The petitioner, Edeltraud Elter-Nodvin, appeals an order of the Superior Court (Colburn, J.) dismissing claims against the respondents, her daughters, Leah Nodvin and Madeline Nodvin. The claims sought to impose a constructive trust on insurance and retirement account proceeds that would otherwise pass to her daughters. We affirm.
The petitioner alleges the following facts, which we accept as true for purposes of this appeal. See Morrissey v. Town of Lyme,
In October of that year, the family division issued an anti-hypothecation order instructing the parties to refrain from, among other things, disposing of marital property while the proceedings were pending. Sometime thereafter, Stephen changed the beneficiaries of certain life insurance policies and retirement accounts from the petitioner to the couple’s daughters. After changing the beneficiaries, Stephen died.
In February 2011, the petitioner sued her daughters for the insurance and retirement account proceeds. She argued that the circumstances under which her husband changed his beneficiaries justified the imposition of a constructive trust. The daughters, one of whom was still a minor and represented by her guardians, moved to dismiss the petition. They argued that Stephen’s change of beneficiaries did not violate the anti-hypotheca
In reviewing this motion to dismiss, our standard of review is whether the allegations in the petitioner’s pleadings are reasonably susceptible of a construction that would permit recovery. Tessier v. Rockefeller,
The petitioner first argues that Stephen’s alleged violation of the anti-hypothecation order justifies the imposition of a constructive trust. The order restrained the parties “from selling, transferring, encumbering, hypothecating, concealing or in any other manner whatsoever disposing of any property, real or personal, belonging to either or both of them.”
Here, because the petitioner’s beneficiary status was not “property, real or personal, belonging to” her, Stephen’s selection of new beneficiaries did not violate the order. See In the Matter of Goodlander & Tamposi,
Nevertheless, the petitioner argues that we should focus upon the order’s purpose, rather than its letter. The purpose, she contends, was to preserve the status quo so that the trial court could equitably divide the couple’s assets during the divorce proceeding. See RSA 458:16-a, I, II (2004). Had divorce proceedings continued, she argues, the court’s power to distribute marital property would have permitted it to require Stephen to maintain the now-disputed policies for her benefit. See Dubois,
Even if, for the sake of argument, we adopt the petitioner’s construction of the order, we reject her conclusion. Stephen’s nomination of different beneficiaries in no way impaired the trial court’s ability to order him to name a particular beneficiary in the divorce proceedings. See Dubois,
The petitioner next argues that equity requires the imposition of a constructive trust on the insurance proceeds. No rigid requirements exist for imposing a constructive trust. In re Estate of Cass,
In this case, the trial court properly dismissed the petitioner’s constructive trust claim because she failed to allege facts establishing a confidential relationship at the time Stephen changed beneficiaries. An essential component of a confidential relationship is the justifiable belief that a person will act in another’s best interest. See id. The petitioner argues that she had such a relationship with Stephen because, during their marriage, the couple agreed to purchase life insurance with marital assets. Her petition alleges that the couple bought insurance to “ensure that[,] were one to predecease the other, the surviving spouse would be protected financially,” and that the couple spent “substantial amounts of marital funds on . . . life insurance premiums[,] [m]uch” of which the petitioner earned.
These allegations fail to establish a confidential relationship, however, because, notwithstanding the couple’s marital plans to provide for one
Thus, while their divorce action was pending, the petitioner could not rely upon Stephen to provide for her based upon a spousal obligation. Rather, if she wished to remain beneficiary of the insurance policies, she should have asked the court to order Stephen not to alter them. See RSA 458:16 (2004). In the absence of such an order or some other legal or equitable obligation to maintain the policies for the petitioner, Stephen was free to name his daughters as beneficiaries. See Dubois,
Finally, the petitioner contends that the trial court erred when it dismissed her breach of contract claim. We first note that the petitioner failed to allege a breach of contract claim in her petition. Instead, she included a footnote in her objection to the respondents’ motion to dismiss requesting to amend her petition by adding a breach of contract claim.
The trial court’s order dismissing the petition made no mention of this claim, which we construe as a denial of the petitioner’s request to amend rather than a substantive ruling upon the claim. The claim’s absence from the dismissal order suggests that the trial court either declined to allow the amendment and, therefore, found it unnecessary to address the contract claim’s substance, or did not address the petitioner’s request because she failed to file a motion seeking to amend. Such a construction
Affirmed.
