Pacific Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Lusk

46 F.2d 505, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1621
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Louisiana
DecidedAugust 15, 1930
Docket375
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 46 F.2d 505 (Pacific Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Lusk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pacific Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Lusk, 46 F.2d 505, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1621 (W.D. La. 1930).

Opinion

DAWKINS, District Judge.

Complainant filed this bill of interpleader on March 1, 1930, alleging that it had issued its policy of insurance to one John A. Hurt, which provided for the payment of $200 per month for an indefinite period in case of total disability; that the assured had made claim for disability, commencing on June 20, 1927, and that payment for two months, or $400, had been made; that one L. J. Knox, a resident of Alabama, claiming to be a judgment creditor of said Hurt, had filed in the circuit court of Mobile county, Ala., a garnishment proceeding against complainant, claiming the sum of $1,798.12, which was served on October 7, 1927; that the superintendent of banks for Alabama, claiming to be a judgment creditor of Hurt, for the sum of $5,335.51, had also filed garnishment proceedings against complainant, in which service was made August 3, 1928; that the Mobile National Bank had instituted similar garnishment proceedings against it on an alleged judgment'for $1,400 against Hurt, which was served on October 2, 1928; and that S. H. Sylvester, also a citizen of Alabama, likewise sued out garnishment proceedings against it on an alleged judgment for the sum of $1,313.55, as to which service was made upon complainant on May 13, 1929; further, that all of said creditors had attempted to seize the proceeds of the policy in its hands belonging to the said Hurt.

Complainant further alleged that one Jesse Lusk, a citizen of Louisiana, had filed suit in the state court for West Carroll parish, on January 14, 1929, claiming the entire proceeds of said policy under an alleged assignment purporting to have been executed on December 29, 1927, of which he gave petitioner notice on January 4,1928, and was apparently a bona fide claimant therefor, said suit claiming the benefits of said policy “since the date of the assignment, to-wit: December 29, 1927, at the rate of $200.00 per month,” and that complainant had removed said suit to this court, where it is now pending. 46 F.(2d) 502. Complainant further alleged that, in view of the above, “there are two or more adverse and apparently bona fide claimants, citizens of different states, to the funds or to some portion thereof, hereinafter admitted to be due under said policy.”

Complainant further alleged as follows %

“12. Complainant admits that the said assured was disabled within the provisions of the said policy from June 20, 1927 up to J an. 14, 1929, and that the total of said disability benefits accrued up to said date (less $400.00 of disability benefits paid to the assured by Complainant for the months of July and August 1927) amount to $3,273.32, which amount your complainant has been ready, willing and anxious to pay to the per-, son legally entitled to receive the same but because of the said conflicting claims made upon the said funds by the said assignee and the said creditors, your Complainant cannot determine with safety to itself to whom the said funds should be paid; that Complain- • ant has no means of ascertaining definitely the facts or merits of the several conflicting claims arising in the said litigation and of the said assignment which are relied upon by the aforesaid claimants as the foundation of their respective claims; that it cannot pay over the money due to any one or more of the said claimants without taking upon itself the responsibility of determining the doubtful questions of law and of fact arising out of the said transactions and without incurring the risk of being subjected to great costs’ and expense in defending itself in a multiplicity of suits and to a possible double payment of the amount due if it should finally appear that Complainant had wrongfully determined in-favor of one such claimant at the expense of the others.
“13. Complainant alleges that it does not. in any respect collude with any of said claimants touching the matters in question in this action and it has not asked, and does not ask,, this relief or any relief herein at the request of any of the said claimants, but solely of its own free will and to avoid being molested' and injured touching the matters herein set, forth.
“14. That under the Act of Congress of' May 8th, 1926, e. 273, sections 1-3, 44 Stat.. 416, in such cases it is provided that your-Complainant may deposit the funds admitted to be due under the said policy in the Registry of the Court and that the respective claimants may be required to interplead their rights-against the said funds in such proceedings; and that this Court has jurisdiction of this-proceeding by reason of the claim of the said Jesse Lusk a citizen of the State of Louisiana,, residing at Epps in the Western District of Louisiana.
“15. That your Complainant tenders herewith the sum of Three Thousand Two *507 Hundred and seventy three and 32/100 ($3,-273.32) Dollars, being' the amount due under the said policy, to be deposited in the Registry of this Court to abide the judgment of the Court and that your Complainant is entitled to be discharged from further liability upon the aforesaid policy and to its actual court costs and its reasonable attorney’s fees, to be fixed by the Court.”

Petitioner, purporting to act under the provisions of the Act of Congress of May 8, 1926 (28 USCA § 41(26), deposited the amount admitted to be due, to wit, $3,273.32, in the registry of this court to abide its judgment, prayed for a preliminary injunction against further proceedings in the suits by creditors in the state court of Alabama; that they, together with Lusk, be cited to appear and answer the bill, and that the rights of the several claimants to said funds as between themselves be determined by this court; further, that complainant recover its actual costs and reasonable attorney’s fees, for gen■eral and equitable relief.

The Alabama creditors appeared and moved to dismiss the bill of complaint on the grounds that this court was without jurisdiction because complainant had not deposited “the full amount of the insurance or disability benefits which at the time of the filing of the bill of complaint herein had accrued and became due and payable,” in that the total disability of Hurt, which commenced on June 20, 1927, “has continued ever since, and that proofs of said disability as required by the terms of said policy, were made by the said John A. Hurt, prior to the filing of the bill in this complaint, covering the period of from January 14, 1929, to to-wit, Feb.

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Bluebook (online)
46 F.2d 505, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1621, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pacific-mut-life-ins-co-v-lusk-lawd-1930.