Randall v. Travelers Casualty & Surety Co.

2006 OK 65, 145 P.3d 1048, 2006 Okla. LEXIS 68, 2006 WL 2673279
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 19, 2006
Docket103,417
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 2006 OK 65 (Randall v. Travelers Casualty & Surety Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Randall v. Travelers Casualty & Surety Co., 2006 OK 65, 145 P.3d 1048, 2006 Okla. LEXIS 68, 2006 WL 2673279 (Okla. 2006).

Opinion

WATT, C.J.

1 1 The United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit certified two first impression questions of Oklahoma law under the Revised Uniform Certification of Questions of Law Act, 20 0.98.2001 §§ 1601, et seq. As reformulated, 1 the questions ask:

*1050 Does the principle articulated in Alkire v. King, 1938 OK 282, 80 P.2d 309, that the assignment of a life insurance policy conveys to the assignee a right to policy proceeds although the insured's estate is the named beneficiary, apply to contracts generally?
May an insurer alter the right to assign rights under a settlement agreement by funding the contract through the purchase of an annuity where the settlement agreement does not anticipate such a purchase and where neither the settlement agreement nor the annuity contains anti-assignment provisions?

T2 We answer the first question "yes." Our determination is supported by the Alkire Court's grounding of its decision that the owner of a life insurance policy made payable to the owner's estate may assign all property interests therein 2 in principles long recognized in Oklahoma law-that a living person has no estate subject to probate 3 and that there can be no vested right of inheritance in the estate of a living person. 4 Furthermore, our pronouncement in Prudential Ins. Co. of America v. Glass, 1998 OK 52, 959 P.2d 586 that an assignment of a life insurance policy is an ordinary contract between the assignor and the assignee and, as such, is interpreted under general contract principles is determinative of the issue.

T3 We answer the second question "no." Our determination is supported by well settled principles of Oklahoma law that: 1) contractual rights are presumed to be assignable; 5 2) generally, where an executor or administrator would succeed to rights and liabilities of a deceased party to a contract, the contract is assignable; 6 and 3) the failure to include any provision making a contract nonassignable results in the assumption that the rights under the agreement may be assigned. 7 Extant jurisprudence also bol *1051 sters our answer. 8

CERTIFIED FACTS 9 AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

T4 In 1982, Richard Randall (husband/assignor) was injured in an accident with an insured of the predecessor of the appellee, Travelers Casualty & Surety Company (Travelerg/insurer). Two years later, the husband and the appellant, Connie Randall (wife/assignee) entered a release and covenant with the insurer providing that the husband would be entitled to monthly payments of $1,250.00 for three hundred months. Pursuant to the settlement agreement, upon the husband's death, any remaining payments were to be made "to his estate." It is undisputed that the release and covenant, dated August 22, 1984, contains no anti-assignment provision and that it does not provide the manner in which the payments are to be funded.

T5 Travelers subsequently purchased an annuity from Executive Life Insurance Company of New York, now Metropolitan Life Insurance Company (MetLife) as separate funding for the monthly payments. The husband or his estate is named as the annuitant and payee "subject to change" under the contract while Travelers is its owner. The husband's estate is also named as the primary beneficiary "subject to change" for payments payable after the husband's death. 10 Not only does the annuity not contain an anti-assignment provision, it specifically provides that the owner can assign the contract and that the rights of any assignee will supersede those of the owner or beneficiary. Furthermore, the owner can change the beneficiary upon written request "signed while the Annuitant is living. 11

1 6 On November 6, 2000, two days before his death, the husband executed an assignment of his contract rights under the release and covenant agreement. The assignment provides that it is a transfer of all the husband's "right, title and interest, under and by virtue" of the release and covenant agreement to his wife. 12 Both Travelers and Met-Life were notified of the assignment and of the husband's death and demand was made for all remaining payments due under the release and covenant agreement to be paid to the wife. The wife was informed that Tray-elers and MetLife were taking the position that all payments must be made to her husband's estate as provided by the release and covenant and as beneficiary of the annuity. Payments were suspended pending the appointment of an administrator of the husband's estate.

T7 On August 23, 2002, the wife filed suit against Travelers in Tulsa County District Court alleging breach of contract and bad faith. In September, Travelers removed the cause to federal court asserting a counterclaim/third-party claim for a declaratory *1052 judgment specifying the proper recipient of the unpaid funds.

T8 Asserting that the husband could not alter the terms of the underlying contract by disenfranchising his estate's interest in the annuity payments, Travelers moved for summary judgment. The United States District Court for the Northern District sustained the motion on February 4, 2004. On March 2nd, the wife filed her notice of appeal to the Tenth Cireuit Court of Appeals.

T9 Recognizing that the lawsuit involved unsettled issues of Oklahoma law, the Tenth Circuit sua sponte certified two issues to this Court pursuant to the Revised Uniform Certification of Questions of Law Act, 20 0.8. 2001 §§ 1601, et seq. We set a briefing cycle which was concluded on July 27, 2006, with the simultaneous filing of the parties' answer briefs.

DISCUSSION

10 1) The principle articulated in Alkire v. King that the assignment of a life insurance policy conveys to the as-signee a right to policy proceeds although the insured's estate is the named beneficiary applies to contracts generally.

{11 Both parties tend to focus on the assignable aspects of the annuity contact. Nevertheless, they each recognize that the issue here involves the rights of the husband to receive monthly payments under the settlement agreement between himself and Travelers' predecessor-an agreement which does not contemplate its funding by the purchase of an annuity and which contains no anti-assignment provision. Furthermore, neither the original settlement agreement nor the assignment is subject to the Structured Settlement Protection Act of 2001, 12 0.98.2001 § 8228 et seq. 13

112 Alkire v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2006 OK 65, 145 P.3d 1048, 2006 Okla. LEXIS 68, 2006 WL 2673279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/randall-v-travelers-casualty-surety-co-okla-2006.