OPINION
This is an appeal from a constructive trust imposed on insurance proceeds by the probate court. The probate court ruled that appellee’s deceased husband violated a temporary injunction entered by the district court forbidding any change in the beneficiary on a term life insurance policy. After the injunction was entered, the decedent changed the named beneficiary from appel-lee, Kay Oak, to appellant, Eugene Oak. In two points of error, appellant, the decedent’s brother, argues that the probate court erred in: (1) imposing a constructive trust on the proceeds because the district court’s order was void; and (2) ruling that there was a valid and operative change of beneficiary by the decedent as a matter of law. We affirm.
The record reflects that the decedent, Yoon Oak, and appellee, Kay Oak, were married in Korea in 1974. They emigrated to the United States in 1976 and eventually took up residence in Bismarck, North Dakota until May 1986. At that time, the Oaks planned to move to Fremont, California because there were employment possibilities for appellee there. The decedent had been diagnosed with lymphoma and was unable to work due to his illness. Ap-pellee testified that her parents supported
Upon arriving in Houston, appellee discovered that the decedent had filed a petition for divorce on June 23,1986. Appellee secured the services of an attorney and answered the suit on July 17, 1986. Following a hearing, a temporary restraining order was entered on July 17, 1986, prohibiting the parties from, among other things, “[c]hanging or in any manner altering the beneficiary designation on any life insurance on the life of Cross-Petitioner [Kay Oak] or Cross-Respondent [Yoon Oak] or the parties’ children.” Appellee was listed as the primary beneficiary on a term life insurance policy on the decedent with the Life Insurance Company of Virginia in the amount of $500,000. A temporary injunction was then entered on January 7, 1987. The divorce action was actively prosecuted by both parties until the death of Yoon Oak on January 23, 1988.
On November 21, 1986, the decedent executed a change of beneficiary naming the new primary beneficiary as the “trustee under the insured’s will.” A notation attached to the form, apparently made by an employee of the life insurance company, indicates that Soo Duk Ra, the decedent’s mother, was the trustee. The record contains correspondence from Life of Virginia to the decedent stating that a copy of a trust agreement was needed to implement the change of beneficiary to the decedent’s mother. Nothing in the record indicates whether the decedent acted upon this request. Another change of beneficiary was executed on January 17, 1988, with appellant listed as the primary beneficiary and trustee for Yoon Oak’s two minor children. Yoon Oak died six days later. The change of beneficiary notice was received by the insurance company following his death. After the will was admitted to probate, appellee filed a contest. The probate court ruled that the decedent had violated the temporary order imposed by the district court forbidding any beneficiary change and held that appellee, as the original beneficiary under the policy, was entitled to the proceeds of the policy, along with interest, interpled into the United States District Court Registry by Life of Virginia. The probate court severed this cause of action and this appeal followed.
Numerous questions are raised concerning the legal effect of the beneficiary change in this case. Other possible issues, all of which impact on a proper resolution of the parties’ rights, were not presented to the appropriate lower courts and are, consequently, not before us on appeal.
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In his first point of error, appellant argues that the district court’s temporary injunction was void because the parties had not resided in Texas for six months. The Family Code provides that no suit for divorce may be maintained unless the petitioner or the respondent have been a domiciliary of Texas “for the preceding six-month period and a resident of the county in which the suit is filed for the preceding ninety-day period.” Tex.Fam. Code Ann. § 3.21 (Vernon 1975). The exact date that the decedent arrived in Texas is not apparent from the record, although it appears to have been June 18, 1986. It is undisputed, however, that he was not a resident of Texas for six months or of Harris County for ninety days. Similarly, appellee had not yet moved to Texas when the decedent’s divorce petition was filed and she had only been in this state for approximately two weeks when she filed her answer. Appellant now argues that the district court lacked jurisdiction over the parties because neither had satisfied the statutory residence requirements. Appellant asserts that merely because the trial court held a hearing on the temporary restraining order before six months had elapsed, any action that followed thereafter was void. We disagree.
The residency requirements of section 3.21 are not jurisdictional, but, rather, prescribe the qualifications that must be met before a court may grant a divorce.
McCaskill v. McCaskill,
Here, the decedent alleged in his original petition that he had completed the prescribed residency requirements. Appellee answered with a general denial and did not attack the decedent’s lack of the requisite six-month residency through a plea in abatement. The divorce action was then continued for almost eighteen months until Yoon Oak died in January 1988. Appellant, as trustee under the decedent’s will, now asks this court to declare that an order entered by the district court was void for lack of jurisdiction when the decedent availed himself of the court in the first place. This we decline to do. The decedent’s judicial admission of residence and domicile in his original petition for divorce prevents any challenge now of the failure of the parties to meet the residency requirements of section 3.21.
McCaskill,
We also note that the temporary injunction complained of was signed by the judge on January 7, 1987, more than six months after the decedent moved to Texas. The change of beneficiary was executed on Jan
Furthermore, the record contains findings of fact and conclusions of law, submitted by appellee, that were returned unsigned by the trial judge. Appellant failed to request his own findings and conclusions. When findings of fact and con-elusions of law are not filed or are not timely requested, the court of appeals must presume that all questions of fact were implicitly found in support of the judgment.
Roberson v. Robinson,
In his second point of error, appellant argues that the “Probate Court erred as a matter of law in holding that there was no valid and operative change of beneficiary by Yoon Oak to change the beneficiary from Kay Oak to Eugene Oak.” Appellant contends that the decedent followed the applicable procedure required by Life of Virginia to change the beneficiary under the policy. He supports his argument with authority that allowed changes of primary beneficiaries to become operative even though the insurance company received notice of the change after the death of the insured.
See, e.g., Price v. Supreme Home of the Ancient Order of Pilgrims,
However, the judgment recites that ap-pellee, Kay Oak, “is, under the facts adduced in evidence, and the applicable law, entitled to the entirety of said proceeds, principal and interest....” The probate court did not specifically hold that a valid change of beneficiary had not occurred because Life of Virginia received the decedent’s form after his death.. The court merely held that appellee was entitled to the proceeds, presumably because the decedent violated a temporary injunction.
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Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the probate court.
Notes
. Those issues that, from the record before us, were never presented to the district court or the probate court and may have dictated a different result on appeal are: (1) the character of the life insurance proceeds,
see, e.g., Givens v. Girard Life Ins. Co. of America,
. See abo Tex.Fam.Code Ann. § 3.58 (Vernon Supp.1991), which provides that the trial court "after notice and hearing may issue a temporary injunction for the preservation of the property and the protection of the parties as deemed necessary and equitable....”
. One of the conclusions of law proffered to the district court judge by appellee reads: "There was no valid and operative change of beneficiary of the life insurance policy from the original beneficiary, KAY OAK.” This conclusion, however, was not signed by the judge and,
