During the course of his marriage to the respondent, Leslie L. Francis paid, with community funds, all premiums on two policies insuring his life. He designated as beneficiaries his wife, who is the respondent, and his son by a previous marriage, who is the aрpellant. He died testate in 1973, making provisions for the respondent in his will but leaving the residue of his estate to a daughter and the appellant. The respondent commenced this action seeking a determination that all оf the proceeds of the policies belong to her. The trial court reluctantly upheld this contention, finding
Occidental Life Ins. Co. v. Powers,
In a 5-to-4 decision, this court held in that case that a nonconsenting wife may void the designation of someone othеr than herself as beneficiary of a community-owned life insurance policy. The holding was grounded upon the theory that a life insurance policy and its proceeds constitute community property and that the designatiоn by the insured of a beneficiary other than his spouse amounts to an attempt to give away community property. 1
*513 The majority opinion was immediately questioned in a Comment by Russell V. Hokanson in 13 Wash. L. Rev. 321 (1938). It has been consistently critiсized over the years and to our knowledge has never been defended. 2
While the case has been cited numerous times (most often for the proposition that an insurance policy purchased with community funds constitutes community property and/or the proposition that substantial gifts of community property cannot be made without the consent of both spouses), the questionable holding of the case, namely, that where an insured designates as beneficiary of a community-owned policy a person or persons other than his spouse, the latter may void the designation as to all the proceeds and not just to a one-half share, has figured in only a few cases.
These include
King v. Prudential Ins. Co.,
That ever since a cloud of doubt has hung over the rule of law upon this point is recognized in
Estate of Hammel v. General Am. Life Ins. Co.,
In the meantime this court had softened somewhat the impact of
Powers
by giving effect, in
In re Estate of Towey,
Having reexamined the Powers case and its progeny, we have come to the conclusion that the case was erroneously decided and should be overruled. The majority opinion proceeded upon the incorrect assumption that a designation of a life insuranсe beneficiary operates as an inter vivos gift of community property, failing to recognize that such a designation is merely a means of transmitting property at death. The opinion confuses the right of the wife to void an inter vivos gift of community property in its entirety with her right to receive the value of one-half of the community property at the husband's death. The designation of an insurance beneficiary is quasi-testamentary in nature, since the beneficiary has only an inchoate right prior to the death of the insured, at least where the insured retains the right to change the beneficiary. And even where he does not retain this right the beneficiary's interest is *515 contingent upon the maintenance of the policy in good standing up to the time of the insured's death.
While the designation of a beneficiary is quasi-testamentary in nature, it is not subject to the requirements of the statute of wills (RCW 11.12), since it is expressly exempted under RCW 11.02.090.
The policy being community property and the husband having the right to dispose of one-half of the community property upon his death, he should have the right to give to persons other than his wife one-half the amount of the proceeds. We think the principles involved were well summarized by the California Supreme Court in
Pacific Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Cleverdon,
First, where premiums of an insurance policy issued on the life of the husband after coverture are paid entirely from community funds, thе policy becomes a community asset; second, the designation of a beneficiary in a policy of life insurance initiates in favor of the beneficiary an inchoate gift of the proceeds of the policy, which, if not revoked by the insured prior to his death, vests in the beneficiary at the time of his death; third, the husband may not make a gift of the entire community property without the written consent of the wife; but if he attempt so to do, in contravеntion of the wife's rights (as in the case of life insurance policy, by naming a third party as beneficiary) the entire gift is not a nullity; it is subject only to the wife's right to have it revoked as to the half to which she would be entitled upon his death; and as to the remaining half, the gift is valid and immune from attack by the surviving wife or by those who under the law of succession would inherit the husband's share in *516 case he made no disposition thereof up to the time of his death.
It should be noted that this court did not hold in Powers or in the cases following it, as sоme have thought, that the surviving spouse was entitled to recover the entire proceeds of the policy where the insured had attempted to designate another beneficiary but rather that the designation was void in the sаme sense that an attempted inter vivos gift is void if attacked by the nonconsenting spouse. As a result the proceeds, not having been disposed of under the insurance policy, became part of the insured's estate to be administered according to his will or the laws of intestacy. The wife's share was also subject to administration pursuant to RCW 11.02.070. 4
Thus, the evil of the case was not that it gave the entire proceeds to the surviving spouse, contrary to the intent of the insured, but that it denied to the insured the right to designate the beneficiary of one-half of the proceeds, being the half attributable to his interest in the policy as community property. We know of no sound reason of public policy which demands such a result. On the contrary the fundamental principles of community property law dictate that each spouse should upon his or her death have the right to dispose of his or her one-hаlf interest in the policy as community property.
Small v. Bartyzel,
The respondent suggests that inasmuch as
Occidental Life Ins. Co. v. Powers,
We can conceive of no harm that can result in this instance. The rule of Powers was not one which invited reliance, rather it imposed burdens, created рitfalls, and promised frustration of the legitimate intentions of an insured. Its abandonment can produce none but salutary results.
Our decision here is in harmony with the 1972 revision of RCW 26.16.030, which makes spouses equal partners in the management and control of community property. This amendment also expressly provides that neither spouse shall give community property away without the express or implied consent of the other and limits to one-half the portion of the community property which either spouse can devise or bequeath by will.
This statute does not purport to govern the disposition of insurance proceeds. That question is expressly dealt with in RCW 48.18.440. Paragraph two of that sеction provides that in any policy issued upon the life of a spouse, that spouse's designation of a beneficiary shall create a presumption that the beneficiary was so designated with the consent of the оther spouse, provided the beneficiary is a. child, parent, brother or sister of either of the spouses. Implicit in this provision is a recognition of the interest which each spouse has in the proceeds of an insuranсe policy.
This provision, read in conjunction with RCW 48.18.370, protects the insurer against delayed claims that a spouse
*518
did not consent to the designation.
Miller v. Paul Revere Life Ins. Co.,
We conclude that insofar as this court held in
Occidental Life Ins. Co. v. Powers, supra,
that an insured husband may not, without his wife's consent, designate another person as the beneficiary of one-half of the proceeds of a policy of insurance on his life, it erroneously applied the community property law of this state. To that extent it and those cases which have followed it, including
King v. Prudential Ins. Co.,
According to the rule whiсh we have adopted today, the deceased had the right to give one-half of the proceeds of the policy of insurance on his life to a person or persons other than his wife. Since his designation of beneficiaries achieved precisely this result, the proceeds should be paid according to the terms of the policy.
The judgment is reversed.
Wright, C.J., and Hamilton, Stafford, Utter, Brach-tenbach, Horowitz, Dolliver, and Hicks, JJ., concur.
Notes
In
Cade v. Head Camp, W.O.W.,
See
E. Reiley,
Community Property v. Contracts—A Domestic Conflict of Law Being Wagеd by the Washington Wife,
1 Gonz. L. Rev. 1 (1966); H. Cross,
The Community Property Law in Washington,
49 Wash. L. Rev. 733, 790-94 (1974); W. Reppy & W. deFuniak,
Community Property in the United States
461-62 (1975); W. deFuniak & M. Vaughn,
Principles of Community Property
§ 123 (2d ed. 1971).
See also
dissenting opinion of Mallery, J.,
Small v. Bartyzel,
The court in
Travelers Ins. Co. v. Fancher,
The confusion arises from a statement found in the opinion in
Occidental Life Ins. Co. v. Powers,
The presumption created in RCW 48.18.440 is rebuttable.
National Bank of Commerce v. Lutheran Brotherhood,
