Articles Tagged with challenging beneficiary designations

Many life insurance lawsuits involve disputes over the designation of beneficiaries. In Humana Ins. Co. of Kentucky v. O’Neal (2018), the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals had to evaluate two competing claims for life insurance proceeds under an ERISA plan (“Plan”).

Under the Plan, the decedent (“Decedent”) could name a beneficiary.  If the Decedent did not name a beneficiary, Humana, the administrator of the plan, would pay the benefit at its option to either the surviving spouse or the estate of the Decedent. One year prior to the Decedent’s death in 2015, he named his then girlfriend as his beneficiary (“Prior Beneficiary”). The following year, during the re-enrollment period, the Decedent did not select any person or entity to be his beneficiary.

Shortly after the Decedent’s death, Humana received claims from both the administrator of the Decedent’s estate (“Estate”) and the Prior Beneficiary. After the district court determined that the Estate was entitled to the Decedent’s life insurance benefit, the Prior Beneficiary appealed.

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Under what circumstances will a court rule that the named beneficiary under a life insurance policy is not entitled to receive the proceeds of the policy?  In Estate of Lane v. Courteaux (2017), the Court of Appeals of Tennessee wrestled with that issue, before ruling against the party who argued that a named beneficiary should not be entitled to any proceeds under the policy.  According to the court, a named beneficiary of a life insurance policy will almost always be able to recover the death benefit, even when there are compelling reasons to award the proceeds to another party.

The facts of Estate of Lane are tragic.  A wife had a $600,000 life insurance policy in which she named her husband the sole beneficiary. Later, she was diagnosed with terminal cancer.  Shortly after, her husband learned he also had terminal cancer.

Although the husband was not expected to outlive his wife, she passed away before he did.  Shortly before her death, the wife, while retaining her husband as a co-beneficiary, added her sister, Amanda Courteaux, as a co-beneficiary.  This caught the husband by surprise.  When he discovered, after her death, that his wife did add her sister as a beneficiary of the life insurance policy proceeds, he speculated that his wife wanted her sister to provide for their son, who was on the verge of losing both his parents.  Under the life insurance policy at issue, the wife’s sister was entitled to $300,000 of the policy proceeds.

Later, the husband believed Courteaux was going to use the proceeds for purposes other than his son’s welfare.  He then filed a complaint against Courteaux seeking to have nearly all of her share of the proceeds placed into a trust for the benefit of his son.  In his lawsuit, the husband sought relief, in part, under the legal principle of promissory estoppel.

Prior to the trial, the husband passed away, and his executor and estate were substituted in his place.  Before he died, the husband gave a deposition in which he testified about a document created by his wife that he discovered after her death.  According to the husband’s testimony, the document indicated his wife wanted Courteaux to have only $30,000 of the proceeds for herself, with the remainder of her share to be transferred to her husband to use for their son’s benefit. (It is not clear from the court opinion what exactly this document was, or what it said.)  At trial, the deceased wife’s half-sister also testified wife wanted Courteaux to receive only a $30,000 share of the proceeds.

At trial, Courteaux conceded that she and her sister both promised to take care of each other’s children if anything ever happened to one of them.  Nevertheless, she testified that the life insurance proceeds were “my money.”

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