The petitioner, Gloria Napper, as surviving spouse of the insured, petitioned for certiorari to review the court of appeals decision in
National Western Life Insurance Co. v. Schmeh,
I.
This case began as an interpleader action by National Western Life Insurance Company to determine whether it should pay the proceeds of a life insurance policy either to the insured’s ex-wife or to his estate. In 1963, the decedent, Dr. Robert S. Napper, purchased a $60,000 life insurance policy from the Hamilton Life Insurance Company (Hamilton) which named respondent Betty Jo Schmeh, who was then Napper’s wife, as beneficiary. In April 1973, the Nappers were separated. They entered into a separation agreement which stated, in part, that the agreement was a complete settlement of all property rights and claims of one party against the other, and that:
Each of the parties will maintain his or her present life insurance policies, and will retain the present beneficiaries on the said policies until a final decree of dissolution is entered in this matter. Upon entry of final decree of dissolution each of the parties will be sole and only owners of their respective life insurance policies, and each waives any interest in said policies. Each party shall be free to change beneficiaries on said policies.
A final dissolution decree, which incorporated the separation agreement, was entered on September 4, 1973.
*532 On October 15,1973, Dr. Napper wrote a letter to Hamilton stating: “I am no longer married and want the beneficiary of this policy changed from Betty Jo Napper to Mrs. Harry E. Napper [Dr. Napper’s mother].” In response to this letter, Hamilton sent Dr. Napper a letter on October 23, 1973, stating “[i]n order that we may make the change of beneficiary you requested, please complete the enclosed Change of Beneficiary form and return it to us along with the contract itself.” 1 It is undisputed that neither the form nor the policy was returned to Hamilton and that Hamilton did not in fact change the designated beneficiary from the respondent to Mrs. Harry E. Napper.
In May 1977, Dr. Napper’s mother died. In August 1983, Dr. Napper married the petitioner, Gloria Napper. Less than a year after his marriage, Dr. Napper died intestate, leaving Gloria Napper as his sole surviving heir. The IntraWest Bank of Greeley, N.A. was appointed as the personal representative of the estate upon Dr. Napper’s death.
Both Betty Jo Schmeh and IntraWest asserted claims against National Western Life Insurance Company, successor in interest to Hamilton National by virtue of a merger, for the $60,000 proceeds from Dr. Napper’s policy. Schmeh claimed as the designated beneficiary in the policy. In-traWest claimed that the estate, and consequently Napper, was the beneficiary by virtue of intestate succession. 2 It argued that the dissolution decree dissolving Dr. Napper’s marriage with the respondent, coupled with Dr. Napper’s letter to Hamilton, terminated any interest or expectancy the respondent might have had in the insurance policy. National Western filed an in-terpleader action against the respondent and IntraWest with the Weld County District Court to determine to whom it should pay the policy proceeds. IntraWest irrevocably assigned all right, title, and interest in the claim to Gloria Napper, who was accordingly substituted in place of IntraW-est.
Trial was to the court, at the conclusion of which the trial judge, construing together the separation agreement and letter directing Hamilton to change beneficiaries, found that Dr. Napper manifested sufficient intent to substitute beneficiaries and to terminate Schmeh’s interest in the policy. The trial court noted that the separation agreement alone would have supported its conclusion had it not been for paragraph 6 of the agreement which stated that “each party shall be free to change beneficiaries.” Given the existence of this paragraph, the court stated that a further showing of the intent to change beneficiaries was required, and that showing was made by the letter from Dr. Napper to Hamilton.
The court of appeals reversed. It stated that as a general rule of law a change of beneficiary can be accomplished only in the manner specified in the insurance contract.
National Western Life Ins. Co. v. Schmeh,
The court of appeals also stated that the trial court’s finding that the separation agreement terminated Schmeh’s interest as the named beneficiary in the policy was error. While the court agreed that the provision in the separation agreement that “each waives any interest in said policy,” extinguished any ownership interest Schmeh had in the policy, it did not affect “her status as beneficiary under the policy.” Id. at 976. Since the separation agreement did not contain a “reservation or disclaimer” of Schmeh’s expectancy in the policy, the court of appeals concluded that the agreement did not terminate her interest as a beneficiary. Id. Accordingly, the court of appeals ordered that the policy proceeds be paid to Betty Jo Schmeh as the named beneficiary in the policy.
II.
We granted certiorari on two issues: Whether the respondent waived her interest as a beneficiary by entering into the separation agreement and whether Dr. Napper had substantially complied with the policy terms governing substitution of beneficiaries.
A.
In general, a separation agreement in and of itself does not divest one spouse of his or her rights as a beneficiary under a life insurance policy purchased by the other.
See In re Estate of McEndaffer,
Although reaching a different result,
Mullenax
is not inconsistent with
McEn-daffer
or with our decision in this case. In
Mullenax,
a husband and wife entered into a separation agreement stating that the wife conveyed to the husband “all of her right, title and interest in and to any and all other property presently standing in the name of the husband....”
Mullenax,
The court of appeals stated that by conveying “all of her ‘right, title and interest in and to any and all property’ held by the husband,” the wife relinquished “any interest in the property to which she might have had a legitimate claim or interest.”
Id.
at 423-24,
Six years later we sharply distinguished the
Mullenax
decision in
In re Estate of McEndaffer,
After the divorce, the husband remarried but did not change the designated beneficiary of the thirteen policies. Upon his death, the ex-wife claimed that because she was still named as the beneficiary in all the policies, she was entitled to the policies’ entire proceeds. The trial court disagreed, finding that the parties intended to waive all rights to each other’s property, including any expectancy one spouse might have as beneficiary of a life insurance policy carried by the other spouse. The court of appeals reversed, reasoning that under
Mullenax v. National Reserve Life Insurance Co.,
We first distinguished
Mullenax
on the ground that its separation agreement was substantially narrower than the one involved in
McEndaffer.
To construe the
McEndaffer
agreement, which covered “all of the property rights” and “all claims of every kind and nature in and to the ... other assets of every kind and nature,” as anything less than a “full and final disposition of all property claims, interests and expectancies would do violence to the parties’ obvious intent.”
McEndaffer,
The holdings in
McEndaffer
and
Mulle-nax
can be reconciled by recognizing the differences in the terms of their separation agreements. Where, as in
McEndaffer,
the separation agreement manifests an obvious intent by the parties that they waive, release, or abandon any right, claim, expectancy, or interest to the others property and specifically lists insurance in the agreement, then no express renunciation of an expectancy as beneficiary of the insurance is required.
Accord Beneficial Life Ins. Co. v. Stoddard,
B.
In our view, the Nappers’ separation agreement more closely resembles the McEndaffer agreement than the one contained in Mullenax, 5 Whereas the Mulle- *536 nax agreement speaks only of the wife waiving any interest in her husband’s property, the McEndaffer and Napper agreements refer to the full satisfaction, waiver, and release of all claims and interest against any of the husband’s property. In part, the Nappers’ separation agreement provided that:
The parties are desirous of settling their property rights and other marital obligations.
The husband and wife freely and fully accept the provisions, terms and conditions hereof in full satisfaction of all claims against one another, and in and to the marital property.
3. As and for complete settlement of all property rights and claims against the other, it is agreed as follows:
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g. Each of the parties will maintain his or her present life insurance policies, and will retain the present beneficiaries on the said policies until the final decree is entered in this matter. Upon entry of final decree of dissolution each of the parties will be the sole and only owners of their respective life insurance policies, and each waives any interest in said policies. Each shall be free to change the beneficiaries on said policy.
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4. Each of the parties hereto accepts the provisions herein made in full satisfaction of any claims they may have, one against the other, for property division, maintenance, or support....
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6. Except as hereinabove specifically set forth, each party has and hereby does release the other from any and all claims, debts, demands, including demand for statutory rights to inherit in or administer the estate of the other, and the rights in and to the property of the other or to share in the resources or possessions of the other henceforth, except as herein set forth.
In our view, the Nappers’ agreement manifests a clear intent that the parties to the agreement intended it to be a full and final settlement of all interests, including any interest the parties may have had as beneficiaries.
We note, however, that the Nappers’ agreement contains a troublesome sentence contained in neither the
McEndaffer
or
Mullenax
agreements. The sentence, contained in paragraph 3(g) of the agreement, states that after the final divorce decree is entered, the parties “shall be free to change the beneficiaries on said policy.” The respondent contends this language means that the beneficiary listed on the policy as of the date the divorce decree was entered remains the named beneficiary ab-. sent a change of beneficiary by the insured party. We decline to make such a narrow and non-contextual interpretation of the sentence.
See Gandy v. Park Nat’l Bank,
When the Nappers’ agreement is viewed as a whole, it is clear that the parties intended to waive all claims they may have had, including claims as beneficiaries under any contract of life insurance. The fact that the respondent expressly waived any interest she had in the insurance policy is a strong indication that she waived her right to take as a beneficiary. The provision in the agreement requiring that the decedent maintain the respondent as beneficiary until the final decree was entered is substantial evidence that upon the entry of the final decree, the respondent’s interest or expectancy as beneficiary expired.
While we need look only to the agreement itself to determine whether waiver occurred, we note the further support provided by the decedent’s handwritten letter to Hamilton requesting that his mother be substituted for the respondent as beneficiary. This letter, while not necessary to our inquiry, nevertheless buttresses our conclusion. As stated by the trial judge, Dr. Napper’s letter “clearly indicat[ed] his intent to change the beneficiary.” Because the Napper agreement clearly indicates that the parties intended that any interests or expectancy in each other’s insurance policies was to be terminated, no express renunciation was required. Accordingly, we hold that when the final divorce decree dissolving the marriage between the decedent and respondent was entered, the respondent’s expectancy as beneficiary of the insurance policy was extinguished.
III.
Based upon our holding in section II, we note that the question of whether Dr. Napper substantially complied with the policy terms regarding substitution of beneficiaries is inconsequential. If Dr. Napper substantially complied by sending the October 15, 1977 letter to Hamilton, then Dr. Napper’s mother was substituted as designated beneficiary and, upon her death in May 1977, her interest reverted under the terms of the policy back to Dr. Napper. 7 Thus when Dr. Napper died, his interest in the policy would have passed to his widow, Gloria Napper, through intestate succession. Alternatively, if there was no substantial compliance, then the attempted substitution failed, and there was no named beneficiary in the policy. The entire interest in the policy remained in Dr. Napper and upon his death his interest again would have passed to Gloria Napper via intestate succession. Because Gloria Napper takes regardless of whether there was substantial compliance, we do not reach the issue of whether Dr. Napper substantially complied with Hamilton’s requirements by mailing the October 15, 1973, letter to Hamilton.
Accordingly, we reverse and remand to the court of appeals with directions to reinstate the trial court’s judgment.
Notes
. Petitioner contends that Dr. Napper never received the Hamilton letter. Whether this contention has merit is irrelevant, since the insurance contract expressly provided that in order to change beneficiaries, the policy holder had to file a "written request therefor at the Home Office of the Company on forms satisfactory to the Company, accompanied by this policy for suitable endorsement. Such change shall take effect only upon endorsement thereof on the policy by the Company at its Home Office.” Thus the Hamilton letter merely reiterated the procedure for changing beneficiaries already contained in the policy.
. Under the Colorado Probate Code, sections 15-10-101 to 15-17-101, 6B C.R.S. (1987 & 1988 Supp.), the intestate share of the surviving spouse is the entire intestate estate if there Eire no surviving issue of the decedent. § 15-ll-102(l)(a), 6B C.R.S. (1987).
. The general rule that a separation agreement does not automatically extinguish a spouse’s interest as beneficiary arises from the recognition that there are two distinct property interests in a life insurance policy: (1) the policy owner’s interest, which is a control interest and includes the power to name and change beneficiaries and to surrender the policy for its cash value, and (2) the interest of the named beneficiary to the proceeds of the policy. The former is an interest in the policy itself, the latter an expectancy in the proceeds thereof. Because the spouse designated as beneficiary has at the time of the divorce only an expectancy in the proceeds, but not an interest to convey or relinquish, the divorce decree does not extinguish the expectancy as beneficiary.
See Mullenax v. National Reserve Life Insurance Co.,
. Our focus on ascertaining the parties’ intent finds substantial support in decisions of other jurisdictions. In
Hollaway v. Selvidge,
. As we noted in
McEndaffer,
the only language in the
Mullenax
separation agreement which could be construed as a waiver was the provision that the wife conveyed to her husband "all of her right, title and interest in and to any and all other property presently standing in the name of the husband_”
McEndaffer,
192 Colo at 433,
*536 the parties have now mutually agreed between themselves upon a full, final and complete settlement of their property rights.... It is agreed that... this Agreement... will be considered as a full, final and complete adjudication and settlement of all the property rights of the parties hereto and in any manner arising or resulting or to result from said marriage relationship, or otherwise, and in consideration of the settlement thus made, each of the parties hereto will, and does hereby, waive any and all claims of every kind or nature in and to the monies, real and personal property, and other assets of every kind or nature that might be due to either from the other or the estate of the other as widow or husband, by right of inheritance, widow’s allowance, or otherwise....
. According to Restatement (Second) of Contracts, § 202 (Rules in Aid of Interpretation) (1981), "(2) a writing is interpreted as whole, and all writings that are part of the same transaction are interpreted together.” Comment d to this section provides:
Interpretation of the whole. Meaning is inevitably dependent on context. A word changes meaning when it becomes part of a sentence, the sentence when it becomes part of a paragraph. A longer writing similarly affects the paragraph, other related writings affect the particular writing, and the circumstances af-feet the whole. Where the whole can be read to give significance to each part, the reading is preferred.... To fit the immediate verbal context, or the more remote total context, particular words or punctuation may be disregarded or supplied.
. According to the insurance policy, ‘‘[I]f any beneficiary shall die before the insured, the interest of such beneficiary shall vest in the Owner, unless otherwise provided herein or hereon.” The policy contained no provisions amending its terms.
