Reivich v. United States

25 F.2d 670, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3049
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedApril 3, 1928
DocketNo. 4898
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 25 F.2d 670 (Reivich v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reivich v. United States, 25 F.2d 670, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3049 (6th Cir. 1928).

Opinion

DENISON, Circuit Judge.

Herman Reivieh died in October, 1918, holder of a $10,000 war risk insurance policy, payable to himself as beneficiary. By will made before the application for the policy, he had made his grandmother sole legatee. Following the then prevailing view that such a legatee was not a “designated beneficiary” under the War Risk Insurance Act (Comp. St. § 514a et seq.), the Director of the Bureau, in March, 1919, awarded the insurance to the soldier’s brother, Alex Reivieh (“as the person named as beneficiary by” the soldier), and payments to him were begun. Later the question was raised as to his right, and July 11,1924, it was decided that he was the sole person entitled, as against other relatives, and another award to him was made. The payments to him, including July, 1924, aggregated $4,073. On August 26, 1924, the Bureau, following U. S. v. Napoleon (C. C. A. 5) 296 F. 811, decided that the award'to him had been erroneous, and that the “proceeds are properly payable” to the grandmother as the designated .beneficiary. It soon appeared that in July, 1924, the grandmother had died. In October the Bureau wrote to counsel for Reivieh: “You are advised that it has I been determined that the grandmother of the insured was entitled to the monthly payments of insurance during her lifetime under will of the insured. However, it has been determined further that the payments of the insurance previously made in this ease will be allowed to stand, and that, subsequent to the death of the grandmother, the full brother, your client, Alex Reivieh, under the laws of the state of Ohio is entitled to the remaining installments of the insurance.”

In May, 1925, Reivieh was advised that formal proof of the death of the grandmother had been received, but that owing to the provisions of section 303 of the Veterans’ Act, as amended March 4, 1925 (38 USCA § 514), the remaining payments should be commuted and paid to the estate of the insured; “the remaining insurance will therefore be payable to Mr. Cahuse, as executor.” On May 20, Reivieh was advised by the Bureau “that the precise amount of the remainder of [671]*671the insurance whieh will he so paid to the executor is $7,748.” Later Reivich became administrator d.b.n. e.t.a. of the soldier’s estate in place of the named executor, and in September he was again advised “that it has been held that the insurance installments payable subsequent to the death of your grandmother are now payable to the administrator of the veteran’s estate in a lump sum.” At a later date, the Bureau deducted from this $7,748 the $4,073 which had been previously paid to Reivich as brother, and paid to Reivich as administrator only the balance, being $3,675. This voucher and payment were apparently the first notice that the Bureau intended to deduct from the present/ value of the remaining payments the amount of those payments which it held had been erroneously made to Alex Reivich, as beneficiary. It appears, also, that the administrator of the grandmother’s estate was before the Bureau claiming this $4,073, and that the Bureau was intending to pay this sum to that administrator, though apparently no award had ever been made to the grandmother.

In this situation, this bill was filed in the court below by the administrator of the soldier against the United States and the grandmother’s administrator, asking payment of the balance, $4,073, which the Bureau had deducted. The United States and the grandmother’s administrator filed answers and ciross-eomplaints, affirming that the grandmother’s administrator was entitled to this balance. Upon final hearing in this ease, the court below, agreed with the views of the Bureau and directed payment of this balance to the grandmother’s administrator. The record contains no finding of facts and no agreed statement, hut the opinion and decree say that the facts were agreed upon and the opinion summarizes them. We assume that the stipulation existed as recited.

The underlying question involved is whether the grandmother was the “designated beneficiary” under section 402 of the original act (Comp. St. § 514uuu). Where a will was made before the insurance was in existence or contemplated, and where in the application the soldier refrained from naming this legatee in the blank provided therefor, but named “himself,” we can feel no certainty that this legatee is that “designated beneficiary” whom section 402 contemplates. That he is was considered in the Napoleon Case, supra (though perhaps, on account of the pleading, not expressly decided); that ease on that point has not been doubted; and the Bureau has followed it for years in many eases. Lacking any conviction to the contrary, we think it better to accept and follow the rule there announced.

Th.e question chiefly argued is as to the construction of section 303. Correctly to apprehend it, as applied to this case, its origin and development should he observed. In the original War Risk Insurance Act of October, 1917, the conditions of the policies were not fully stated hut were to he fixed by regulations, though the statute, section 402, expressly prescribed that, “if no beneficiary within the permitted class be designated by the insured, either in his lifetime or by his last will and testament, or if the designated beneficiary does not survive the insured, the insurance shall be payable to such person or persons, within the permitted class of beneficiaries as would under the laws of the State of the residence of the insured, he entitled to his personal property in case of intestacy.” Bulletin No. 1 of the Bureau, dated October 15, 1917, prescribed the form of policy; and this form, after providing a blank for designating the beneficiary to whom the payments were to be made, continued: “If no beneficiary within the permitted class be designated by the insured, either in the insured’s lifetime or by last will and testament * * * the insurance (or, if any above designated beneficiary shall survive the insured but shall not receive all the installments, then the remaining installments) shall be payable [etc., as in section 402].”

It will be seen that 'the statute, section 402, apparently contemplated that the designated beneficiary who survived the insured would take an interest, which under ordinary rules would he a vested interest, in all the unpaid installments, fairly implying that those remaining unpaid, upon the subsequent death of the beneficiary, would go to the beneficiary’s estate, while the form of contract provided by Bulletin No. 1 took away from the beneficiary’s estate this interest in the remaining payments upon the beneficiary’s death and transferred it to the insured’s estate. A doubt is at once suggested whether, under the guise of a regulation, the Bureau could make a provision so different from the statutory provision; but the form of the bulletin became the contract of the parties in this policy as in all the others of the vast number issued; it has been accepted and treated as a valid provision of the contract by the Bureau ever since 1917; it was sustained (although the point was not made) in Cassarello v. U. S. (C. C. A. 3) 279 F. 396; and we would not he justified in declining to accept it as the contract which governed these parties and continued to do so until Pebru[672]*672ary, 1920, at whieh date there took effect upon this policy section 15 of the Act of December 24, 1919 (41 Stat. 376 [Comp. St. § 514vv(1)]).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 F.2d 670, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3049, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reivich-v-united-states-ca6-1928.