Court Opinion

ID: 9443385
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-03 19:19:09.549082+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:29:28.472072
License: Public Domain

JAMES ALGER FEE, District Judge
(concurring).
It is impregnably founded as judicial doctrine that “the social interest served by refusing to permit the criminal to profit by his crime is greater than that served by the preservation and enforcement of legal rights of ownership.”1 An early pronouncement settled this principle in the *628field of life insurance 2 There the murderer sometimes has no right even against the insurer.3 Since the right of a beneficiary,
either original or alternate, is ordinarily not a vested interest in proceeds of a policy, no statute is required to carry out the principle. Nor is the doctrine of constructive trusts applicable or necessary here, as it might be with vested property rights.4 If it were applied in this case, the murderer should be held trustee, not for the alternate beneficiary, his mother, but for the murdered wife’s heirs or estate.5 Since title did not automatically lodge in the slayer by operation of law, it would seem a matter of supererogation to vest the fund in him in order to compel him to hold as trustee in virtue of this judicial doctrine. If the gift failed then, normally the proceeds would fall into inttstacy.6 But it is said — - and we may agree under normal circumstances — that an alternate beneficiary should take. Here the murdered spouse clearly expressed “if living” as a condition precedent to devolution to the alternate beneficiary.7 Since there was no trust nor other impediment to the effectiveness of the gift, immediately upon her death the proceeds fell into the estate as intestate assets, for the reason that her murderer could not take by judicial doctrine and the alternate beneficiary could not take because the condition precedent was unfulfilled. No cv pres rationale is necessary to save the gift from lapse.
In this case, over and beyond all else, there is the murderer as primary beneficiary and the murderer’s mother as the alternate. If judicial policy dictates that he cannot take directly, no technical consistency should permit him to benefit indirectly by a gift to his family, especially a mother, from whom he would normally acquire property by the statutes of descent and distribution. The policy is pronounced that neither he nor any who takes through him or for his benefit should be recognized.
Both technical and moral consideration demand that our former decision stand.
The remand to us by the Supreme Court indicates misunderstanding of the rationale of the opinion. The basis for this may be in the fact that the findings of the Court do not reflect except by implication certain vital factors which distinguish this case from that considered by the California Supreme Court. (1) The findings do not directly show that the law to be applied was not California law, but that of Indiana, where the policy was written, or Iowa, where it was delivered. True, there is a reference to a stipulation where these facts appear. (2) There is a finding by the Court that it was the intent of the wife to give the proceeds to the murderer’s mother if he, although living, could not take. If this had been found as a conclusion of law, as an interpretation of the words of the will, such would have been possible. However, this could not have been found as a matter of fact based on evidence other than the words of the will because there was no such evidence upon which the factual finding was possible. (3) Since everything was lumped together, it does not clearly appear that the insurance company deposited the fund in court, was allowed attorney fees and costs, and has no fur*629ther interest in the controversy. It should have been discharged in the first stage of interpleader. Then the normal situation would have developed. There was a fund to which two opposite interests filed claims. These the Chancellor should dispose of according to law and good conscience. On one side are the murderer and the mother of the murderer, who, represented by one attorney, presented a joint claim that the proceeds be allotted to him, but, if for any reason the gift failed, then these should he paid to the mother. On the other side was the administrator of the estate of the wife for the benefit of her heirs. If this procedural situation were plain, it would seem the decision would be correct without regard to the other matters set up in our former opinion.
Upon the suggestion that there were facts showing closer relationship between the first and alternate beneficiaries, and in view of the lack of clarity in the record, I would have thought it preferable to reaffirm our former holding, vacate the judgment, set aside the finding of intent as clearly erroneous, and send the case back for further testimony and for appropriate record which would clearly dispose the basis for our holding.
My colleagues, however, believe there can he no misunderstanding if the record is carefully examined and, with the above explanation, I concur.

. Cardozo, The Nature of the Judicial Process (1921) 48,

. New York Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Armstrong. 117 U.S. 591, 600, 6 S.Ct. 877, 29 L.Ed. 997.

. Prince of Wales, etc., Ass’n Co. v. Palmer, 25 Beav. 605.

. Although this doctrino is advocated by text writers it receives scant support in the cases, oven in those dealing with vested property. If we were interested in California law, it would he noteworthy that the statute as to succession to property provides that the portion to which the murderer would have been entitled does not go to him but follows the law of intestate succession. Calif. Probate Code (Deering 1949). Sec. 258. As to insurance proceeds one court at least has found a resulting trust in favor of insured. Schmidt v. Northern Life Ass’n, 112 Iowa 41, 83 N.W. 800.

. Sec National Benefit Life Ins. Co. v. Davis, 38 Ohio App. 454, 176 N.E. 490.

. This situation can be compared to a lapsed legacy. Johnston v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 85 W.Va. 70, 100 S.E. 865, 7 A.L.R. 823.

. Bullock v. Expressmen’s Mut. Life Ins. Co., 234 N.C. 254, 67 S.E.2d 71.