Sun Life Assurance Co. v. Weyen

136 F. Supp. 592, 1955 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2463
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Washington
DecidedDecember 15, 1955
DocketNo. 1309
StatusPublished

This text of 136 F. Supp. 592 (Sun Life Assurance Co. v. Weyen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sun Life Assurance Co. v. Weyen, 136 F. Supp. 592, 1955 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2463 (E.D. Wash. 1955).

Opinion

DRIVER, Chief Judge.

This is an interpleader action in which the plaintiff, Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada, a corporation, has deposited in the registry of the court the net proceeds of eight insurance policies on the life of-Robert F. Weyen, who died on April 16, 1955. Several rival claimants to such proceeds have been impleaded as defendants.

There is little dispute as to the facts which, for the most part, are established by documentary evidence. On September 22, 1953, the insured, Robert F. Weyen, a resident of Asotin county, Washington, secured a decree of divorce in the superior court of that county from his wife, Mary P. Weyen. The mother was awarded the custody of the two minor children of the parties, Daryl Weyen and Carolyn Weyen. The father was required to pay $200 a month for their support during their minority, and the' insurance policies in suit, in accordance' with the property settlement agreement entered into between the parties, were awarded to the insured, Robert F. Weyen." Ón the next day following the entry of the divorce decree, Robert F. Weyen executed a trust agreement or declaration of trust, in which he named his attorney, defendant E. J. Stanfill, as trustee, and stated that he had designated the trustee as beneficiary in ten life insurance policies.1 The policies constituted the corpus of the trust. The trust was to continue for a period of fifteen years, and the beneficiaries were the two minor children of Robert F. Weyen. The trust instrument provided that in case of the death of Robert F. Weyen during the trust period, the trustee should collect the proceeds of the life insurance policies and ■ use them for the education, maintenance, and support of the minor children.. The trust agreement contained the following provision:

“The donor specifically reserves the right, during the term of this trust, to pledge any of such policies as collateral or to exercise the loan rights as provided in said policies, and in the event the donor makes application for such loans, iit is hereby expressly understood that the signature of the Trustee named herein shall not be required to join in the application for said loans.”

On the same day, September 23, 1953, Robert P. Weyen executed a last will and testament in which he stated that he had made no provisions for his minor children because “I have heretofore provided for them through Insurance Policies on my life; however, should said policies lapse or become null and void I hereby give, and devise and bequeath to my said children the sum of $10,000.-00 share and share alike.”

On November 16, 1954, Robert F. Weyen executed an assignment to a trustee for benefit of his creditors. In that document he stated he was in financial difficulties and unable to pay his debts, and that he assigned all his property, assets and income to defendant, Ralph B. Defenbach, as trustee for his creditors. Certain real property and a number of items of personal property were particularly described in the assignment, including all but one of the life insurance policies which are the subject of the present action.2

[595]*595The paragraph of the assignment in which the life insurance policies were listed recited that Robert F. Weyen, the assignor, had prepared the necessary documents to have Ralph B. Defenbach made his beneficiary for the benefit of creditors “joining in this assignment” in the event of his death, and the assignor undertook immediately to deliver the policies to Defenbach for forwarding “to the home offices of the companies issuing said policies so that appropriate endorsements may be attached thereto” showing Defenbach as beneficiary thereunder.3 The instrument further stated that “this assignment shall constitute a mortgage upon all of the property listed herein.”

The question presented for determination is whether the defendant, E. J* Stan-fill, as trustee in the trust agreement of September 23, 1953, or defendant, Ralph B. Defenbach, as trustee in the assignment for benefit of creditors of November 16, 1954, is entitled to the proceeds of the life insurance policies which are listed in and covered by both instruments. Defendant Stanfill argues that the trust agreement of September 23, 1953, set up an irrevocable trust whereby the trust settlor, Robert F. Weyen, divested himself of the right to change the beneficiary, and created in the trustee for the benefit of his minor children a vested right in the proceeds of the insurance policies, which constituted the corpus of the trust. The donor, Weyen, could not thereafter without the consent of his children, it is argued, make defendant Defenbach as trustee for his creditors, the beneficiary under the policies. The record not only shows no such consent on their part but, since they were minors, they were incapable of giving effective consent.

It seems to me that it is not necessary to decide whether the trust agreement set up an irrevocable trust so far as the right to change the beneficiary is concerned. By its plain terms, the document specifically reserved a right in the donor Weyen to exercise the loan rights as provided in the policies and “to pledge any of such policies as collateral.”4 There can be no doubt as to what Weyen intended by the language just quoted. The trust agreement was drafted by a lawyer, and in legal parlance “pledging as collateral” means putting up property as security for a debt additional to the personal obligation of the debtor. Pledging for collateral provides concurrent additional security for the payment of the debt, whether it is antecedent or newly created.5

By his trust agreement and last will, Robert F. Weyen clearly indicated that he desired to make provision for the support of his minor children in case of his death.' But he was a comparatively young man — only thirty-five years of age at the time he executed the agreement — and it may be assumed that he was in ordinary good health as the record shows that he procured life insurance in the amount of $10,000 on December 16, 1953, — only a year and four months prior to his death. He died as the result of an accident, and not from disease. It may be assumed that he had every expectation of living through the fifteen-year period of the trust. The trust, to say the least, was a very thin one, depending for its fruition on a number of contingencies. The children could not have benefited from it unless the father died during the period'of the trust, the children survived him, and prior to his death he had not permitted the policies to lapse for fail[596]*596ure to pay the premiums. Weyen was a large-scale logging contractor, which is not generally regarded as one of the more stable forms of business activity, and he was burdened by the divorce decree requirement that he pay $200 a month for the support of his two children. When he set up the life insurance trust for his children, obviously he wished to reserve his life insurance as a useful credit resource.6 When he got into serious financial difficulties in November of 1954, Weyen took advantage of the reservation he had made in his declaration of trust' and, in effect, pledged the life insurance policies as collateral security for the payment of his debts. It was not necessary for him to change the beneficiary in order to accomplish that purpose.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
136 F. Supp. 592, 1955 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2463, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sun-life-assurance-co-v-weyen-waed-1955.