Williams v. Penn Mut. Life Ins.

133 So. 649, 160 Miss. 408, 1931 Miss. LEXIS 163
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 20, 1931
DocketNo. 29381.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 133 So. 649 (Williams v. Penn Mut. Life Ins.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Penn Mut. Life Ins., 133 So. 649, 160 Miss. 408, 1931 Miss. LEXIS 163 (Mich. 1931).

Opinion

*411 Ethridge, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Mrs. Trinity Tourne Williams filed a declaration in the circuit court of Pearl Elver county against the Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company upon a policy of insurance in which she' had been made a beneficiary together with two children of Eobert J. Williams, alleging that on the 20th day of April, 1917, the defendant insurance company issued a policy upon the life of Eobert J. Williams for the sum of twelve thousand dollars, which policy provided for change of beneficiaries, and that the original policy named- Mrs. May L. Williams, the then wife of the insured, Granville Hollie and Nellie Edwina Williams, children of the said insured, in equal shares; that afterward on September 16, 1926, the said Eobert J. Williams, exercising the rights reserved by him as shown by the said policy to change the beneficiaries, changed the beneficiaries so as to make Trinity Tourne, as Mrs. Trinity Tourne Williams was then Known, a beneficiary together with the two children; that afterward on the 9th day of December, 1929, Eobert J. Williams changed the beneficiaries making the said policy payable to his executors, administrators, or assigns; that on the 10th day of December, 1929, Eobert J. Williams again changed the beneficiaries so as to make the said policy payable to the plaintiff, who was then the wife of Eobert J. Williams, and the two children; that the insured, Eobert J. Williams, executed a premium note in the sum of two thousand three hundred three dollars and twenty cents, and further borrowed' from the defendant the sum of four thousand six hundred dollars; and that there was due on the said loans as interest 'at the time of the death of Eobert J. Williams twenty-one dollars and eighty-eight on the premium note and fifty-two dollars and thirteen cents on the loan note, making a total amount due the defendant at the time of the death of the said Eobert J. Williams, of six thou *412 sand nine hundred seventy-seven dollars and twenty-one cents, and after deducting the said amount from the amount due under the terms of the policy there remained an amount due the beneficiaries of five thousand fifty-five dollars and nineteen cents. It was further alleged that Robert J. Williams departed this life February 27, 1930, while the policy was in full force and effect, and that the company was indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of one-third of five thousand fifty-five dollars and nineteen eents; and that the defendant had already paid the other beneficiaries their part, and the amount due her was long past due and the defendant had failed and refused to pay the plaintiff the sum of her interest which was one thousand six hundred eighty-five dollars and seven cents, and she demanded judgment for said amount with interest from the 27th day of February, 1930.

A copy of the policy was attached to the declaration and contained a provision, as shown by the exhibit, which reserved to the insured “full power, while this policy is in force' and not previously assigned, to change the present beneficiary or beneficiaries, such change to be made by instrument in writing and to take effect only upon its indorsement upon the policy by the company at its home office.”

The defendant being served with process came into court and filed an affidavit in which it admitted the issuance of the policy sued on, the amount of the premium note, and the loans therein alleged, and that it was due the money, but set up in the affidavit that Mrs. May L. Williams, through her attorneys, had served notice upon the insurance company that Mrs. May L. Williams claimed to be one of the' beneficiaries in said policy, and if the company paid the money to Mrs. Trinity Tourne Williams it would do so at its peril; and the insurance company offered to pay the money into court, stating that it was not interested in the contest between *413 Mrs. May L. Williams as the claimant and Mrs. Trinity Tonrne Williams as a beneficiary in said policy, and asked that it be' discharged under section 569' of Hemingway’s 1927 Code, and that interpleader be had between Mrs. May L. Williams and Mrs. Trinity Tourne Williams, and that process issue for that purpose. Accordingly, process was issued to the appellant, Mrs. May L. Williams, under said affidavit and statute, and an order was entered by the court directing Mr's. May L. Williams to be summoned and appear on the 17th day of November, 1930', to maintain or relinquish her claim against the defendant, and directing that the clerk of the court be appointed custodian of the money paid into court, which was one thousand seven hundred forty-one dollars and twelve cents, ’ and that upon the said Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company paying the said amount to the clerk aforesaid it should be discharged from all liability to either of the other parties, in respect to the subject of the action.

Mrs. May L. Williams appeared and moved to set aside the order discharging the Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company on payment of money into court, which had been done, and set up that in 1907 the said Robert J. Williams took a ten-year convertible term policy upon his life in the said company, in which she and the two children referred to above were beneficiaries, and that the policy did not authorize any change of beneficiaries, and that she became vested with the rights of a beneficiary which could not be divested without her consent, and that she had never consented to any chánge in the beneficiary; that said policy issued in 1907 was for the. principal sum of twelve thousand dollars, and that in April, 1917, the said Robert J. Williams surrendered 'the original policy and took a policy of twenty-year term ’payable to herself and the said two children as beneficiaries therein, and that this policy likewise had' no provision for a change of beneficiary by Robert J. Wil *414 liams, and neither did the application for the policy,’ which was made a part thereof, have any such stipulation or provision in it; that she had never consented to the change of beneficiary and had never consented to the assignment of the policy as security for any loan on said policy; and that she was entitled to the sum of four thousand dollars, and'not merely entitled to the one thousand seven hundred forty-one dollars and twelve cents paid into court; that the defendant life insurance company was a necessary party defendant to any suit by her to establish her claim to the proceeds of the insurance policy, and that it was not a disinterested stakeholder entitled to interplead in the manner and in accordance with the statute referred to and in accordance with the order of the court moved to be set aside.

The allegations of the affidavit were denied in material particulars and an accompanying answer, as an exhibit thereto, in answer to the affidavit to the insurance company in which tile rights and claims of Mrs. May L. Williams were set up and which, in effect, but with more elaboration and detail, challenged the theory of defendant insurance company, and made an exhibit to the said answer a copy of the original policy issued in 1907, and also a copy of the policy issued April 20, 1917, according to her version thereof, but the policies made exhibits to the answer of Mrs. May L. Williams, although the last one bears the same date as the policy made exhibit to the declaration of Mrs. Trinity Tourne Williams, did not contain a provision for change of beneficiary.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
133 So. 649, 160 Miss. 408, 1931 Miss. LEXIS 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-penn-mut-life-ins-miss-1931.