Mutual mistake helps dissolving LLC retain member’s life
insurance proceeds to pay debts
The simple mistake of listing an entity as a corporation instead of an
LLC on a life insurance policy contract may have saved the LLC from
losing $1 million in life insurance proceeds. For a corporation to
transfer ownership, the policy required two signatures, instead of
one.
By Joe Forward, Legal Writer,
State Bar of Wisconsin
Jan. 20,
2011 – The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit recently
concluded that Richard McDonald’s former girlfriend could not
claim the proceeds of a $1 million life insurance policy on
McDonald’s life because McDonald was not the owner of the
policy.
That conclusion may have been different had the life insurance policy
contract correctly listed B&K Enterprizes LLC (B&K) as an LLC,
and not a corporation.
McDonald was the founding member of B&K – which built and
operated a convenience store in Manitowoc – and also managed the
day-to-day operations of the store. B&K financed the business by
purchasing a $1 million life insurance policy on McDonald’s life
and assigning interest in the insurance proceeds as security for
business loans.
But in 2007, things went sour for McDonald. Recently divorced, McDonald
was living in a motel while dating Megan Hansen, a friend of his
ex-wife’s daughter. In addition, other B&K members learned
that McDonald misappropriated nearly $50,000 from the company’s
funds.
Facing substantial debt, the members removed McDonald as manager and
hired Michael Culligan to wind up B&K’s business affairs.
B&K, which had paid the life insurance premiums up through the time
of liquidation, decided to let the life insurance policy lapse.
However, Culligan had previously submitted a transfer of ownership form
to the policy-holder, Protective Life Insurance Co. (Protective), asking
Protective to transfer ownership to McDonald. McDonald then submitted a
change of beneficiary form, naming Hansen as beneficiary.
Shortly after, McDonald committed suicide. Protective filed an
interpleader action, naming Hansen and B&K as defendants.
Fight for proceeds
In Protective
Life Insurance Co. v. Hansen, No. 10-2085 (Jan. 19, 2010), a
three-judge panel for the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals applied
Wisconsin law to conclude that B&K, not Hansen, was entitled to the
insurance policy proceeds.
When B&K obtained the policy, the policy named “B&K
Inc.” as the policy owner, which was a mutual mistake on the part
of B&K and Protective. B&K was an LLC, not a corporation.
This distinction is important, Judge William Bauer explained in his
opinion, because under Protective’s policy terms, LLCs can submit
a transfer of ownership form with the signature of one LLC officer, but
corporations must submit the signature of at least two officers.
Because the policy listed B&K as a corporation, Protective sent the
transfer of ownership form back to Culligan for another signature when
he submitted it. He never sent it back. If the policy correctly noted
B&K as an LLC, it may have accepted the form and
transferred ownership.
Thus, Hansen asked the court to correct the mutual mistake. Once
corrected, Hansen asked the court to find that ownership transferred
because Protective would have transferred ownership based on
Culligan’s signature alone, which was all that was required for
LLCs.
Finally, Hansen asked the court to conclude that she was the rightful
beneficiary because McDonald, as policy owner, named her the
beneficiary. The panel disagreed.
Even if Wisconsin law allowed the court to reform the contract to read
“B&K LLC,” the panel explained, “we cannot presume
to know what Protective would have done if B&K had been listed as an
LLC.”
Kathleen Britton, vice president of life insurance policies for
Protective, testified that Culligan’s signature alone would have
satisfied Protective’s requirements to transfer ownership, but did
not testify that Protective would have actually transferred ownership
based on the signature.
The panel noted that Protective could have investigated before
transferring ownership or could have refused to transfer it, and Judge
Bauer explained that “the proper focus here is not on what should
have happened but rather on what actually happened.”
“Absent some viable legal theory, we cannot simply unwind this
series of events and declare Hansen the beneficiary of the
policy,” Judge Bauer wrote.
Because ownership never actually transferred, the panel concluded that
B&K was the owner of the policy when McDonald committed suicide.
Thus, B&K was entitled to the proceeds.
Given the holding, the panel did not decide whether McDonald gave
adequate consideration to obtain ownership of the policy, or whether
Culligan had authority to transfer ownership.
Equity
The panel also explained that equitable principles favored the
conclusion that B&K was entitled to the proceeds, even if Hansen had
satisfied all elements of reformation, “because the equities do
not lie in Hansen’s favor.”
The panel explained that McDonald was a dishonest employee, attempted
to swindle B&K by transferring ownership of the policy to Hansen,
and Hansen sought a windfall even though neither she nor McDonald ever
paid any insurance premiums.
Meanwhile, the liquidation of assets did not provide B&K with
enough money to pay its debts. It owed non-member creditors $83,000, and
members had claims of approximately $400,000.