Phoenix Mutual Life Insurance v. Birkelund

175 P.2d 5, 29 Cal. 2d 352, 1946 Cal. LEXIS 301
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 3, 1946
DocketL. A. 18940
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 175 P.2d 5 (Phoenix Mutual Life Insurance v. Birkelund) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phoenix Mutual Life Insurance v. Birkelund, 175 P.2d 5, 29 Cal. 2d 352, 1946 Cal. LEXIS 301 (Cal. 1946).

Opinion

SCHAUER, J.

Plaintiff insurance company filed this action in interpleader after each of the two defendants had made claim upon it for the proceeds of a policy of insurance issued by it in 1921 on the life of James R. Birkelund, now deceased. One of the defendant-claimants is Hilda Olsen Birkelund, hereinafter called Hilda, the first wife of the decedent, and the other defendant-claimant is Ruth Lillian Birkelund, hereinafter called Lillian, who also entered into a marriage with the decedent. Hilda asserts equitable claims, deriving from a property settlement agreement with James, executed in 1931, whereby he agreed “to deliver” the policy to Hilda and she agreed to pay the accruing premiums. James *354 did not deliver the policy to Hilda but instead, in 1932, named Lillian as beneficiary and delivered the policy to her. For approximately eleven years after the settlement with Hilda, James and Lillian paid the premiums. Then James died and both Hilda and Lillian demanded the proceeds. Previously Hilda had never demanded the policy and had paid no premiums. Lillian urges both a legal claim as the beneficiary named in the policy and an equitable claim, not pleaded, based on Hilda’s asserted neglect. She appeals from a judgment decreeing that the proceeds of the policy, less $271.20 awarded to her as repayment of premiums paid by her on the policy (and subject to costs awarded Hilda), shall be paid to Hilda. We have concluded that Hilda has established an equitable right to recover such proportion of the proceeds of the policy as the amount of premiums paid at the time of the property settlement agreement bears to the total premiums paid and that Lillian is entitled to the remainder.

As indicated above, by the terms of the policy as it stood at the death of the insured Lillian is the designated beneficiary and is, accordingly, prima facie entitled to its proceeds unless Hilda has established superior equitable rights. To establish such rights Hilda relies upon a property settlement agreement with James, executed in 1931 in the State of Minnesota where the parties were then domiciled, whereby, among other things, James agreed “to deliver” to Hilda the policy in question subject to a loan of $450. No specific date for the delivery was fixed. James agreed to pay the interest on the policy loan but not the principal. Hilda agreed “to pay the premiums” on the policy “subsequent to the current year [1931] out of the alimony and support money received from the defendant. ’ ’ The agreement further provided that “the . . . interest of the defendant [James] in the homestead . . . be and is hereby set over and given to the plaintiff [Hilda] . . . That the defendant [James] . . . agrees to pay all the taxes ... on said premises . . . for the year 1930 on or prior to the 31st day of October, 1931, and ... to give to the plaintiff all of the household effects and furniture now in the home . . . [and] to pay to the plaintiff the sum of Two Hundred Fifty Dollars . . . per month, beginning the 1st day of November 1931, said payment ... to constitute all of the alimony which said defendant shall be required to pay . . . That the foregoing is a full and complete property settlement between the parties. ...”

*355 The settlement was first entered into on October 26, 1931, and at that time the provision relative to insurance read in full as follows: “The defendant agrees to deliver to said plaintiff herein an insurance policy or policies upon the life of said defendant with premiums paid for the year 1931, in the amount of at least Ten Thousand Dollars ($10,000.00), said policy or policies not to be incumbered by any loan. The said plaintiff herein agreeing to pay the premiums thereon subsequent to the current year out of the alimony and support money received from the defendant.”

On November 23, 1931, the agreement regarding insurance was modified to read as follows: “The defendant agrees to deliver to the said plaintiff herein insurance policies upon his life as follows; Two policies for Five Thousand ($5,000.00) Dollars, each in the Phoenix Mutual Insurance Company, each of which policies is encumbered with a loan of Four Hundred Fifty ($450.00) Dollars, and one policy in the Berkshire Life Insurance Company in the amount of Twelve Hundred ($1200.00) Dollars, which laier policy is unencumbered by any loan. The plaintiff herein agreeing to pay the premiums subsequent to the year 1931 on the two policies with the Phoenix Mutual Insurance Company, said payments to be made out of the alimony and support money received from the defendant herein. The defendant herein agrees to carry at all times the premium on the Twelve Hundred ($1200.00) Dollar policy above named, and in addition thereto to pay at all times the interest as it comes due on the Nine Hundred ($900.00) Dollar loan from the Phoenix Mutual Insurance Company on the two first policies above mentioned.” It is upon the language above quoted that Hilda relies to establish her claim to the proceeds of the policy. Only one $5,000 policy is here involved, the other having been cashed in by James in 1937°.

On December 10, 1931, the District Court of the Fourth Judicial District, County of Hennepin, State of Minnesota, entered its decree “That plaintiff [Hilda] is not entitled to a decree of divorce from the defendant herein” but “That the defendant [James] shall pay and continue to pay, until further order of the Court, the amounts provided in the stipulation on file herein” (such stipulation being the property settlement hereinabove described), and that “Nothing herein shall be construed as a bar to the prosecution of an action for *356 divorce on the ground of desertion, when such desertion shall have reached the time when it becomes a ground for divorce.”

The policy in question recites that the insurer “Agrees to pay to [the named beneficiary] . . . the Sum of Five Thousand Dollars, upon receipt at its Home Office of this policy duly discharged together with due proofs of the death, while this policy is in force, of James B. Birkelund . . . The Company Will Also Pay to The Insured During Permanent and Total Disability An Income of Fifty Dollars a Month and will waive the payment of premiums hereunder during such disability ...” (Italics added.) The stated premiums were fixed at $67.80 “payable on the 2nd day of each February and August until fifty-six full years’ premiums shall have been paid or until the death of the Insured.” The policy further provides: “9. Beneficiary Clauses .. . (b) The insured if of legal age may, whenever and as often as he likes, change any beneficiary designated herein by filing at the Home Office of the Company a written notice thereof duly executed and accompanied by the policy for record and endorsement of the change thereon by the Company. Unless the notice is so.recorded and endorsed it shall not take effect, but when recorded and endorsed, whether the insured be then living or not, it shall relate back and take effect as of the date of the execution of said notice by the insured.

“(c) The interest of any beneficiary hereunder shall be ' subject to and bound by any assignment, pledge or release of this policy by the insured, dated either prior or subsequent to the nomination of such beneficiary.”

At the time the policy was first issued it contained a special indorsement providing that “At the request of the insured . . .

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Bluebook (online)
175 P.2d 5, 29 Cal. 2d 352, 1946 Cal. LEXIS 301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phoenix-mutual-life-insurance-v-birkelund-cal-1946.