Teresa James v. Mary Cynthia Mounts, James Phillip Rocconi, and Richard Anthony Rocconi, Individually and as of the Estate of James R. Rocconi

2023 Ark. 53
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 16, 2023
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2023 Ark. 53 (Teresa James v. Mary Cynthia Mounts, James Phillip Rocconi, and Richard Anthony Rocconi, Individually and as of the Estate of James R. Rocconi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Teresa James v. Mary Cynthia Mounts, James Phillip Rocconi, and Richard Anthony Rocconi, Individually and as of the Estate of James R. Rocconi, 2023 Ark. 53 (Ark. 2023).

Opinion

Cite as 2023 Ark. 53 SUPREME COURT OF ARKANSAS No. CV-21-198 TERESA JAMES Opinion Delivered: March 16, 2023

APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE OUACHITA COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT [NO. V. 52CV-18-154]

MARY CYNTHIA MOUNTS, JAMES HONORABLE DAVID F. GUTHRIE, PHILLIP ROCCONI, AND RICHARD JUDGE ANTHONY ROCCONI, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS EXECUTOR AFFIRMED; COURT OF APPEALS OF THE ESTATE OF JAMES R. OPINION VACATED. ROCCONI, DECEASED

APPELLEES

BARBARA W. WEBB, Justice

Teresa James, the ex-wife of Dr. James R. Rocconi, deceased, appeals from a

declaratory judgment by the Ouachita County Circuit Court finding that the death benefit

of a term life-insurance policy owned by Dr. Rocconi was payable to his children and not

to her. On appeal, James argues that the circuit court erred in (1) failing to make findings of

fact and conclusions of law in accordance with Rule 52 of the Arkansas Rules of Civil

Procedure;1 (2) finding that Dr. Rocconi substantially complied with the Allianz policy

requirements to change a beneficiary designation with an unsigned, undated change-of-

beneficiary form; (3) finding the Allianz policy provisions regarding the change-in-

1 Point 1 appears in James’s original brief but is not mentioned in her “supplemental” briefing. Her original Point 2, “The circuit court erred in finding that a change of beneficiary had occurred in accordance with Arkansas law” restated and expanded in new Points 2, 3, and 4, so the original Point 2 will not be discussed separately. beneficiary designation to be ambiguous; and (4) construing the unsigned, undated change-

of-beneficiary form to effect a change in beneficiary.

The court of appeals reversed and remanded. See James v. Mounts, 2022 Ark. App.

158, 644 S.W.3d 425. We granted the appellees’ petition for review. When we review a

decision by the court of appeals, we treat the case as though it had been originally filed in

this court. Cherry v. Cherry, 2021 Ark. 49, 617 S.W.3d 692. We vacate the court of appeals

opinion and affirm.

I. Facts

On September 5, 2016, Teresa James informed Dr. Rocconi, her husband of thirteen

years, that she was leaving him. Three days later, James filed for divorce. The divorce was

finalized April 18, 2017. Almost immediately after James informed him of her decision, Dr.

Rocconi began to take inventory of his assets to ensure that James would receive nothing

from his estate in the event of his death. On September 9, 2016, Dr. Rocconi changed his

will to bequeath all his assets to his three adult children, Mary Mounts, Richard Rocconi,

and James P. Rocconi.

It is not disputed that on October 17, 2016, Dr. Rocconi called Allianz Insurance

Company to determine what, if any, insurance policies he had with Allianz and to ensure

that if his wife was a named beneficiary, she was replaced with his three adult children. The

Allianz representative informed him that he had a $300,000 term-life policy.

The life-insurance policy allowed the policy owner to change beneficiaries. The

policy documents included the following language:

2 Change of Beneficiary You may change the named Beneficiary by sending Notice. The change will not be effective until we record it at our home office. Even if the insured is not living when we record the change, the change will take effect retroactively as of the date it was signed. Any benefits we pay before we record the change will not be affected. An irrevocable Beneficiary must give written consent before we will change the Beneficiary.

The policy defines the “Beneficiary” as “the person(s) or entity named in the application

unless changed as outlined in the Change of Beneficiary provision.” Under the policy,

“Notice” is defined as “[o]ur receipt of a satisfactory written request.”

Dr. Rocconi asked for, and received from Allianz via fax, the change-of-beneficiary

form that Allianz required. The form he received was styled “Request to Transfer

Ownership and/or Change Beneficiaries.” Under the style, the form stated simply, “The

owner should use this form to transfer ownership of an annuity or life insurance policy

and/or to add or change beneficiaries.”

Section 1 of the five-page form requested contract information: the policy number,

owner’s name, social security number, phone numbers, and email address. Section 2 of the

form concerned changing policy owners. Section 3 addressed “Beneficiary designation.”

The instructions provide:

Complete this section to add or change beneficiaries.

• Percentages must total 100%.

• If you have more than 4 beneficiaries, please list them on a separate sheet, signed and dated by you.

• If you do not indicate the % you would like each beneficiary to receive, the surviving beneficiaries will share equally.

3 Standard blocks for completing identifying information for Beneficiary Nos. 1–3 are

listed on page 3. A standard block for completing identifying information for Beneficiary

No. 4 is listed on page 4. Directly below the space to designate Beneficiary No. 4 are the

following directives:

As the authorized signer, please sign your name and date below in the appropriate space. If you do not sign and date this page, we will not be able to process your request.

Changes will take affect based on the guidelines in your contract. Allianz is not liable for any requested changes we make to your contract before the effective date.

Below these directives were signature blocks for the current owner; current joint owner;

new owner; new joint owner; trustee, attorney in fact; and assignee.

Dr. Rocconi filled in the information required to complete the above-referenced

Section 3 on the form, listing his three adult children, the same beneficiaries named in his

new will, as the new policy beneficiaries, with each receiving 33 1/3 percent of the death

benefit. Dr. Rocconi did not fill out any of the remaining blocks.

It was stipulated by the parties that Sections 1, 2, and 3 of the form were completed

by Dr. Rocconi in his handwriting. Dr. Rocconi’s handwritten form was faxed back to

Allianz at 3:50 p.m. the same afternoon that he received the form from Allianz. Allianz

records indicate that a letter was subsequently generated and mailed to Dr. Rocconi on

October 19, 2016, indicating that his beneficiary-change request was incomplete because it

was not signed and dated.

On November 24, 2017, Dr. Rocconi passed away. James completed the “Life Claim

Form” Allianz sent to her to receive payment of the life-insurance death benefit, but before

4 payment was made, appellees, Dr. Rocconi’s children and the executor of his estate, filed a

declaratory-judgment action asking the circuit court to find that they were the lawful

beneficiaries of the life-insurance policy. Alternatively, appellees asked the circuit court to

find that the policy language regarding the change of a beneficiary is ambiguous and must

be interpreted in their favor. James counterclaimed, seeking, among other things, a

declaratory judgment from the circuit court that the policy provided for payment of the

death benefit to her, as named beneficiary, to the exclusion of the appellees.

A bench trial was held on December 14, 2020. According to Allianz’s records, Dr.

Rocconi never responded to the letter asking him to correct what it regarded as deficiencies

in the change-of-beneficiaries form. Appellees, however, countered that there was no

evidence that Dr.

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