Travelers Insurance v. Gebo

106 Vt. 155
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedFebruary 6, 1934
StatusPublished

This text of 106 Vt. 155 (Travelers Insurance v. Gebo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Travelers Insurance v. Gebo, 106 Vt. 155 (Vt. 1934).

Opinion

MoultoN, J.

These defendants are rival claimants for the proceeds of a life insurance certificate issued by the plaintiff to Dominic Gebo, now deceased. They have been ordered to inter-plead for the purpose of determining which one of them is entitled to the fund, which has been paid into court. A hearing has been had, the facts have been found and the chancellor has decreed the fund to Delia Gebo. Fred Gebo (individually, for he does not claim as administrator of Dominic’s estate) has appealed.

Following are the material facts as found by the chancellor:

Fred Gebo was the brother and Delia is the widow, of Dominie. The certificate in question, in which Delia was the beneficiary, contained a provision enabling the insured to change the beneficiary at any time, upon written request made in a prescribed manner. It was a so-called group insurance under a plan in force for the benefit of the employees of the Fro-Joy Ice Cream Company for which concern Dominic was working, and the premiums were paid by certain sums deducted from his wages.

Delia and Dominie were married in 1929, before the policy was taken out. Dominie was then employed by his father at a wage of $40 a month. Delia had about $1,000 on deposit in a savings bank, of which she withdrew about $300 to purchase household furniture, which she still has. Before the marriage Dominic had undergone an operation for a serious abdominal ailment. Soon after the marriage, while the two were living on a farm owned by Dominie’s father, the latter proposed to sell the farm to them. Delia opposed the purchase, holding that the price was excessive, and their indebtedness would be too large, and this opposition caused a coolness between her and her husband’s parents. In the spring of 1930, Dominic and his wife removed to Winooski, where they lived with Delia’s sister-in-law under an arrangement whereby Delia did the housework, and, with her husband, paid one-half of the expenses of the table, but they were under no charge for rent. Dominic obtained employment by the Fro-Joy Ice Cream Company, and during the same year he was transferred to the company’s plant in Springfield, Mass., where he had a return of his illness, and the two returned to Vermont, where another operation was performed in February, 1931. After having sufficiently [159]*159recovered, Dominic went back to work for tbe ice cream company, and remained in its employ until January, 1932, when a third operation became necessary. The incision from this operation never healed, and it was necessary to keep it drained and dressed. Likewise the incision of the prior operation did not permanently heal, and here again drainage and dressing were required. Dominic suffered pain and was irritable when so afflicted. His physical condition grew worse and he died in September, 1932.

Delia and her husband were an affectionate couple, both being thrifty and good workers. Because of Dominic’s illness and his necessary confinement in the hospital, the family expenses were heavy and Delia withdrew practically all her money to pay bills from the hospital and for nursing and surgical operations, as well as for general household purposes. She obtained employment in various places, at one time working for the ice cream company, and her earnings were used in the payment of the expenses. She also helped her husband in paying for an automobile, which he had purchased before their marriage, and upon which there was due, at that time, between $700 and $800. At the time of his death there was some $400 still unpaid. “Delia,” says the chancellor, “was loyal to her husband, worked hard to care for him and to keep bills paid, used practically all of her available funds for this purpose and was kind and considerate in her treatment of her husband. All this was much appreciated by Dominic and at times he expressed this appreciation to Delia and told her in effect that he was glad he had two insurance policies because if anything happened to him, she, Delia, would have these two policies to make up what she had spent for him. The second policy referred to here was a policy for one thousand dollars in the New York Mutual Life Insurance Company and the proceeds on this policy were paid to Delia after Dominic’s decease.”

After this conversation she continued to work, and use her earnings and available funds for general family expenses, believing that the proceeds of the two policies were to be hers.

In June, 1932, in accordance with Dominic’s wish, the couple went to the farm in Ferrisburgh to live with his mother, his father having deceased. In August, 1932, Delia took some offense at an occurrence which consisted in the mother’s chang[160]*160ing the dressing upon Dominic’s wound, and at Dominic’s language in refusing her own offer of services, and went to her mother’s house in Winposki. Shortly after this Dominic caused a change of beneficiary in the certificate of insurance, without notice to Delia, substituting the name of his brother Fred for that of his wife, and a new certificate was issued to him. This he did voluntarily for the purpose of preventing Delia from getting the benefits of the insurance, and for the purpose of avoiding the latter’s equitable right and the equitable duty which he owed to her. Delia had retained possession of the original certificate and knew nothing of the change until after Dominic’s death. She paid the expenses of his funeral, amounting to about $440.

There was no evidence that Dominic owed his brother Fred anything, or that there was any reason why he should wish to designate the latter as beneficiary, beyond the fact that he was his brother.

The chancellor concludes: “This situation gave her (Delia) an equitable right to the proceeds of these policies and it was the duty of Dominic to refrain from doing anything to deprive her of the benefits of these policies. She did nothing during Dominic’s lifetime, or thereafter to forfeit this equitable right which she had or to relieve her husband Dominic from the duty of doing nothing to avoid her getting the benefits of the policies. ’ ’

The appellant has briefed several exceptions to the findings and to the failure of the chancellor to find as requested in certain respects, but no bill of exceptions has been signed and filed, and so the questions thus involved are not before us, the only point for our consideration being whether the decree is warranted by the pleadings and supported by the findings. Brown v. Osgood, 104 Vt. 87, 89, 156 Atl. 876; Stevens v. Flanders, 103 Vt. 434, 435, 154 Atl. 673.

Where, as here, a contract of insurance so provides, tKe beneficiary may be changed at the instance of the insured, and no vested right, but only an expectancy, exists in the beneficiary, in the absence of facts or circumstances tending to establish an equitable interest in the proceeds of the policy. Modern Woodmen of America v. Headle, 88 Vt. 37, 46, 90 Atl. 893, L. R. A. 1915A, 580; Spaulding v. Mut. Life Ins. Co., 94 Vt. 42, 49, 109 Atl. 22; Cummings v. Conn. General Life Ins. Co., 101 [161]*161Vt. 73, 80, 142 Atl. 82. This principle applies whether the contracts in issue are ordinary life policies or certificates issued by mutual benefit societies ’(Modern Woodmen of America v. Headle, supra; N. Y. Life Ins. Co. v. Rose, 70 Cal. App. 175, 233 Pac. 343, 344), and no reason is perceived why it should not be equally applicable where the certificate has been issued under a system of group insurance.

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Bluebook (online)
106 Vt. 155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/travelers-insurance-v-gebo-vt-1934.