286 Mass. 305 | Mass. | 1934
The plaintiff brought actions at law against two insurance companies on policies of insurance issued by them some time prior to 1929 on the life of her husband who married the plaintiff in January and died on August 7 of that year. One policy designates the insured’s sister and mother, and the other policy his sister, as beneficiaries. Each company filed a petition of interpleader, the beneficiaries appeared as parties and filed answers, the companies paid into court the amounts due as proceeds of the policies and their liabilities thereunder were declared terminated in one case by stipulation
The plaintiff testified that early in May, 1929, her husband delivered to her the two insurance policies on which the present suits are brought and another policy with which we are not here concerned, saying that he wished her to have and receive their proceeds, and that she thereafter-ward retained the two policies here in question except for a short time when they were mislaid. Other testimony applicable in the action against the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, taken in its aspect most favorable to the plaintiff, is here summarized. The insured entered a hospital in the latter part of July and on August 3 he had a talk with the plaintiff about a change in the beneficiaries in the policies and on the same day at his request she went to a branch office of that company in Boston and told the supervisor that she had been sent by her husband to get blank forms for a change of beneficiary. She was given such a printed form and took it to her husband who filled it out and signed it on August 5. It stated above the place of signature: “I understand that this designation of beneficiary will take effect when endorsed on the Policy by the . Company and not before, and that if examination of the records of this Policy at the Home Office of the Company discloses any reason why the designation cannot be made, this beneficiary designation form shall be returned to me by the Company without endorsement of designation of beneficiary on Policy. I understand that legal process or action between the parties to the contract, insanity or minority of any of the interested parties, or an order of a Court may serve to prevent the proposed designation of beneficiary.” On the same day, August 5, the plaintiff
Each of the policies here in suit provides that the insured may ''designate a new beneficiary ... by filing written notice thereof at the Home Office of the Company accompanied by this Policy for suitable endorsement” and that “Such change shall take effect upon endorsement of.the same” on the policy by the company. In the present case neither written notice of a change of beneficiary nor the policy was sent to the home office of either company and no indorsement of any change was made thereon. The claimants assert the rights of beneficiaries who are so designated in insurance policies as those policies stood at the time of the death of the insured. Such beneficiaries have an interest which may be asserted in actions based upon the policies and brought in their own names. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 175, § 125. Tyler v. Treasurer & Receiver General, 226 Mass. 306, 308.
The interest of a beneficiary, designated in a life insurance policy containing a reservation to the insured of the right to change the beneficiary named, has been described as “a qualified vested interest, which is subject to be divested and defeated should the assured in his lifetime exercise the power given him to change a beneficiary in the manner prescribed by the contract between the insurer and the assured.” Kochanek v. Prudential Ins. Co. of America, 262 Mass. 174, 177. See also Hersam v. Aetna Life Ins. Co. 225 Mass. 425, 427; Marsh v. American Legion of Honor, 149 Mass. 512, 515; Lorando v. Gethro, 228 Mass. 181, 188. The right of such a beneficiary during the lifetime of the insured is sometimes referred to as being contingent upon the happening of the death of the insured but when so viewed the right nevertheless becomes
These last stated principles are not applicable to the facts in the present case. The insured secured the proper blanks to give notice of a change of the beneficiaries named in the policy issued by the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company. The language of the blanks as well as that of the policy plainly told him that under the policy requirements in order to effect such a change not only must he sign a written notice but that it and the policy as well must be filed in the home office of the company before the change could be accomplished. When the blank signed by him was rejected by the supervisor of a local office of the company and the policy returned to the insured he knew that
If we assume that the delivery of both policies by the insured to the plaintiff in May, taken with what Was then said, amounted to an oral assignment which was good between the parties thereto, and further assume without deciding that the transaction at that time was of such a character that if the companies had been notified and had assented the assignment would operate as a change of beneficiary (Atlantic Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Gannon, 179 Mass. 291, O’Brien v. Continental Casualty Co. 184 Mass. 584), the plaintiff acquired thereby no rights as against the beneficiaries named. The insured at no time gave to the companies written notice of the assignment. With respect to that assignment there was not only no substantial compliance with provisions of the policies regulating changes in beneficiaries but there was no attempt at compliance therewith. There was evidence that the plaintiff, when in August she asked a branch office supervisor of one of the companies for the necessary blanks to change the beneficiaries, described the transaction in May. There was then no assertion that the assignment had effected such a change and no request that it be so treated by the company.
The plaintiff contends that, because the companies upon being sued in these actions filed petitions of interpleader and paid into court-the amount due on their respective policies, there has been a waiver of the failure of the insured to comply with the policy provisions regulating changes of beneficiary and that as a result the plaintiff is the sole beneficiary. An insurance company when sued on a policy may waive any rights it possesses under the policy (Merrill v. New England Mutual Life Ins. Co. 103 Mass. 245, 252) but it cannot by acts done by it after the rights of a named beneficiary have vested upon the death of the insured waive or destroy such rights. Kochanek v. Prudential Ins. Co. of
In each case the entry must be made
Exceptions overruled.