed to reveal one, which has compelled an insurance company to pay a .policy a second time when in good faith it has paid the amount of the policy to a new beneficiary or to an assignee, on the ground that the assignment or the change in beneficiary was void because of lack of mental capacity of the insured at the time the change was made, and that is so even though the original beneficiary did not join in the application for change of beneficiary or in the application for the assignment of the policy. The cases upon which the appellee relies to sustain its contention in this respect are not in point. An examination of these cases reveals that they were either -actions by the original beneficiary against the new beneficiary to cancel the void change, or actions in behalf of the incompetent insured against the assignee to cancel the void assignment. In none of them had the company paid the amount due under the policy, and none of them was brought against the company.

A number of cases have held that payment in good faith of the full amount of a life insurance policy to the last regularly designated beneficiary, without knowledge of the lack of mental capacity to make the designation under which payment was made, discharged the insurer’s obligation under the policy, and that no duty rested upon the company to make inquiry into the mental status of the insured making application for a change of beneficiary. In Bosworth v. Wolfe, 146 Wash. 615, 264 P. 413, 56 A.L.R. 1117, the insured, aged eighty-eight years, while wholly incompetent mentally, changed the "beneficiary. The Washington Supreme Court held that there was no duty upon the company to make inquiry into the mental capacity of the insured. In Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Bramlett, 224 Ala. 473, 140 So. 752, an insane person changed the beneficiary in his policy. After his death, the original beneficiary sought to compel the company to pay the policy a second time, after it had paid the proceeds to the new beneficiary without knowledge of the insured’s mental condition.

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Bluebook (online)
151 F.2d 537, 162 A.L.R. 536, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 2989, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-life-ins-v-federal-nat-bank-ca10-1945.