In this сivil action Cora Hopkins and Adelia Potter, surviving sister and divorced wife respectively of Walter E. Sherman, are litigating the question of who is entitled to the proceeds of an insurance certificate for $3,000 issued by The Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States on Walter's life. The case was tried in the Superior Court to a trial justice sitting without a jury. After judgment awarding the death benefits to Cora, Adeliа appealed.
The facts are not in dispute. To the extent feasible they are stated chronologically. In 1955 Walter, who was then married to Adelia, went to work as a watchman for the General Controls Co., Hammel-Dahl/Foster Engineering Division, As one of the fringe benefits of that employment he was insured under a group life and accident policy issued by The Travelers Insurance Company. The certificate of insurance received by him designated “Adelia Sherman — Wife,” as his beneficiary, and reserved to him “the right to change the beneficiary.” Walter exercised that right in September I960, and attached to the certificate is a change of beneficiary form directing that the proceeds payable under the policy in the event of his death be paid to “Cora Hopkins — Sister.” Coincident with that change Walter also substituted Cora for Adelia as the beneficiary under a $1,000 life policy issued by The Prudential Insurance Company of America.
About the time of the foregoing beneficiary changes, Walter had separated from his wife because of marital difficulties and simultaneously had changed his residence to his sister’s home where he lived until he built a small home for himself four years later. In the meantime, however, the marital difficulties led to “real bitter” divorce proceedings. Adelia was the petitioner and Walter the cross-petitioner. A property settlement was agreed tо pursuant to which Adelia received $1,500, and on December 6, 1961, a final decree was entered granting Walter’s cross-petition and dissolving the childless marriage. About four months later Adelia remarried. She has since been known as Adelia Potter. The record does not disclose that Walter ever knew she remarried, or indeed that he ever saw or spoke to her following their separation.
In 1963 Genеral Controls Co., Hammel-Dahl/Foster Engineering Division, was acquired by ITT General Controls Co., a subsidiary of International Telephone and Telegraph Corporation. Within a few months it changed insurance carriers and
Another exhibit in the case is a 4" x 6" card which came from the employer’s records and which, for want of a more convenient designation, we refer to as an “enrollment card.” It is signed by Walter, carries the date “3/25/64” in his handwriting, and in typing, in addition to certain miscellaneous information not here pertinent, gives the beneficiary’s name as “Sherman, Adelia” and her relationship to Walter as “Wife.” There is no evidence whatsoever that Walter, subsequent to his 1960 designation of Cora as his beneficiary, requested Travelers, Equitable or his employer to revoke that designation, or to restore Adelia as his beneficiary.
Walter died on May 4, 1968. The certificates of insurance issued by Travelers and Equitable, as well as other valuable papers of Walter’s, were in Cora’s possession. Her brоther had entrusted them to her for safekeeping. Those papers did not include the March 25, 1964 enrollment card or a copy thereof, for the original was retained by the employer, and Walter had not received a copy.
Shortly after Walter’s death Cora made demand upon his employer for the death benefits due under the group policy. The company rejected her claim on the ground that its records did not indicate that she was the beneficiary under the policy. Adelia made no claim under the policy until August of 1968, and then only after being advised by the employer that it beliеved she was the beneficiary. Thereafter, Cora commenced this suit naming both Adelia and Equitable as defendants. Pending termination of the litigation, Equitable was enjoined from paying Adelia the procеeds of the policy.
Based upon the foregoing, the trial justice in substance found that a company clerk prepared the enrollment card as a part of the routine connectеd with the employer’s switch of insurance carriers; that the clerk listed “Sherman, Adelia” as the beneficiary and described her as Walter’s wife without prior consultation with Walter about his choice of beneficiary and in reliance solely upon the company’s records; that in examining those records he overlooked or ignored the 1960 change of beneficiary from Adelia to Cora and the absence of any record indicating a request by Walter for a subsequent change; that Walter, even though he signed the enrollment card designating “Sherman, Adelia” — “Wife” as his beneficiary, obviously did not intend to substitute Adelia for Cora as his beneficiary. In arriving at these conclusions, the trial justice was mindful of and commented upon the divorce, “the bitterness” which led to it, and the lack of any reasonable explanation as to why Walter would name Adelia Sherman, his divorced wife, as his beneficiary and state that she was his “Wife.”
Adelia’s challenge to those findings is clearly without merit. True they are inferential, but a trial justice’s inferential findings, no less than his determinations on credibility, will be accepted by us as valid and binding so long as the inferences he draws, whether afiirmative or negative, reasonably and logically flow from established facts.
Spouting Rock Beach Ass’n
v.
Garcia,
104 R. I. 451, 460,
The question, then, is whether the inferential findings justified the trial justice’s legal conclusion that the death benefits, due under the Equitable certificate of insurance,
should be paid to Cora. Adelia argües that the enrollment card on which she was designated as beneficiary was the highest evidence of who Walter intended as his beneficiary; that it was his duty to know and learn its contents before he signed it; and that, even though he may have signed the card in ignorance of its character, the express terms of what he assented to should not be ignored absent evidence — and there is none here — thаt his assent was induced by fraud, misrepresentation, violence, undue influence or the like. The general principles invoked by Adelia, though subject to nuances, have long been settled.
Dante State Bank
v. Calenda, 56 R. I. 68,
In this case Cora invokes the unquestioned jurisdiction of equity to reform a written instrument.
Allen
v.
Brown,
6 R. I. 386, 396. That jurisdiction applies to insurance policies as well as to other agreements,
Ferla
v.
Commercial Casualty Ins. Co.,
74 R. I. 190, 195,
To warrant reformation it must appear that by reason of a mistake, common to "both pаrties, their agreement fails in some material respect correctly ■ to reflect their prior completed understanding.
Vanderford
v.
Kettelle,
75 R. I. 130, 142,
Here the undisputed evidence compellingly yields to the inference that the naming of Adelia, instead of Cora, as the beneficiary on the enrollment card was a mistake originating with the employer’s failure to ascertain who was the then existing designee. That mistake was sharеd by Walter who signed the enrollment card undoubtedly believing that it named Cora, and not Adelia, as his beneficiary. A substantially similar fact situation existed in
Prudential Ins. Co. of America
v.
Glasgow,
The defendant’s appeal is denied and dismissed, and the judgment appealed from is affirmed.
