United States v. Marguerite Parlington Scoggins

224 F.2d 517
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 6, 1955
Docket15410
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 224 F.2d 517 (United States v. Marguerite Parlington Scoggins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Marguerite Parlington Scoggins, 224 F.2d 517 (5th Cir. 1955).

Opinion

TUTTLE, Circuit Judge.

The Government is here appealing from a judgment against it on a National Service Life Insurance policy, contending that at the date of death of the veteran the policy had lapsed for non-payment of premiums.

Although the Veterans Administration’s course of dealing with the decedent’s premium payments was marked by some inconsistency and confusion, perhaps due in the main to benevolent concern for careless policyholders, the facts can be fairly simply stated.

Parlington, the veteran, had a $10,000 life policy on the term basis which was in full force through the month of April, 1946. The policy lapsed for non-payment of the May premium. Parlington nevertheless made payments on July 2, August 8, October 1, October 8 and October 17, which would have taken care of premiums for May through September, if they had been timely made. He thereafter made payments on January 15, 1947, and two on March 31, 1947. He made no further payments until after he received two letters from the Veterans Administration. The first of these, dated May 7, 1947, replying to an inquiry from Parlington, correctly stated that his policy had lapsed on May 1,1946, that reinstatement was necessary if he desired to continue the insurance, and that there was a credit to his account of $56.80 (the eight payments above referred to made after the lapse). The second letter, dated November 28, 1947, repeated the information of the May letter, and also stated that the credit could be used for reinstatement and advance premiums after reinstatement. There was a postscript to the letter advising Parlington that in the alternative he could have a refund of his $56.80 upon his request. On January 29, 1948, Parlington filed a formal application for reinstatement on the form supplied by the Veterans Administration, stating that he wished his credit used for payment of reinstatement premiums —one month’s premium for the month of lapse and one month’s premium for the month of reinstatement.

In the meantime, without the matter being in any way considered in connection with Parlington’s insurance account, a letter notice was issued by the Assistant Administrator for Insurance dated November 8, 1946, 1 obviously for the *519 purpose of alleviating hardship resulting in situations in which veterans (we may note that this was a time when some ten million veterans were readjusting their affairs upon being released from the military services) were commencing to make directly monthly payments for premiums which had theretofore been deducted from their pay, and where gaps in monthly payments had occurred and some payments were made late, but later caught up.

Subsequently, this letter was “superseded” by a letter of May 9, 1947, which repeated the identical four paragraphs, except for the date and the addition of the following clause to the last sentence in the third paragraph, “and when corresponding with the insured care will be taken to avoid giving a contrary imprestion,” 2 and the dates in the last paragraph were changed by making each of them a date six months later. There was then added a significant paragraph. 3

Then, finally, there was issued a so-called “Technical Bulletin” known as TB 9 — 53, on September 25, 1947, which, so far as claimed to affect this policy, merely had the effect of restating the provisions of the original letter, except that the liens required in that letter were cancelled, This TB sought to make mandatory the readjustment in accordance with the instructions therein contained,

When Parlington filed his application for reinstatement, it was processed and endorsed “reinstated 2-13-48.” Under the validly existing regulations, this reinstated the policy as of the month of application, January 1948. In a letter addressed to Parlington, dated February 17, 1948, the Veterans Administration informed him (contrary to its advice to him on November 28, 1947, that he had a credit of $56.80) that “by an administrative adjustment the credit of $56.80, as shown in our letter dated November 28, 1948 [sic] was in error. The credit which existed on your account was $21.30 and was applied to pay the cost of reinstatement and one month in advance, paying your account as shown above.” 4

*520 No explanation of any kind was made as to what happened to the $35.50 that had been taken away by “an administrative adjustment of the credit of $56.80,” an amount that would have kept his policy in force for an additional five months, or through August. Parlington died on April 29, twenty-nine days after expiration of the grace period, under the Administration’s “administrative adjustment.”

Of course, the Government cannot be estopped by its unbusinesslike handling of the deceased veteran’s insurance account, but at first blush the beneficiary’s claim here seems so clearly instinct with right that the court may well be expected to subject the record, and the plausible legal reasoning of the Government’s brief to exceptionally careful scrutiny, if that should be found necessary, in order to serve the ends of justice without violence to legal principle.

The Veterans Administration based its rejection of the claim on the proposition that where a veteran has elected to reinstate a lapsed policy by paying two months’ premiums, if it should happen that he has made irregular payments while the policy was lapsed — payments for which the Administration acknowledged he was entitled to restitution — the Administration could by unilateral action and without the veteran’s consent debit his account for premiums during the lapse period so as to wipe out the credit; even though the policy conferred no such power on the Administration. 5

Such a contention would sound fantastic if it were put forward by a commercial insurance company. Under normal legal principles if an insurance policy lapses for non-payment of premiums and the .former assured continues to make payments, the insurer, of course, holds the money for the former policyholder. The Government recognized this principle when it wrote Parlington that it held $56.80 as a credit to his account. Then by what legal principle could the Veterans Administration appropriate part of this money? It claims the right under a letter of instructions or a Technical Bulletin, which it claims has the force of law.

The solution of this problem lies, it seems to us, in two answers to the Administration’s argument. The first is that the series of instructions did not, by their terms, touch the particular policy here in question; the second is that if they purported to do so in a manner that adversely affected the policyholder’s rights, they would be void to that extent.

As to the first proposition, we should say at the outset that the standard of strict construction is required by the- instruction letter itself.

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Related

Kane v. United States
154 F. Supp. 95 (S.D. New York, 1957)

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Bluebook (online)
224 F.2d 517, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-marguerite-parlington-scoggins-ca5-1955.