Opinion
36415
September 22, 1932
Present, All the Justices.
1. DESCENT AND DISTRIBUTION — War Risk Insurance — Death of Soldier Before His Estate Was Finally Administered. — The vested right of the distributee of the estate of a deceased soldier is not affected by the fact that such distributee died before the estate was finally administered, and such distribution should be made to those who would have been entitled to it at the date of his death, and their successors in title.
2. DESCENT AND DISTRIBUTION — War Risk Insurance — Death of Soldier Before His Estate Was Finally Administered — Case at Bar. — William H. Cole, a soldier in the World War, died in France on October 28, 1918, unmarried and intestate, leaving surviving him his father, William Cole, his mother, Rhoda Cole, a sister, Minnie Ann Brooks, and a half-brother, Frazier Sayres, an illegitimate son of Rhoda Cole who was never acknowledged by William Cole as his child. The soldier designated his mother the beneficiary in his war risk insurance. His mother received the monthly installments until her death in 1923; thereafter the father of the soldier received the monthly installments until his death in 1929.
Held: That at the time of the death of the soldier his father was his sole distributee. The father's only successor in title was his daughter, Minnie Ann Brooks, who was entitled to the whole fund, to the exclusion of the half-brother, Frazier Sayres.
Appeal from a decree of the Circuit Court of Tazewell county, directing the distribution of war risk insurance of a deceased soldier.
Reversed.
The opinion states the case.
S. M. B. Coulling, for the appellant.
Robert O. Crockett, for the appellee.
William H. Cole, a soldier in the World War, died in France on October 28, 1918, unmarried and intestate, leaving surviving him his father, William Cole, his mother, Rhoda Cole, a sister, Minnie Ann Brooks, and a half-brother, Frazier Sayres, an illegitimate son of Rhoda Cole who was never acknowledged by William Cole as his child. William H. Cole, the soldier, designated his mother the beneficiary in his War Risk insurance policy of $10,000. She received the monthly installments due thereon until her death in 1923; thereafter, and until his death in 1929, the father, William Cole, received the monthly installments. After the death of William Cole the computed value of the policy was $5,516, which was paid to Aaron Russ, as administrator of the deceased soldier. A dispute arose between the sister and the half-brother as to the payment of this sum, and thereupon the administrator filed a bill, praying that a court of equity direct him in the distribution of the sum named.
The trial court held that under the statutes and the decision in Price v. McConnell, 153 Va. 567, 149 S.E. 515, the sister was entitled to two-thirds and the half-brother to one-third of the fund. From this decree an appeal was allowed the sister.
The determination of this case is controlled by the decision in Stacy v. Culbertson, 157 Va. 258, 160 S.E. 50, wherein it is held that the vested right of the distributee of the estate of the deceased soldier was not affected by the fact that such distributee died before the estate was finally administered, and that such distribution should be made to those who would have been entitled to it at the date of his death, and their successors in title.
At the time of the death of the soldier, William H. Cole, his father was his sole distributee. The father's only successor in title is his daughter, Minnie Ann Brooks, who is entitled to the whole fund, to the exclusion of the half-brother, Frazier Sayres.
The decree of the trial court is reversed, with the direction that a final order be entered directing the administrator to pay the entire sum to Minnie Ann Brooks.
Reversed.