If, рursuant to a postnuptial property settlement agreement, a father promises to maintain his three children as beneficiaries of his life insurance policy, may the children recover the proceeds of the pоlicy from the deceased husband’s second wife who, without fault on her part, was named beneficiary of the policy in violation of the agree *232 ment? The trial court concluded that the second wife had been unjustly enriched and decreed that she should pay the proceeds of the policy to the decedent’s children by his first marriage. The widow appealed. We affirm.
Marion Torchia and Joseph Torchia were married on May 1, 1964. They were divorced in 1979. As part of a written property settlement agreement on February 9, 1979, Joseph Torchia promised to “maintain his (three) children as beneficiaries of all insurance policies that he presently owns.” On March 5, 1979, Torchia named his three children as beneficiaries on two policies of insurance maintained at his place of employment. He subsequently remarried and soon thereafter changed the beneficiary on the two policies, naming his second wife, Kathleen M. Torchia, as primary beneficiary and his children as contingent beneficiaries. Joseph Torchia died on November 5, 1982. His widow was paid $44,000.00 as named beneficiary of the two aforesaid policies. 1 Marion Torchia, as parent and guardian for her minor children, commenced an action in equity against Kathleen Torchia to recover the sum of $44,000.00 paid to her by the insurance company. The trial court, after hearing, deсreed that the guardian was entitled to recover the sum of $44,000.00, plus interest. Exceptions were dismissed, and a final decree was entered. This appeal followed.
The findings of a chancellor, affirmed by the court en banc, have the effect of a jury verdict and may not be reversed unless a review of the record reveals that they are unsupported by the evidence or are predicated upon erroneous inferences and deductions or errors of law.
Biglan v. Biglan,
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To sustain a claim of unjust enrichment, a claimant must show that the party against whom recovery is sought either “wrongfully secured or passively received a benefit that it would bе unconscionable for her to retain.”
Roman Mosaic & Tile Co. v. Vollrath,
The decisions in most jurisdictions have recognized that a contract not to change the beneficiary of a policy of life insurance, entered into by an insurеd and his designated beneficiary for a valuable consideration, is binding as between the insured, or his volunteer, and the contractually determined beneficiary and will be enforced in equity. In
Hundertmark v. Hundertmark,
*234 “The law appertaining to the equitable assignment оf the benefits of an insurance policy is well settled in this state. There is no doubt that a beneficiary named pursuant to a definite agreement that he shall be so named, by virtue of a valuable consideration moving from him, acquires a right in the policy or the proceeds thereof that will be protected against subsequently named beneficiaries who have no superior equity____”
Id.,
Other jurisdictions have reached the same result. See: 5 Couch, Cyclopedia of Insurance Law § 28:41 (2d ed.1984). Most cоurts have concluded that a promise, made as part of a separation agreement, to maintain a policy of insurance designating either spouse or children as beneficiaries vests in such spouse or children an equitable interest in the policy which is superior to that of a stranger to the agreement who was subsequently named gratuitously as beneficiary. Thus, in
Markwica v. Davis,
*235 Defendant, having furnished no consideration for the receipt of the proceeds of the life insurance policy, has received а gratuitous benefit and would be unjustly enriched in the eyes of the law were she to retain those proceeds against the claims of the children for breach by their father of his agreement to continue them as beneficiaries of the policy. That the children might also have a breach of contract claim against their father’s estate is of no moment so far as the liability of defendant to the children is concerned____
Id.
at 41,
These authorities are determinative 2 of the issue in this case. Joseph Torchia, the deceased owner of the policy, had promised for legally adequate consideration to maintain two policies of insurance on his life and name his children as beneficiaries thereof. The children’s rights were superior to those of appellant, who was a mere volunteer. Even though the widow was a passive and innocent party, her rights were subordinate. It would have been unjust to allow her to retain the proceeds of the pоlicy in preference to the children.
Appellant argues, however, that appellee’s children are not entitled, as third party beneficiaries, to enforce their contractual rights against her because she was not a party to the contract. This misconceives the nature of the action which the children asserted and which the court enforced. The children’s cause of action was not founded on a contractual duty which apрellant owed; it was based, rather, on the equitable interest in the proceeds of the policy which had been vested in the children by their father’s agreement.
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Appellant also argues that the trial court erred in denying a motion to amend her answer to permit her to allege that the first wife had committed a prior breach of the postnuptial agreement. The record, however, is inadequate to permit appellate review of this issue. No written mоtion to amend was ever presented, and the trial record does not disclose that an oral motion to amend was made. There is, consequently, no disclosure at any place in this record of the
factual
averments which apрellant wished to add to her answer other than the bald conclusion that the agreement between the decedent and his first wife had been breached by the first wife. This is inadequate. We are unable from the record to ascertain thе precise nature of the amendment which appellant wished to offer. See:
Coyne v. Porter-Hayden Co.,
The trial transcript does reflect a statement by appellant’s counsel that he orally requested leave to amend his answer during an unrecorded, pre-trial conference and that his request was denied because it had been untimely, i.e., the case had already been called for trial. Even so, the record does not disclose the
factual
averment which appеllant intended to add via an amended answer. Where, as here, there is no basis for concluding that facts existed which would have changed the result, we will not find an abuse of discretion by the trial court which refused, after the case had bеen called for trial, to grant an untimely request for the court to consider a possible amendment to the answer. See:
Cucinotti v. Ortmann,
Appellant contends finally that the trial court erred in failing to allow her a credit for debts which she incurred in сaring for the decedent during his last illness and in arranging for his burial. Her answer did not contain a counterclaim, and a claim for these expenses was not made at trial. A possible credit was asserted for the first time via exceptions tо the court’s adjudication and decree nisi. Where, as here, the pleadings contain no counterclaim and
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there has been neither a request to amend nor evidence to support a credit for services separately rendered, the claim will not thereafter be considered. Cf.
Jackson v. Richards 5 & 10 Inc.,
It is unfortunate that of several deserving persons, one must be denied benefits under these policies of insurance. The law, however, is clear. The rights of children contractually entitled to receive the proceeds of a policy of insurance on their father’s life are superior to those of a volunteer who was innocently, albeit gratuitously, named as beneficiary by their father in violation of his agreement.
Order affirmed.
Notes
. Kathleen Torchia also reсeived $19,000.00 as beneficiary of a policy of insurance which was not subject to the terms of the property settlement agreement executed by her deceased husband at the time of the divorce from his first wife.
. It appears that the trial court was unaware of the decision in
Hundertmark
and the line of cases we have cited. Instead, the court relied upon decisions of this Court which have held that when an innocent party benefited from the wrongful act of anоther, he was thereby unjustly enriched if the victim of the wrongful act would have received that benefit but for the wrongful act of the third party. See:
Zvonik v. Zvonik,
