Singleton v. Cheek

284 U.S. 493, 52 S. Ct. 257, 76 L. Ed. 419, 1932 U.S. LEXIS 889, 81 A.L.R. 923
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 15, 1932
Docket403
StatusPublished
Cited by98 cases

This text of 284 U.S. 493 (Singleton v. Cheek) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Singleton v. Cheek, 284 U.S. 493, 52 S. Ct. 257, 76 L. Ed. 419, 1932 U.S. LEXIS 889, 81 A.L.R. 923 (1932).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Sutherland

delivered the opr" on of the Court.

Lee Ray Jackson, a soldier in the United States army, received a certificate of insurance on his life, issued by the United States through the Bureau of War Risk-Insurance on September 5, 1918. His wife, Mary Lucinda Jackson, was named as beneficiary. He died intestate March 21, 1921, a resident of Craig County, Oklahoma, leaving him surviving his wife and a son named James Lee Roy Jack *494 son, a minor child about seven months old. In March,' 1922, the child died, of course intestate; and in March, 1923, the widow died intestate, in the meantime having married Charley Singleton, one of the- petitioners. No part of the insurance due under the certificate was paid during the lifetime of the insured or beneficiary; but the sum accrued between March 31, 1921, and March 3.0, 1923, has since been paid to the administrator of the estate of Mary Lucinda Jackson, who, at the time of her death, was Mary Lucinda Singleton. The amount of insurance due to the insured on account of permanent- disability has been paid to the administrator de bonis non of the estate of Lee Ray Jackson. The remaining installments of the life insurance were commuted and the sum thereof, fixed by the War Risk Bureau, was also paid to the administrator last named. Such payments of the disability insurance and the sum of the commuted installments were authorized by the Veterans’ Bureau and the administrator directed to distribute the amounts in accordance with the intestacy laws of the state of the insured’s last legal residence, an award in favor of the administrator in each case having previously been inade. The respondents, Edith Cheek, née Jackson, and Jewel Braziel, nee Jackson, are sisters, and Emmett Jackson is a brother, of Lee Ray Jackson. Neither his father nor his mother survived him. George. Davis and Maggie Davis are the parents of Mary Lucinda Singleton, but neither they nor Charley Singleton are blood kin to the insured.

During her lifetime Mary Lucinda Jackson administered the estate of Lee Ray Jackson, and upon her final report the court having probate jurisdiction found that she was entitled to all of the estate of the deceased Lee Ray Jackson, one-half in her own right, and the other one-half in the right of the minor child above named. A decree of heirship to that effect was duly entered.

*495 In. the administration following the death of Mary Lucinda Singleton and the' infant son of Lee Ray Jackson, the same court determined that petitioners were entitled to the disability insurance which accrued before the death of the insured, but that respondents were entitled to the commuted value of the insurance falling due after the death of the beneficiary, holding that the commuted balance of such insurance was payable to the estate of the insured, but vested in the heirs next surviving within the permitted class of beneficiaries designated by the War Risk Insurance Act of 1917, c. 105, Art. 4, § 402, 40 Stat. 398, 409, as amended by the World War Veterans’ Acts of ■1919; c. 16, § 13, 41 Stat. 371, 375, and of 1924, c. 320, §§ 300, 303, 43 Stat. 607, 624, 625. The case was appealed to a state district court, where a different judgment was rendered. From that judgment an appeal was taken to the Supreme Court of Oklahoma, where it was twice heard. That court first sustained the petitioners’ contention. Subsequently, upon rehearing, it held in favor of the respondents in respect of the commuted installments accruing after the death of the beneficiary, and in favor of petitioners as to those accruing before her death, following a decision of the Supreme Court of Kentucky in Sutton’s Executor v. Barr's Administrator, 219 Ky. 543 ; 293 S. W. 1075, in which that court had decided that the heirs of the insured in being at the time of the death of the beneficiary took the property, and not those who were heirs at the time of the death of the insured. 1 7 P. (2d). 140.

By the first Oklahoma decision the doctrine of the Kentucky case, just cited, was expressly disapproved; and, following the view of a number of other state decisions to the contrary, it was held that the decree of the county *496 court in the original administration of the Jackson estate fixed the parties entitled to inherit all his estate, “whether the assets were then in the hands of the administrator, or later came into the possession of an administrator de bonis non and that when the widow died these assets became assets of her.estate, to be distributed among her heirs. By the second Oklahoma decision this was reversed, upon the authority of the very case which had been distinctly rejected in the first decision.

We are of opinion that the first decision was right, and the second wrong. Undoubtedly, by § 15 of the War Risk Insurance Amending Act of 1919, 2 war risk insurance, after the death of the designated beneficiary, became payable to such person or persons within the permitted class of beneficiaries (enumerated in § 402, Act of 1917, as amended by § 13, Act of 1919) as would, under the laws of the state of the residence of the insured, be entitled to his personal property in case of intestacy. The second decision of the state supreme court, therefore, would have been entirely correct if no change had been made in the statute. But a radical change had been effected prior to the award of insurance made by the Veterans’ Bureau on August 18, 1925. The Act of March 4, 1925, c. 553, 43 • Stat. 1302, 1310, amended § 303 of the World War Veterans’ Act of 1924 (which had in turn amended and modified the preceding acts), to read as follows:

*497 “ If no person within the permitted class be désignated ás beneficiary for yearly renewable term insurance by the insured either in his lifetime or by his last will and testament or if the designated beneficiary does not survive the insured or survives the insured and dies prior to receiving all of the two hundred and forty installments- or all sueh as are payable and applicable, there shall be paid to the estate of the insured the present value of the monthly installments thereafter payable, said value to be computed as of date of last payment made under any existing award.”

The amendment, in express terms, was made retroactive so as to take effect as of October 6, 1917, a provision undoubtedly within the power of Congress, for the reasons stated by this court in White v. United States, 270 U. S. 175.

By that amendment, the rule, which, upon the happening of the contingencies named in the prior acts, limited the benefit of the unpaid installments, to persons within the designated class of permittees, was abandoned, and “ the estate of the insured ” was wholly substituted as the payee.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Baumet v. United States
81 F. Supp. 1012 (S.D. New York, 1948)
State Ex Rel. Koontz v. Wells
210 S.W.2d 387 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1948)
State v. McCollum
136 P.2d 165 (Washington Supreme Court, 1943)
Jones v. Gaillard
4 So. 2d 131 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1941)
In Re Verchot's Estate
104 P.2d 490 (Washington Supreme Court, 1940)
Day v. Bradshaw
5 S.E.2d 514 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1939)
Brown v. Fidelity Union Trust Co.
9 A.2d 311 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1939)
Johnson v. United States
102 F.2d 729 (Tenth Circuit, 1939)
Walker v. Queener
124 S.W.2d 236 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1939)
Baird v. Mills
119 S.W.2d 889 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1938)
United States v. Fuller
97 F.2d 541 (Fifth Circuit, 1938)
Marsh v. United States
97 F.2d 327 (Fourth Circuit, 1938)
United States v. Rasmussen
95 F.2d 842 (Tenth Circuit, 1938)
Butler v. United States
23 F. Supp. 143 (S.D. Texas, 1938)
In Re White's Estate
73 P.2d 316 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1937)
Smallwood v. United States
91 F.2d 287 (Fourth Circuit, 1937)
Curtik v. United States
19 F. Supp. 447 (D. Massachusetts, 1937)
Terry v. Rogers
190 S.E. 168 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1937)
Wilson v. Fisher
105 S.W.2d 304 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1937)
Moyse v. Laughlin
171 So. 784 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1937)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
284 U.S. 493, 52 S. Ct. 257, 76 L. Ed. 419, 1932 U.S. LEXIS 889, 81 A.L.R. 923, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/singleton-v-cheek-scotus-1932.