209 Ga. 753 | Ga. | 1953
Independent Life & Accident Insurance Company filed an equitable petition against Mrs. Allie C. Coleman, Mrs. Etta Mae Lowery, and Cordie Adams, seeking to require the defendants to inter-plead and set up their respective claims to $750, and praying that the court adjudicate their rights, and allow the plaintiff to pay.said fund into the registry of the court and be discharged. The petition in substance alleged: On March 3, 1951, the plaintiff issued a policy of insurance on the life of Hayden C. Lowery for $750, in which policy the defendant Mrs. Etta Mae Lowery was named as beneficiary. The defendant Mrs. Coleman contends that the insured changed the beneficiary designated in said policy from Etta Mae Lowery to Allie C. Coleman prior to his death. The insured died on December 27, 1952, and Mrs. Etta Mae Lowery and Mrs. Allie C. Coleman have filed demands for payment of the amount due under the policy, and the defendant Adams is demanding payment thereof as transferee of Mrs. Coleman. The plaintiff has no interest in the fund except to pay it to the person entitled thereto, is not in collusion with or supporting either party in their respective claims to the fund, and the defendants should be required to interplead and set up their respective claims for adjudication. Mrs. Lowery filed demurrers both general and special to the petition. Paragraph 6 of the petition alleged: “It is contended by Mrs. Allie C. Coleman that said Hayden C. Lowery changed the beneficiary named in said policy from Etta M. Lowery to Allie C. Coleman, prior to his death.” This paragraph was demurred to specially, on the ground that
1. “Whenever a person shall be possessed of property or funds, or owe a debt or duty, to which more than one person shall lay claim of such a character as to render it doubtful or dangerous for the holder to act, he may apply to equity to compel the claimants to interplead.” Code, § 37-1503. “A stakeholder is not entitled to protection by a court of equity to the extent of being saved from all shadow of risk; and so where he is in possession of all the facts and there is no question of law which is reasonabfy debatable, his petition for interpleader should be denied.” Lassiter v. Bank of Dawson, 191 Ga. 208, 221 (11 S. E. 2d, 910). “It must appear from the allegations of the petition that the conflicting claims of the defendants are of such character as to render it doubtful or dangerous for the plaintiff to act; and in order to do this it is necessary that such claims be set forth so as to inform the court of their nature, character, and foundation, certainly to the extent of enabling the court to determine whether or not an interpleader is essential to the plaintiff’s protection.” Knight v. Jackson, 156 Ga. 165, 167 (118 S. E. 661). See also Davis v. Davis, 96 Ga. 136 (2) (21 S. E. 1002); Reed v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 206 Ga. 604 (2) (58 S. E. 2d, 183).
2. “Where no power of divestiture is reserved in a policy of life insurance, the issuance of the policy confers a vested right upon the person named therein as beneficiary, and the insured can not transfer such interest to any other person without the consent of such beneficiary. Perry v. Tweedy, 128 Ga. 402 (57 S. E. 782, 119 Am. St. R. 393, 11 Ann. Cas. 46); Smith v. Head, 75 Ga. 755; Baldwin v. Wheat, 170 Ga. 449, 453 (153 S. E. 194). The rule is different, however, where a power to change the beneficiary or to assign the policy is reserved to the insured by the terms of the instrument; and in such a case the issuance of the policy does not confer a vested right or interest upon the beneficiary.” Bankers Health & Life Ins. Co. v. Crozier, 192 Ga. 111, 112 (14 S. E. 2d, 717). In the instant case, the petition does not set forth a copy of the life-insurance policy, or the substance of the same. It contains a specific allegation that, at the time the plaintiff issued the policy on the life of Hayden C. Lowery, the defendant Mrs. Etta Mae Lowery was designated as beneficiary, and alleges that the defendant Mrs. Coleman contends that the insured changed the beneficiary named in the policy from Mrs. Lowery to Mrs. Coleman prior to his death, without alleging
3. The right of the defendant Adams, as assignee of Mrs. Coleman, to receive the benefits of the policy, could only arise in the event there had been a change of beneficiary from Mrs. Lowery to Mrs. Adams. Whether or not this assignment was valid is a matter in which only the plaintiff and the defendants Coleman and Adams would be concerned, and consequently the special demurrer of Mrs. Lowery seeking to require the plaintiff to allege in what manner the policy was transferred to the defendant Adams, and at what time, were properly overruled.
4. Under the rulings made in division 2 above, it necessarily follows that the judgment of the court ordering the parties to interplead was nugatory.
Judgment reversed. All