Interpleader. John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company filed a petition describing itself'as an indifferent stakeholder of the proceeds of a policy insuring the life of Thomas Dawson,.deceased. Named as defendants and rivals for the fund werе Mary and Antoinette Dawson. Thomas Dawson was the husband of Mary for many years. Differences arose. They executed a property settlement. They were divorced a few days afterward. Thomas married Antoinette a few weeks later.- Eleven months thereafter he died.
The settlement Thomas and Wary executed embraced a stipulation that the insurance policy “be turned over” by Mary to Thomas “along with 2 $50.00 Series ‘E’ United States Government Bonds.” The only reference in the settlement to the policy or to the bonds is this one. They were immediately delivered to Thomas by Mary. The right to change the beneficiary was reserved to Thomas by the terms of the policy. Mary was beneficiary. One bond was in the name of Thomas and payable to Mary “on death.” The other was payable to Thomas “or" Mary. Thereafter the policy and bonds remained in the possession of Thomas or Antoinette until- his death. No action of any kind was taken' by him to change the beneficiary of the policy or the payee of the bоnds. Mary remained the named beneficiary of the policy and the ■named payee of the bonds when he died, and she so remains at this time.
Answering the petition, Mary and Antoinette each filed pleadings challenging the claim of the other, asserting her own right tо the proceeds of the policy, and bringing into issue the ownership, of the bonds. Both claimed, the bonds. The appropriateness of the pleadings is not questioned and this description suffices in consequence. Mary based. her claim on her status as named beneficiary of the policy and as named payee of the bonds. Antoinette pleaded the property settlement, alleging Mary had accepted and retained its benefits and was estopped to deny its burdens. Its burdens, according to her, were relinquishment by Mary of all right ever to claim the proceeds of the policy and bonds, .even though Thomas might permit her to remain the beneficiary and the payee until he died, as he did. If the stipulation relating to the policy and bonds warrants this construсtion,, Antoinette is right. For one who accepts the benefits of a contract or settlement is estopped to disaffirm its burdens. Runnels v. Lasswell, Mo.App.,
We regard the stipulation as ambiguous ;and its meaning unascertainable except by construction. Whethеr we can arrive at its meaning by construction depends on the state of this record and this record is meager. The entire settlement can be examined for aid in determining whether the stipulation was intended by the signatories as a relinquishment by Mary of all right ever tо claim the proceeds of the policy and the bonds. Hubbard v. Hubbard, Mo.App.,
These legalistic arrangements of obligations and rights strike us as quite significant when juxtaposed with the stipulation dealing with the policy and bonds. For the latter is the only one of all the stipulations which is expressed without legal exactitude and the only one which leaves-any doubt about its meaning. In all other instances, the parties provided for obligations and relinquishments of rights, and defined them, by employing legal language which was absolute and unequivocal and which anciently had come to possess an accepted and settled signification in lаw. Adjudged decisions and standard texts have not revealed to us that the words “turn over” or “turned' over” have ever come to possess any accepted and settled legal signification. We believe therefore that the signatories regarded them аnd we should regard them in the ordinary or lay sense. In that sense they can be and frequently are employed to denote a variety of actions, each,'depending for a determination of its significance on clarifying and explanatory evidence. For example, they may indicate a delivery following a sale, a gift, a loan, a bailment for hire, or- a delivery for variotis other purposes which readily come to mind. Certainly' they do not import any action which is unique in law or in characr ter and аlways of the same, significance.
Accordingly, we lack a legal formula for measuring their meaning as they stand in the present stipulation, and cannot do so at all unless we are aided by .clarifying and explanatory evidence. The record 'contains no evidence settling their meaning. Some evidence of some aid is present. It.is Antoinette’s. evidence and it militates against her theory. The two witnesses she presented were , permitted to testify that Thomas told them he “intended” to make 'her beneficiary of the policy. One added that Thomas “was planning to. change it but he never got around to it before he died.” The other stated that Thomas said he “intended’,’ also to make her payee of the bonds. The’competency,of this evidence is not questioned by the parties on this appeal. State ex rel. Gneckow v. Hostetter,
Our courts have declared that es-toppel's are not- favorites of the law and ■Will not bfe lightly invoked, for "oftentimes they shut оut the truth. National Match Co. v. Empire Storage
&
Ice Co.,
We have recited every circumstance and fact in this record to which resort can be had for assistance in construing the stipulation. We deal only with the record presented to us and are not free to conjecture or imagine what could be decided if other evidence were present or if we were considering a different record. Viewing the stipulation apart from the statements that Thomas “intended” to change the beneficiary and payee, or coupling it with those statements, only cоnjecture and inference could be argued to uphold a construction that the signatories intended that Mary should relinquish all right ever to claim the bonds and the proceeds of the policy even if Thomas permitted her to remain payee and beneficiary until his death. Consequently the stipulation is not absolute, unequivocal and certain to every extent, and the construction urged by Antoinette can rest only on conjecture, inference, and in-tendment. This plainly prevents it from standing as an estopрel.
The decisions relied on by Antoinette do not aid her. In Rhoads v. Rhoads,
Mary complied with the stipulation. She “turned over.”- the policy and bonds to Thomas. Thenceforward and until his death he knew he had the right and the opportunity to effect the changes essential to make Antoinette, or aiiyone he chose, the recipiеnt at his death. There is no question regarding his mental capacity or his physical strength, and no evidence that he was prevented from exercising his rights by any excusatory circumstance. Aware that Mary was beneficiary and payee, he did not even undertake to make a change. As a result of his inaction, of choice, Mary remains the’ named beneficiary and the named payee. Why he failed to make the change this record does not enable us to say. It is not beyond credulity that he actually
chose
to make no change. Mary was the mother of his three children. She was rearing two of them without any aid from him, for he failed to pay the maintenance agreed on in the settlement. But be this as it may, Antoinette has offered us nothing to support her own claim and nо evidence to defeat Mary’s. Clearly this record affords no basis for holding that Mary, named payee and beneficiary, is not entitled to the bonds and to the proceeds of the policy. Gnekow v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., supra,
It is so. ordered.
