Tennessee-Carolina Mills v. Mauk

14 Tenn. App. 517, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 55
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 3, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 14 Tenn. App. 517 (Tennessee-Carolina Mills v. Mauk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tennessee-Carolina Mills v. Mauk, 14 Tenn. App. 517, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 55 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

PORTRUM, J.

This suit was filed by Tennessee-Carolina Mills, a partnership, to set up a claim in the nature of a resulting trust *518 to a policy of life insurance, taken on the life of a former partner, now deceased, in the amount of $5000. The basis of the claim is that the two partners, G. IT. Mauk, deceased, and Andrew Johnson Bach-man, agreed to take out a policy of insurance upon their lives for the benefit of the partnership, and the partnership was to be named as the beneficiary in the policies, and to pay the premiums from partnership funds. Both applications were made to the Travelers Insurance Company, Hartford, Connecticut, for a policy on the life of each of the partners, through its local agent, S. G. Holly, at Blizabethton, Tennessee, February 12, 1927. And in the course of time the two policies, in the sum of $5000 each, were issued and delivered to the two partners, but the one issued to G. H. Mauk carried the name of his administrator as the beneficiary, while the other, issued to A. J. Bachman, carried the name of the Tennessee-Carolina Mills as the beneficiary. To cut off the right of the insured to change the beneficiary, borrow money, or to exercise any right given him under the policy in derogation of the partnership, an assignment was attached to each of the policies in favor of the Tennessee-Carolina Mills, the partnership. The assignment on the policy issued to Bachman was an absolute assignment, while the assignment on the Mauk policy was a conditional assignment. The latter assignment carried this provision:

“For value received, I hereby assign, transfer and set over unto George IT. Mauk and Andrew Johnson Bachman, doing business as Tennessee-Carolina Mills (a copartnership), of Elizabethton, State of Tennessee (provided such partnership is in existence and I am a member thereof at the time of my death), all my rights, title, claims, interest, and benefit in and to the principal sum insured, in event of death, by the contract of insurance issued by the Travelers Insurance Company, Hartford, Connecticut, on my life, and numbered 303667.
“This assignment shall automatically become null and void upon dissolution of said partnership. In testimony thereof . . . ”

These policies were delivered in March, 1927, and on June 16, 1927, the two partners entered into an agreement, dissolving the partnership by the purchase of all the interest of Mauk by his copartner Bach-man, and under the terms of the agreement all the assets of the partnership passed from Mauk to Bachman, who assumed all the debts and obligations of the partnership. On July 9th following, Mauk made a deed of his interests to the brother and sister-in-law of A. J. Bachman, namely R. B. Bachman, and Mary Irwin, and Mrs. Irwin executed notes in the amount of $2000, in payment of her portion, directly to Mr. Mauk, the retiring partner. On November 29, 1927, Mr. G. H. Mauk died intestate, and then the controversy arose as to who was entitled to the proceeds of this policy.

*519 It is the theory of the bill that the two partners agreed among themselves to take out a policy of insurance on each of their lives, in the sum of $5000, for the benefit of the partnership, and naming the partnership as the beneficiary in each of the policies; and while it is conceded that the partner Mauk was a man of integrity, and would not purposely defraud his partner by violating his agreement, nevertheless by inadvertence or mistake he had his administrator named as the beneficiary, and then made a conditional assignment of the policy to the partnership, which terminated the partnership’s interest in the policy upon the dissolution of the firm by Mauk’s withdrawal, and this conduct, which in fact was in violation of the agreement, was a fraud upon the partnership. And due to this conduct and the violation of this agreement, the partnership is in equity the true beneficiary, and entitled to the proceeds of the policy. If such were the agreement and the partnership was not named as the beneficiary by inadvertence, mistake, or with wrongful intent, then we think the partnership is the true owner of the policy and entitled to its proceeds. On the other hand, if the policy and the written assignment represents and reflects the understanding and purpose of Mauk, then his administrator is the rightful beneficiary and entitled to the proceeds.

Evidence which seeks to undermine and destroy a legal title to property represented by writing, must be clear, cogent' and convincing, before the court will declare the ownership rests in another. If this were not true, written evidences of title would give small assurance of ownership. When in doubt equity follows the law.

Now, we are convinced that the act of Mr. Mauk in having the beneficiary named as his administrator was not an inadvertent act, but one done deliberately and intentionally. It either expressed the intention of the agreement as he understood it, or it was a deliberate fraud upon his part. There is no evidence in the record that he knew his partner 'was having the policy issued upon his life executed in a different manner than that issued upon his, Mauk’s, life. The insurance agent, TIolly, sent in the two applications for the two policies, and the policies were returned accompanied by two forms for the assignment of each; these forms are not the same, neither is the printed matter nor the typewriting, and it was necessary that the company be furnished with some information in reference to the conditional assignment form sent Mauk. The agent says this information was furnished in the application, but Mauk’s application and his policy are not in the record. However, the complainant attempts to supply this missing proof by showing by the partner Bachman that both policies and applications were the same. Upon an examination of the application attached to Bachman’s *520 policy, which is in the record, it is apparent that no information is contained in it in reference to a request for the assignment. It is necessary then that the company be communicated with by letter, and no attempt is made to show the contents of this letter in the proof. The agent says he did not write such a letter, and it follows then that Mauk must have written it. This would have elucidated the issue, and reflected the intent and purpose of Mauk. The company has within its possession some material evidence which should have been produced upon this hearing. The conditional assignment made by Mauk probably was filled out in typewriting by the company, for on the back of the assignment occurs this instruction written on a different typewriter:

"March 11, 1927. The Travelers Insurance Company, Hartford, Connecticut. Dear sir: Please send duplicate notice of premiums due under the contract described in the within instrument, to the following address: (Name) Tennessee-Carolina Mills, Elizabethton, Tennessee. ’ ’

If the company filled out. the conditional assignment, it must have had advice in reference to the proviso placed therein; but if Mauk filled out the proviso, then he certainly understood its purpose and could not have done it inadvertently (he probably did so, for the personal pronoun "I” is used, and the company would not have used the personal pronoun). We cannot believe that the naming of the beneficiary, or the wording of the conditional assignment, was an inadvertent act, we think it was a deliberate act.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 Tenn. App. 517, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tennessee-carolina-mills-v-mauk-tennctapp-1931.