Royal Indemnity Co. v. Kathy Bates

307 F. App'x 801
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 16, 2009
Docket08-40144
StatusUnpublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 307 F. App'x 801 (Royal Indemnity Co. v. Kathy Bates) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Royal Indemnity Co. v. Kathy Bates, 307 F. App'x 801 (5th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

E. GRADY JOLLY, Circuit Judge: **

In this statutory-interpleader action, Kathy Ann Bates (“Bates”) and James B. *803 Koonce’s heirs (James T. Koonce; Stephanie Koonce Mendez; Sandy Diaz Alvarado; Tammy Steinburg; Tina Robertson; and Doris Shirley Meyer, individually and as guardian of minors Christina Koonce, Christopher Koonce, and Alexander Koonce) claim the same $178,800. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of Bates. It granted costs and attorney’s fees to the interpleader-plaintiffs — Royal Indemnity Company (“Royal”) 1 and First Colony Life Insurance Company (“First Colony”) 2 — for then- involvement in these proceedings. It denied leave for Koonce’s heirs to file a counter-complaint against Royal and First Colony. Koonce’s hems have appealed from each ruling.

For the reasons below, the district court erred in granting summary judgment in favor of Bates, abused its discretion in granting costs and attorney’s fees to Royal and First Colony, but did not abuse its discretion in denying leave to Koonce’s heirs to file a counter-complaint. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand.

I.

Royal and First Colony initiated this interpleader action. The disputed property is $178,800, proceeds from an annuity that Royal owned with First Colony. Royal owned the annuity, through a settlement agreement, because it was an insurer: Royal’s insured, General Motors Corporation (“General Motors”), instructed Royal in October 1986 to purchase the annuity to finance a settlement agreement between General Motors, another company, and James B. Koonce (“Koonce”) and his then-wife Zanna (now Zanna Russell, or “Russell”). Under the settlement agreement, Royal’s annuity would finance a series of payments including: a $2,400 monthly payment to Koonce and Russell, jointly, beginning in December 1986 and continuing until the later between Koonce’s death and November 2006; and a lump-sum $150,000 payment to Koonce, individually, to be paid October 20, 2006.

As the annuity’s owner, Royal possessed the exclusive right to change the annuity’s payees. The procedure for changing payees was set out in the annuity contract as follows.

The Owner [Royal] has the right at any time to designate to whom annuity payments will be made. Written notice of change must be filed at the home office in a form satisfactory to the Company [First Colony], The new designation will then take effect as of the date the notice is signed. Such a change does not affect any payment made or other action taken by the company before the notice is received.

When Royal purchased the annuity in 1986, it designated Koonce and Russell as the annuity’s payees. Royal did not, however, designate survivor-beneficiaries for either individual; and thus the annuity contract specified none.

In 1995, Koonce sent a signed, notarized letter to the insurance broker servicing the annuity contract (Casualty Services, Inc., or “CSI”), in which he purported to designate Bates as his survivor-beneficiary. In the same letter, Koonce wrote that he had moved to a new address. CSI forwarded the letter to Royal. Royal, in turn, instructed First Colony to change the address to which First Colony would direct Koonce’s remaining annuity payments.

*804 Royal did not, however, instruct First Colony to designate Bates as Koonce’s survivor-beneficiary. Koonce was not advised by Royal or First Colony that Royal had not designated Bates as his survivor-beneficiary. There was no further designation.

Koonce died intestate in July 2005. Annuity payments totaling $186,000 remained due. Koonce’s heirs claimed the funds. Bates also claimed the funds. Royal and First Colony reviewed their records concerning the annuity, and each company found in its records a copy of Koonce’s letter purporting to designate Bates as his beneficiary. Uncertain whether Koonce’s purported designation was effective, Royal and First Colony suspended payment of the annuity and initiated this interpleader action to determine who, among Bates, Russell, and Koonce’s heirs, is entitled to the $186,000.

Federal subject-matter jurisdiction is provided under 28 U.S.C. § 1335: James T. Koonce resides in North Carolina; Sandy Diaz Alvarado, Tammy Steinburg, Tina Robertson, and Doris Shirley Meyer reside in South Carolina; and Bates, Russell, and Stephanie Koonce Mendez reside in Texas. Royal and First Colony disclaimed all interest in the $186,000. Upon unopposed motion, they deposited the funds into the court’s registry.

II.

Royal and First Colony began early in the interpleader proceedings to produce their records concerning the annuity. The companies produced the last of these records in January 2007. Bates and Koonce’s heirs, after reviewing these records, sought additional discovery regarding whether Royal ever directed First Colony to designate Bates as Koonce’s beneficiary. Royal and First Colony did not answer whether Royal ever directed a change in beneficiary. Instead, they replied that each company possessed a copy of Koonce’s letter purporting to designate Bates as his beneficiary. Whether Koonce’s letter achieved its intended purpose was a question, they asserted, for the court.

The district court, at a September 2007 hearing, attempted to elicit a more responsive answer. The companies initially persisted in the noncommittal position that they had taken during discovery. When the court pressed them, however, the companies said Koonce’s letter “essentially” had effected a change in beneficiary. In the light of this representation, Russell and Koonce’s heirs moved the district court for leave to file a counter-complaint against Royal and First Colony for breach of contract. Royal and First Colony filed a motion for summary judgment to extricate themselves from the inter-pleader action, and they requested costs and attorney’s fees. Bates already had filed a motion for summary judgment; her motion remained pending.

While these motions were pending, all parties stipulated that Russell was entitled to $7,200 of the interpleaded funds. Two questions remained: (1) how to apportion the other $178,800 between the claimants and, possibly, Royal and First Colony for their costs and attorney’s fees; and (2) whether to grant leave for Koonce’s heirs to file a counter-complaint against Royal and First Colony.

Noting that Royal and First Colony produced documents in January that should have put the Koonce heirs on notice of them proposed counter-complaint; that the deadline for filing amended pleadings without leave had passed in July; that the deadline for discovery had passed in August; that the Koonce hems had waited until September to move for leave to file a counter-complaint; and that the final pretrial conference was scheduled for November, the district court denied, as untimely, *805 the motion for leave to file a counter-complaint.

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307 F. App'x 801, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/royal-indemnity-co-v-kathy-bates-ca5-2009.