Parduhn v. Bennett

2005 UT 22, 112 P.3d 495, 523 Utah Adv. Rep. 17, 2005 Utah LEXIS 30, 2005 WL 791238
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedApril 8, 2005
Docket20030551
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 2005 UT 22 (Parduhn v. Bennett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parduhn v. Bennett, 2005 UT 22, 112 P.3d 495, 523 Utah Adv. Rep. 17, 2005 Utah LEXIS 30, 2005 WL 791238 (Utah 2005).

Opinion

PARRISH, Justice:

¶ 1 This is the latest battle in a seven-year war over $300,000 worth of life insurance proceeds. Glade Parduhn comes to us for the second time, claiming, as he did in a petition for rehearing filed after our resolution of his first appeal, that we erroneously remanded his ease to the district court for an equitable distribution of the insurance proceeds he seeks. He also assails the distribution itself, in which the district court awarded the proceeds to the wife and children of his deceased business partner. University Texaco Company (“University Texaco”), the business Parduhn and his former partner operated, appeals the district court’s denial of its motion to intervene in the distribution proceedings and, like. Parduhn, questions the equity of the distribution. We affirm both the district court’s denial of University Texaco’s motion to intervene and its equitable distribution of the insurance proceeds.

BACKGROUND

¶ 2 In 1979, Glade Parduhn and Brad Bu-ehi formed University Texaco, a partnership, for the purpose of owning and operating a gas station business. Their partnership agreement included a buy-sell agreement, which provided a mechanism for continuing the partnership in the event one of the partners died. The buy-sell agreement contemplated that each partner would purchase a life insurance policy designating the other as beneficiary. Upon the death of one of the partners, the surviving partner would use the proceeds from the insurance policy to purchase the deceased partner’s interest in the partnership . from the deceased, partner’s heirs. Initially, Parduhn and Buchi each purchased $20,000 worth of coverage, but they twice increased the amount of coverage in subsequent years. The last increase, which they obtained without explicitly amending the buy-sell agreement, raised the amount of coverage to $300,000 on Buchi’s life and $250,000 on Parduhn’s life.

¶ 3 In 1997, Parduhn and Buchi sold the gas stations comprising their business to Blackett Oil Company (“Blackett Oil”). Later that year, Buchi died unexpectedly. Bu-chi’s daughter, Natalie Buchi Bennett (“Bennett”), claimed entitlement to the proceeds from the insurance policy on Buehi’s life and instructed the life insurance company not to distribute the proceeds to Parduhn.

*499 ¶ 4 Parduhn filed a declaratory judgment action against Bennett, claiming that he was entitled to the policy proceeds. The insurer interpleaded the proceeds, and Buchi’s wife and remaining children (collectively, with Bennett, the “Buchi survivors”) were joined as parties. 1 The Buchi survivors counterclaimed, asserting that they were entitled to the proceeds. Following a trial, 2 the district court awarded the proceeds to the Buchi survivors and the remaining partnership assets to Parduhn, concluding that both the partnership and the buy-sell agreement survived the sale of the gas'stations. The district court also concluded that the insurance policy on Buchi’s life only ambiguously designated Parduhn as beneficiary and that, at any rate, Buchi intended his heirs, not Par-duhn, to receive the-proceeds.

¶ 5 Parduhn appealed to this court. We concluded that (1) the insurance policy on Buchi’s life unambiguously designated Par-duhn as beneficiary, (2) the transfer of the partnership’s business assets to Blackett Oil dissolved the partnership, -and (3) the buy-sell agreement was dissolved along with the partnership. Parduhn v. Bennett, 2002 UT 93, ¶ 18, 61 P.3d 982 (“Parduhn I”). Although Parduhn was the designated policy beneficiary, we held that he could not legally collect the proceeds because he had lost his insurable interest in Buchi’s life upon the dissolution of the partnership and the termination of the buy-sell agreement. Id. at ¶ 16. In so holding, we relied on Utah Code section 31A-21-104(1)(b), which requires that any person seeking to collect insurance proceeds have an insurable interest in the deceased, and on Utah Code section 31A-21-104(2)(a), which states that a partner has an insurable interest in the life of a copartner only if the “insurance contracts ... are an integral part of a legitimate buy-sell agreement respecting ... a partnership interest in the business.” Id.; Utah Code Ann. § 31A-21-104(1)(b), (2)(a) (1999). 3 Having concluded that Par-duhn could not collect the insurance proceeds as a matter of law, we remanded the case to the district court with instructions to equitably distribute the proceeds pursuant to Utah Code section 31A-21-104(5). Parduhn I, 2002 UT 93 at ¶ 17, 61 P.3d 982; see Utah Code Ann. § 31A-21-104(5).

¶ 6 Parduhn petitioned for rehearing pursuant to rule 35 of the Utah Rules of Appellate Procedure, asserting that Parduhn I was incorrect in three respects. First, he contended that section 31A-21-104 was an affirmative defense that the Buchi survivors should have raised in a responsive pleading pursuant to rules 12(b) and 8(c) of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure. Because they first raised that defense in a motion filed after the deadline for amending pleadings, Parduhn asserted that they had waived it and that our remand to the district court for an equitable distribution under section 31A-21-104 was therefore erroneous. Second, Parduhn took issue with our conclusion that section 31A-21-104(2)(a) limits a partner’s insurable interest in the life of his copartner to those partnerships with valid buy-sell agreements. Finally, Parduhn challenged our holding that an insurance policy beneficiary could collect on a policy only if he had an insurable interest at the time the insurance proceeds were distributed. We denied Parduhn’s motion for rehearing without discussion.

¶ 7 On remand, University Texaco sought to intervene in the equitable distribution proceedings. The district court denied the mo *500 tion on the grounds that University Texaco’s motion was untimely and that University Texaco had no interest in the proceedings. The court also held that, even if University Texaco had such an interest, it was already adequately represented by the existing parties.

¶ 8 Following our mandate in Parduhn I, the district court held a hearing on the equitable distribution. After declining Parduhn’s invitation to take additional evidence, the district court found that the partners intended that insurance proceeds from a policy on the life of a deceased partner would go to the deceased partner’s surviving heirs rather than to the partnership or the surviving partner. In so concluding, the district court relied on the 'defunct buy-sell agreement and on counsel’s assertions that Parduhn and Bu-chi had treated the partnership casually by putting its funds to personal use. It also relied on the assumption that Blackett Oil had purchased both the partnership and its assets, remarking that no one had even contended that Blackett Oil owned the insurance policies. Finally, the district court noted that the partners likely would have divided the insurance policies between them had Bu-ehi lived longer.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2005 UT 22, 112 P.3d 495, 523 Utah Adv. Rep. 17, 2005 Utah LEXIS 30, 2005 WL 791238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parduhn-v-bennett-utah-2005.