In the June 16, 2009 published appellate opinion in
Hadfield v. The Prudential Insurance
Company, the ex-wife argued that she was entitled to proceeds from a life insurance policy for
her divorced ex-husband because she had been named as the beneficiary prior to divorce, the
beneficiary designation had not been changed post-divorce and the parties had agreed they would each
remain as beneficiaries on each other’s life insurance until they remarried.
The
parents of Ryan Hadfield on behalf of his Estate argued that after his divorce he had attempted to
change the name of the beneficiary of his life insurance from his ex-wife to his sister but had
executed the forms incorrectly.
The trial court found in favor of the Estate finding that
under
N.J.S.A. 3B:3-14, the divorce revoked the insurance beneficiary designation. On
appeal, the appellate division agreed, finding that the ex-wife had “no vested right in the
life insurance policy since Ryan could have validly changed his beneficiary at any time prior to his
death.”
Furthermore, because the ex-wife had no vested right to the life insurance,
the court held that it was not improper to retrospectively apply the amendment of
N.J.S.A.
3B:3-14 that occurred in 2005 in which life insurance policies were specifically named as
instruments that were revoked upon divorce.
The starting point to this decision focuses
on the concept of a "vested interest" in the life of the other party. In this
case, since there was no obligation upon the Husband to pay support to the Wife after divorce, nor
were there any outstanding obligations owed by the Husband to the Wife under the terms of the
settlement agreement, what was Wife's vested interest in his estate?
The appellate court
confirmed that since there was no vested interest in his estate, what was the former wife's
entitlement to continued beneficiary coverage under his will? Since there was no clear proof
of an intent to continue to designate the former wife as beneficiary (after the divorce), her claims
had to fail.
Simply stated though, it would have been better practice for the Husband
to have prepared a new will and a change in his beneficiary designation in his life insurance
policy, confirming his intent to remove the former wife as beneficiary of his estate to avoid any
future conflict.
This post was previously published on my New Jersey Divorce Law Blog. For a consultation on any
New Jersey family law matter please contact me at 973 379 9292. Further information on the law firm
of Diamond & Diamond, P.A. can be found on our web-site.