Starbuck v. City Bank and Trust Co.

181 N.W.2d 904, 384 Mich. 295, 1970 Mich. LEXIS 123
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 30, 1970
Docket19 October Term 1970, Docket No. 52,406
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 181 N.W.2d 904 (Starbuck v. City Bank and Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Starbuck v. City Bank and Trust Co., 181 N.W.2d 904, 384 Mich. 295, 1970 Mich. LEXIS 123 (Mich. 1970).

Opinion

T. G-. Kavanagh, J.

This suit was brought by Mary Jane Starbuck to determine her right to the proceeds of an insurance policy on the life of her son, John Starbuck. At the time of her son’s death, such insurance contract designated “Peggy L. Starbuck, wife”, as the primary beneficiary and his mother as the contingent beneficiary. 1 The current conflicting claims to the proceeds, however, are between the mother of John Starbuck and his estate. The wife is not involved in this dispute because shortly before John Starbuck’s death the marriage was terminated by divorce. The judgment of divorce specifically excluded Peggy L. Starbuck from sharing in the proceeds of the policy, pursuant to the directions of MCLA § 552.101 (Stat Ann 1957 Rev § 25.131) which provides in part:

*297 “Hereafter every decree of divorce shall determine all rights of the wife in and to the proceeds of any policy or contract of life insurance, endowment or annuity upon the life of the husband in which she was named or designated as beneficiary, or to which she became entitled by assignment or change of beneficiary during the marriage or in anticipation thereof, whether such contract or policy was heretofore or shall hereafter be written or become effective, and unless otherwise ordered in said decree such policy or contract shall thereupon become and be payable to the estate of the husband or to such named beneficiary as he shall affirmatively designate.”

Complying with this requirement the judgment of divorce provided:

“It is further ordered and adjudged, that all rights of the plaintiff [wife] in and to the proceeds of any policy or contract of life insurance, endowment, or annuity upon the life of the defendant [husband] in which she was named or designated as beneficiary, or to which she became entitled by assignment or change of beneficiary during the marriage or in anticipation thereof, whether such contract or policy was heretofore or shall hereafter be written or become effective, shall hereupon become and be payable to the estate of the defendant [husband], or such named beneficiary as he shall affirmatively designate.”

The problem presently litigated arose when, subsequent to the divorce, the now deceased husband failed to name a “primary beneficiary” to replace his divorced wife. Absent a subsequent designation of a new primary beneficiary, the estate of John Star-buck claimed that the cited statute and the judgment of divorce required the proceeds to be paid into the éstate.

The mother, however, contested the estate’s claim. She argued that the statute required only the nam *298 ing of an alternative taker and that her son’s designation of her as a “contingent beneficiary” satisfied the requirements of the statute and entitled her to take the proceeds of the insurance policy.

The insurance company, faced with the dual claims, deposited the money with the clerk of the trial court — willing to pay either, but not both.

' After quoting the statute and the virtually identical language in the judgment of divorce (above quoted), the trial court found:

“ * # # that in order for the contingent beneficiary to take, some positive action would have had to be taken after the divorce to name her as beneficiary. The words ‘shall’ and ‘affirmatively’ as defined above would indicate future positive action. The insured’s naming her as contingent beneficiary previously couldn’t be considered to be a future positive action.

“It is my opinion, therefore, that because the primary beneficiary was living and couldn’t take by operation of law, then this court, by interpreting the same law, should determine who is entitled to the proceeds. The law states that the estate should unless there is another beneficiary named by the insured by taking positive future action to do so. This he did not do. Therefore, it is my determination that the proceeds should be payable to the estate.” (Emphasis in original.)

On appeal to the Court of Appeals, the trial court’s decision was affirmed.

It is perhaps pertinent to note at this point that the insurance policy does not enumerate any events upon which the mother would receive the proceeds of the policy aside from her designation as the “contingent” beneficiary.

We are, thus, confronted with a need for a determination of both the statutory and contractual rights of the mother in the instant insurance proceeds. Does the disqualification of the wife to take, due to *299 her divorce, allow the “contingent” beneficiary to take under the contract? And, secondly, does the quoted statute require the husband to affirmatively designate a new beneficiary subsequent to the divorce in order to preclude payment of the proceeds into his estate ?

Prior to the addition in 1939 of the above-quoted portion of the statute to MCLA § 552.101, the wife was entitled to the proceeds of the policy when she remained the designated primary beneficiary after a divorce. Ancient Order of Hibernians v. Mahon (1922), 221 Mich 213, and Guarantee Fund Life Association v. Willett (1927), 241 Mich 132. The effect of the amendment, as stated in the title to the statute, in the judgment of divorce, and, in the statute itself, was to affect the interest of the wife in the insurance policy and thus cure the situation where a divorced wife could inadvertently receive the proceeds of a perhaps forgotten policy. “Inadvertently receive” should be stressed for the statute does not prohibit the husband or the divorce judgment itself from retaining or renaming the wife as the primary beneficiary. It simply requires affirmative action on the part of the court or husband to retain the divorced wife as the primary beneficiary and thus eliminate what could be, and usually appears to be, the inadvertent payment of the life insurance proceeds to a divorced wife.

The question now arises both under the contract and the statute: “Is the meaning of a ‘contingent beneficiary’ in the life insurance policy under the circumstances of this case sufficient to entitle such a contingent beneficiary to take?”

It would appear that the statute would have no interest in eliminating the taking by such a third party. The statute is concerned, as its title suggests, with the parties to the divorce and with the elimination *300 of an inadvertent transfer of life insurance proceeds to a divorced wife. The naming of a contingent beneficiary at whatever time is therefore sufficient to show positive indication by the husband of an intent to have such a beneficiary alternatively take upon the disqualification of his wife, regardless of why she was unable to take. There is, in most instances, nothing about a judgment of divorce which would suggest that the divorce would alter a husband’s thinking relative to a contingent beneficiary receiving the proceeds of an insurance policy on his life.

The statute, then, would appear interested in whether a husband affirmatively indicated an alternative taker, not

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Bluebook (online)
181 N.W.2d 904, 384 Mich. 295, 1970 Mich. LEXIS 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/starbuck-v-city-bank-and-trust-co-mich-1970.