DocketNumber: 51626
Judges: Pryatel, Economus, Matia, County, Pleas
Filed Date: 4/13/1987
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
With all due respect, relative to Assignment of Error No. I, I dissent from the majority opinion reversing the judgment of the court of common pleas awarding Agnes Hook the proceeds of a life insurance policy on her deceased spouse, Donal Hook.
Agnes Hook (plaintiff-appellee/cross-appellant) and Donal Hook were married on December 23, 1970. Immediately before the ceremony, the parties executed an antenuptial agreement which mutually divested each one of the legal claims to the other's estate. On February 8, 1971, Donal Hook designated Agnes Hook as beneficiary under a life insurance policy on his life provided through his employment with the United States government. Suit for divorce was filed in Cuyahoga County by Donal Hook in June 1977. The domestic relations court on July 26, 1977, pursuant to Agnes Hook's answer and counterclaim, issued a temporary restraining order prohibiting Donal Hook from changing beneficiaries on his insurance policies and/or cashing in or allowing any insurance policies to lapse. The order listed some policies by name and also included "unknown life insurance policies with unknown companies," which included his employment insurance policy, the insurance policy which is at the root of this appeal. This action was still pending at the time of Donal Hook's death on October 28, 1977. The temporary restraining order preventing Donal Hook from changing the beneficiaries on any of his insurance policies was undissolved on the date of his death. In direct violation of such restraining order and in contempt of a court's order, Donal Hook changed the named beneficiary on his insurance policy provided through his employment, from Agnes Hook to his brother, Gerald Hook. After Donal Hook's death, on December 13, 1977, the proceeds of said policy, $38,956.06, were paid to Gerald Hook. On January 31, 1978, Agnes Hook filed a claim against the estate of Donal Hook under R.C.
Upon a hearing on plaintiff's complaint, the trial court held that the antenuptial agreement had no bearing upon the case at bar, that regardless of the possible outcome of the divorce proceeding, a valid temporary restraining order was violated on September 8, 1977, and the proceeds of the subject insurance policy were paid to a beneficiary other than Agnes Hook, whose position as a beneficiary was supposedly ensured by the restraining order. The trial court described Agnes Hook's interest as a conditional expectancy interest in the insurance proceeds and that her position as such beneficiary was solidified by the domestic relations court's order of July 26, 1977.
Given the equity powers of the common pleas court and recognizing that a remedy at law in the form of contempt proceedings against a deceased defendant who violated the restraining order was no longer available, the change of beneficiary, while the restraining order was in effect, was rendered null and void and Agnes Hook was the only named beneficiary entitled to the insurance proceeds.
I agree with the trial court's position. The existence of or interpretation of the provisions of the antenuptial agreement are irrelevant to the issue of whether Donal Hook could violate a valid temporary restraining order to defeat Agnes Hook's interest in the insurance policy proceeds.
A fact which appears to be overlooked by the majority is that Donal Hook named Agnes Hook as a beneficiary on the subject policy on February 8, 1971, after the execution of the antenuptial agreement and marriage on December 23, 1970. Donal Hook had the right and ability to name his wife as the beneficiary notwithstanding the provisions of the antenuptial agreement. Defendant-appellant has argued that the antenuptial agreement provided that "each party hereto may freely sell or otherwise dispose of any or all of his property, now owned or hereafter acquired, by gift, sale or deed, during life, or by Last Will and Testament." Donal Hook obviously chose to "freely" name Agnes Hook as a beneficiary on his insurance policy after the marriage and execution of the antenuptial agreement. He had retained this right and he chose to exercise this right to benefit his wife, Agnes Hook.
Further, the fact that the antenuptial agreement provides that "each party is hereby barred from * * * all rights * * * or claims as widow * * *, heir, * * * survivor, or next of kin, andall other rights or claims whatsoever, * * * which may, in anymanner, arise * * * by virtue of said marriage" (emphasis added) would not prevent Agnes Hook from receiving the proceeds of an insurance policy on Donal Hook's life when Donal Hook, pursuant to the change of beneficiary, entered into a contract on February 8, 1971, with the insurance company, to pay the proceeds to Agnes Hook at his death. Such right of Agnes Hook to receive the proceeds of this policy as the named beneficiary of her husband should not be defeated by the wrongful act of her husband, when Donal Hook was later restrained by a valid court order in a divorce proceeding from changing the beneficiary on this policy.
This court is well aware that the Ohio Supreme Court in Hook v.Hook (1982),
A careful review of the antenuptial agreement makes it evident that there are no provisions therein pertaining to a divorce of the parties and the subsequent division of property. Before the *Page 58
Ohio Supreme Court's decision in Gross v. Gross (1984),
Thus, notwithstanding the rights which Agnes Hook did retain or release in the antenuptial agreement executed before her marriage, in the subsequent divorce action brought by her husband wherein she filed an answer, counterclaim for divorce, and a request for reasonable alimony and division of the property owned by the parties, once Donal Hook named her as a beneficiary on the subject policy, and once he was restrained by a valid restraining order from changing that beneficiary, Agnes Hook had a property interest in the subject insurance policy which was not affected by the antenuptial agreement nor could be defeated by the action in contempt of Donal Hook ignoring a valid restraining order.
Appellant's argument that the divorce action was an inpersonam action which abated on Donal Hook's death is of little consequence to the real issue here: whether or not Gerald Hook (or his estate) should remain the possessor of the insurance policy proceeds as a result of Donal Hook's violations of a court order. Equity considers as done that which ought to be done and here the common pleas court rightfully returned the insurance proceeds to Agnes Hook, the named beneficiary protected by the temporary restraining order prohibiting Donal Hook from changing said beneficiary on his insurance policy.
I differ from the interpretation of the majority relative toCandler v. Donaldson (C.A. 6, 1959),
In the instant case, the new beneficiary, Gerald Hook, brother of Donal Hook, is a pure donee beneficiary with no offsetting equities of his own. Although the majority refers to him as "needy," such fact was not included in the Stipulation of Facts of the parties. Agnes Hook was approximately sixty-seven years old at the time of Donal Hook's death. By obtaining a restraining order to prevent her husband from removing her as the named beneficiary on his policy, she attempted to ensure the statusquo until a final adjudication of her property rights in the divorce proceeding. The antenuptial agreement in question would not have prevented a domestic relations court from awarding her reasonable alimony pursuant to her request in her counterclaim, nor from considering the property *Page 60 rights of the parties in the subject insurance policy.
On the facts in this case, there were no equities of Gerald Hook which would have overcome the equities in favor of Agnes Hook.
I, therefore, respectfully dissent from the majority and would affirm the decision of the trial court awarding the proceeds of the insurance policy, $38,956.06, to Agnes Hook.
Relative to Cross-Assignment of Error No. I, I dissent from the majority. Since I would affirm the decision of the trial court in awarding the proceeds of the policy on the life of Donal Hook to Agnes Hook, his surviving spouse, I would, of necessity, rule that interest is to run, to the benefit of Agnes Hook, from the date the proceeds of life insurance were wrongfully received by Gerald Hook, December 13, 1977, and not from the date of the trial court's judgment.
The parties agreed in the Stipulation of Facts that the amount paid Gerald Hook on December 13, 1977, was $38,956.06. The amount of the debt is thus liquidated and readily ascertainable. Pursuant to the contract between Donal Hook and the insurance company, the proceeds of the policy were payable on his date of death, i.e., October 28, 1977, to his beneficiary and were in fact received by Gerald Hook on December 13, 1977, due to a change of beneficiary from Agnes Hook to Gerald Hook by Donal Hook on September 8, 1977, in direct violation of a temporary restraining order issued by the Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas on July 26, 1977. The fact that the estates of Donal Hook and Gerald Hook have denied owing the proceeds to Agnes Hook does not delay the running of interest on the debt. Braverman v.Spriggs (1980),
R.C.
An insurance policy is included in the statutory phrase "other instrument of writing." Clevenger v. Westfield Companies (1978),
It is immaterial that the insurance contract was between Donal Hook and the insurance company and not between Donal Hook and Agnes Hook. Agnes Hook was named beneficiary on said policy by Donal Hook on February 8, 1971, and had Donal Hook not changed the beneficiary to Gerald Hook in violation of a court order on September 8, 1977, Agnes Hook would have received the proceeds of the policy at Donal Hook's death on October 28, 1977. Accordingly, I dissent from the majority and would hold that the first cross-assignment of error is with merit.
As to Cross-Assignment of Error No. II, I dissent from the opinion of the majority due to my dissent relative to Assignment of Error No. I and Cross-Assignment of Error No. I. The trial court rendered judgment against only the estate of Gerald Hook. It would be illogical and inequitable to hold that Agnes Hook is entitled to the proceeds of an insurance policy which were paid to Gerald Hook by the wrongful act of Donal Hook in violation of a court order, to order interest paid to Agnes Hook thereon pursuant to R.C.
Therefore, Cross-Assignment of Error No. II is with merit.
As to Cross-Assignment of Error No. III, I agree with the majority that since this case does not involve a wrongful conversion of property (by Gerald Hook), the trial court did not err in failing to award attorney fees to Agnes Hook, plaintiff-appellee/cross-appellant. Cross-Assignment of Error No. III is properly overruled.