OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiff William Penn Life Insurance Company of New York (“William Penn”) brings this interpleader action to resolve competing claims to the proceeds of a life insurance policy. When issued, the policy named defendant Kimbal Viscuso as beneficiary. Defendants Charles M. Birns and Beth S. Martin-Birns (the “Birns defendants”) claim that the insured’s attorney-in-fact changed the beneficiary from Viscu-so to them prior to the death of the insured. Viscuso argues that this purported change was ineffective and that she remains the beneficiary. William Penn proclaims its indifference as to these competing claims and moves for permission to deposit the proceeds of the policy with the Court and be discharged from the action pursuant to the federal interpleader statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1335. Viscuso opposes interpleader and moves to dismiss or, in the alternative, for summary judgment in her favor. The Birns defendants consent to interpleader, oppose Viscuso’s motion for summary judgment and assert a variety of counterclaims against William Penn. For all of the following reasons, the Court accepts interpleader jurisdiction, grants summary judgment in favor of Viscuso and retains jurisdiction over William Penn for purposes of adjudicating the Birns defendants’ counterclaims.
BACKGROUND
On November 8, 1995, William Penn issued life insurance policy 0700014261, insuring the life of Jon Fieldman in the amount of $350,000 (the “Policy”). (Meade Aff., Ex. B.) Fieldman was the owner of the Policy, and Viscuso, the wife of Field-man’s then-business partner, was designated the beneficiary.
(Id.,
Ex. C.) The Poli
On January 31, 2005, Fieldman signed a durable power of attorney designating Michael Birns as his attorney-in-fact and agent. (Id., Ex. E.) The power of attorney states in relevant part that the authority of the attorney-in-fact “shall not include the authority to change the name of any beneficiary in any retirement asset or insurance contract.” (Id., Ex. E at 5.)
In October 2006 Fieldman’s bookkeeper forwarded to Michael Birns a notice from William Penn indicating that the premium on the Policy was due and that the Policy would soon lapse unless the premium were paid. (Id., Ex. H.) Upon receiving this notice Michael Birns called William Penn and informed the agent with whom he spoke that Fieldman “no longer had any business or personal reason for maintaining the Policy for the benefit of the originally-named beneficiary.” (Id.) Michael Birns then submitted a change-of-beneficiary form designating the Birns defendants, who are his wife and son, as beneficiaries. (Id., Ex. F.)
The Policy reserves to the owner the right to change the beneficiary. (Id., Ex. B. at 4.) On the line on the change-of-beneficiary form designated for the owner’s signature, Michael Birns signed his own name followed by the words “Power of Attorney.” (Id., Ex. D.) He submitted a copy of the power of attorney to William Penn along with the form. (Id.; id., Ex. H; PL Answer to Countercl. & Countercl. ¶ 15.) In a letter dated November 13, 2006, William Penn stated that the change of beneficiary had been completed and that the Birns defendants were the primary beneficiaries of the Policy. (Meade Aff., Ex. F.) William Penn subsequently accepted a premium payment from Michael Birns in the amount of $4,886. (Weissman Deck, Ex. D.)
Fieldman passed away on April 4, 2007. (Meade Aff., Ex. H.) Both Viscuso and Michael Birns (on behalf of the Birns defendants) submitted claims on the Policy. (Id., Exs. H, I.) By letter dated April 18, 2007, William Penn informed Michael Birns that
a review of [Fieldman’s] policy file, revealed that Kimbal Viscuso was the primary beneficiary of record on the application for insurance. A Beneficiary Change Form was submitted by you as power of attorney and acknowledged. The Durable Power of Attorney does not include the authority to change the name of any beneficiary in any retirement asset or insurance contract. Therefore, Kimbal Viscuso is the current beneficiary of record.
(Weissman Deck, Ex. E.) However, William Penn has not paid the proceeds of the Policy to Viscuso. Instead, after Viscuso filed a state court action in New Jersey against it seeking payment, William Penn brought the present action in this Court, seeking to join Viscuso and the Birns defendants as rival claimants to the Policy. William Penn also asks the Court to enjoin defendants from instituting or maintaining any other action against it seeking to recover the proceeds of the Policy.
DISCUSSION
I. Standard of Review
Summary judgment is appropriate when there is no genuine issue of material fact and one party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c);
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
II. Interpleader Jurisdiction
A. General Requirements
The federal interpleader statute grants district courts original jurisdiction over actions of interpleader or in the nature of interpleader where a plaintiff stakeholder has in its possession money or property worth $500 or more that is or may be the subject of adverse claims by two or more claimants of diverse citizenship. 28 U.S.C. § 1335. The plaintiff must be disinterested as to the competing claims and must deposit the fund or property with the court in order to be discharged from the action.
Id.
§ 1335(a)(2);
Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc. v. Clemente,
The availability of interpleader does not depend on the merits of the potential claims against the stakeholder.
See Sotheby’s, Inc. v. Garcia,
Interpleader actions usually unfold in two stages.
N.Y. Life Ins. Co. v. Conn. Dev. Auth.,
As noted, Viscuso has moved to dismiss for lack of interpleader jurisdiction or, in the alternative, for summary judgment on
B. The Court Has Interpleader Jurisdiction
It is undisputed that the stake is worth more than $500 and that defendants are of diverse citizenship.
1
See
28 U.S.C. § 1335(a). William Penn has not yet deposited the funds with the Court, but deposit has been construed as a requirement of maintaining interpleader jurisdiction, rather than a prerequisite to bringing suit.
See Citigroup Global Mkts.,
1. There Are Adverse Claims to the Policy Proceeds
Viscuso argues that her claim and that of the Birns defendants are not adverse because William Penn may in fact be liable to both claimants: to Viscuso as the Policy beneficiary and to the Birns defendants on a counterclaim for promissory estoppel or reliance.
(See
Def. Viscuso Mem. Opp. Interpleader at 2-3.) Viscuso notes, correctly, that the purpose of inter-pleader is to protect the stakeholder from multiple and inconsistent liabilities on a single obligation.
See, e.g., N. Am. Mktg. Corp.,
Viscuso’s non-adversity argument is flawed because it conflates William Penn’s undisputed liability to the beneficiary of the Policy with its potential liability to the other defendants on those defendants’ counterclaims. Each defendant claims to be the Policy beneficiary and, as such, entitled to the $350,000 proceeds of the Policy. These are competing and inconsistent claims to the stake. If defendants were to proceed against William Penn in separate actions, there would be a risk of multiple and inconsistent liabilities on a single obligation: Viscuso might be deemed the beneficiary in one action while the Birns defendants secure that designation in the other. This is the sort of unjustified multiple liability that inter-pleader exists to prevent.
See Bradley,
It is true that each defendant has asserted (or reserves the right to assert) counterclaims against William Penn in the event he or she is found not to be the beneficiary, creating the possibility that William Penn will be liable to all claimants in a total amount greater than the value of the Policy. But no one argues that both Viscuso and the Birns defendants are all beneficiaries. Rather, each side argues that it, and not the other, is the beneficiary.
3
There is no possibility that William Penn may be properly liable on the Policy to both claimants.
4
William Penn’s potential counterclaim liability to the non-beneficiary defendant does not change this fact, nor does it preclude interpleader.
See Ashton,
2. The Doctrine of Unclean Hands Does Not Preclude Interpleader
Although sanctioned by statute, in-terpleader is fundamentally an equitable remedy.
See Truck-A-Tune, Inc. v. Re,
Viscuso argues that William Penn has unclean hands because its carelessness caused this dispute: William Penn should have reviewed the power of attorney, which was in its possession, and realized that Michael Birns did not have the authority to change the beneficiary of the Policy.
(See
Def. Viscuso Mem. Supp. Mot. Dismiss at 6.) Viscuso cites,
inter alia, United States v. Major Oil Corp.,
Viscuso is of course correct in noting that “the present controversy would not exist” absent William Penn’s carelessness.
(See id.)
But that does not mean the doctrine of unclean hands bars interpleader here. Traditionally, application of the doctrine “has required a finding of wrongful intent or wilful misconduct and mere negligent conduct has not sufficed.”
A.H. Emery Co. v. Marcan Prods. Corp.,
In the interpleader context, the Second Circuit’s decision in
Royal School Laboratories
is controlling. In that case Perkins, the Chairman of the School Building Committee of the Town of Watertown, signed an agreement with Twombly Associates, Inc. pursuant to which the latter would furnish laboratory equipment and furniture for the new Town high school.
Royal then sued the Town and Perkins in quasi-contract for the value of the materials Royal had provided; Royal also brought a tort claim based on breach of the statutory duty to secure a bond from Twombly. Id. New England Merchants National Bank of Boston, the assignee of Twombly, filed a separate suit against the defendants for the amount of the contract price owed to Twombly. Id. The defendants sought interpleader relief, which the trial court denied on the basis that the claims in the two suits were “independent and distinct.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted).
The Second Circuit reversed.
Id.
at 817. The Court of Appeals held that the two claims against the Town were “not distinct from” each other, “but inextricably interrelated.”
Id.
at 815. Allowing the suits to proceed separately would “leave[ ] the Town exposed to the very possibility of double liability which interpleader is designed to prevent,” and create the risk of “two recoveries against it for the same enrichment.”
Id.
As for the Town’s responsibility for causing the controversy, the court held: “Whatever the scope of the doctrine that interpleader may not be invoked by a plaintiff with unclean hands, see
Mallory S.S. Co. v. Thalheim,
Royal School Laboratories
thus establishes that mere negligence on the part of the stakeholder does not bar inter-pleader, even if the controversy has resulted quite directly and foreseeably from that negligence. And in light of this precedent, statements to the effect that “one is not entitled ... to the remedy of interpleader ... if the hazard which he seeks to avoid has been occasioned by his own act” sweep too broadly, at least in this Circuit.
See Major Oil Corp.,
III. Viscuso is the Beneficiary of the Policy
Having decided that interpleader is appropriate, we will next consider the merits of defendants’ competing claims to the Policy. Viscuso argues that, because the power of attorney did not authorize Michael Birns to change the beneficiary of any insurance policy, his attempt to do so was void ah initio. (Def. Viscuso Mem Supp. Mot. Dismiss at 12.) The Birns defendants contend that Williams Penn’s acceptance of the beneficiary-change form made the change effective notwithstanding the limitation on Michael Birns’s authority. (Birns Defs. Mem. Opp. Summ. J. at 18.)
Generally speaking, “the method prescribed by the insurance contract must be followed in order to effect a change of beneficiary.”
McCarthy v. Aetna Life Ins. Co.,
The recent decision of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida in
Spoerr v. Manhattan National Life Insurance Co.,
Richard E. then brought suit seeking recovery of the policy amount plus interest, and the court granted summary judgment in his favor. Id. The court found that the power of attorney did not authorize Richard T. to change the beneficiary of a life insurance policy, and held as a result that “the policy change request executed with Richard T.’s signature as Patricia’s attorney-in-fact is void ab initio.” Id. at *3. Manhattan’s having paid the proceeds to Richard T. did not reheve it of liability to Richard E. because, “[a]s the [power of attorney] did not allow Richard T. as attorney-in-fact to execute the change of beneficiary form, ... Manhattan was on notice that this change of beneficiary form was invalid and that Richard E. remained the beneficiary of the policy.” Id. at *4.
Here, the Birns defendants argue that the change was valid because William Penn “accepted” it, which means that the notice of change must have been “in a form acceptable to the Company.”
(See
Meade Aff., Ex. B at 4; Birns Defs. Mem. Opp. Summ. J. at 18.) Apparently, the Birns defendants mean to suggest that the purported change complied with the terms of the Policy. But a notice of change “in a form acceptable to the Company” is only one of the Policy’s several requirements for a valid change of beneficiary. The requirement that the owner be the party making the change was indisputably not satisfied. And William Penn was not empowered to change the beneficiary
sua sponte,
any more than Michael Birns was. William Penn’s acceptance of the beneficiary-change form could not and did not change this fact, or divest Fieldman of his exclusive right to change the beneficiary. The Birns defendants’ repeated emphasis of the .fact that William Penn “accepted” the purported change is therefore beside the point.
(See
Birns Defs. Mem. Opp. Summ. J. at 18-20.) Neither of the two parties to the attempted change was legally empowered to effect it. The Court therefore concludes that the purported change of beneficiary from Viscuso to the Birns defendants was void
ab
initio.
8
See Spoerr,
As the Birns defendants point out, an insurer waives strict compliance with the policy provisions by bringing an action in interpleader.
See, e.g., Lopez v. Mass. Mut. Life Ins. Co.,
Under the doctrine of substantial compliance, exact compliance with the terms of the policy will be excused, and a change of beneficiary given effect, where the insured took “an affirmative act or acts to accomplish a change of beneficiary, and these affirmative act or acts ... accomplished all that it was in [the insured’s]
The Birns defendants do not argue that the purported change of beneficiary substantially complied with the Policy requirements, relying instead on the erroneous premise that there was actual compliance.
(See, e.g.,
Birns Defs. Mem. Opp. Summ. J. at 20.) And the record reveals no basis for a finding of substantial compliance. In fact, conspicuously absent from the Birns defendants’ brief is any suggestion whatever that Fieldman intended the change in question. The Birns defendants do not even argue that Michael Birns — who, as attorney-in-fact, owed Fieldman a fiduciary duty,
see, e.g., In re Agrest,
Michael Birns’s attempt to change the beneficiary of the Policy was void ab ini-tio. Viscuso was the beneficiary at the time of Fieldman’s death and is therefore entitled to the proceeds of the Policy, plus interest at the rate of 51/2% 9 from the date of Fieldman’s death.
As noted above, the Birns defendants have asserted various counterclaims against William Penn. Neither party has briefed the merits of those claims, so the Court will not rule on them at this time.
CONCLUSION
For all of the foregoing reasons, the motion of plaintiff William Penn Life Insurance Company of New York (“William Penn”) for interpleader relief is granted, and defendant Kimbal Viscuso’s motion to dismiss the Complaint is denied. William Penn is hereby ordered to deposit into the registry of the Court the sum of $350,000, plus interest at the rate of
&k%
per annum
Defendant Viscuso’s motion for summary judgment on her claim to the proceeds of the Policy is granted. The Clerk of the Court is directed to enter judgment in Viscuso’s favor in the amount deposited by William Penn pursuant to this Order and to disburse said deposited funds to Viscuso.
The Court retains jurisdiction over William Penn and defendants Charles M. Birns and Beth S. Martin-Birns for purposes of adjudicating the Birns defendants’ counterclaims against William Penn.
All defendants are hereby enjoined from instituting or prosecuting any proceeding in any State or United States court asserting claims to the proceeds of William Penn life insurance policy 0700014261.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Viscuso is a citizen of New Jersey and the Birns defendants are citizens of New York.
. Viscuso also argues in the alternative that the Court should exercise its discretion to abstain from taking interpleader jurisdiction because the New Jersey state court in which she has brought suit against William Penn provides an adequate alternative forum in which all claims may be addressed.
(See
Def. Viscuso Mem. Supp. Mot. Dismiss at 8);
Am. Airlines, Inc. v. Block,
. For this reason,
Trowbridge v. Prudential Insurance Co. of Am.,
. In fact, Viscuso acknowledges in her brief that "it is unlikely under established law that William Penn faces multiple liability to the interpled fund.” (Def. Viscuso Mem. Opp. Interpleader at 3.)
.
Mallory,
which Viscuso cites, held that in-terpleader relief was unavailable to a party whose predicament was "of its own intentional creating” and whose conduct made it "an intentional wrongdoer as to ... the respondents whom it now seeks to compel to inter-plead.”
. The principal's subsequent ratification of an unauthorized act can make the act binding,
see, e.g., In re Barbieri,
. “[T]he parties’ briefs assume that New York law controls this issue, and such implied consent ... is sufficient to establish choice of law.”
Motorola Credit Corp. v. Uzan,
. Having reached this conclusion, we need not consider the parties’ contract-reformation arguments. (See Birns Defs. Mem. Opp. Summ. J. at 11; William Penn Reply Mem. at 5-6.)
. New York Insurance Law section 3214, which governs interest on the proceeds of life insurance policies, provides in relevant part that "interest upon the principal sum paid to the beneficiary or policyholder shall be computed daily at the rate of interest currently paid by the insurer on proceeds left under the interest settlement option, from the date of the death of an insured ... in connection with a death claim on such a policy of life insurance.” N.Y. Ins. Law § 3214(c) (McKinney 2008). Under the terms of the Policy, the interest rate for the interest settlement option is "at least 51/2%," though "[t]he Company may elect to credit interest at a higher rate.” (Meade Aff., Ex. B at 12.) According to the affidavit of Victor Fonseca, William Penn's Claims Supervisor, no such election has been made. (See Fonseca Aff. ¶ 3.) Therefore, the applicable interest rate is 5lé%.
