ROBERT E. WIER, Magistrate Judge.
The Court considers claimant Robert Lutes's motion for judgment on the pleadings. DE #18 (Motion). Since the filing of Lutes's motion, the suit's context has changed. Plaintiff Unum, the prior stakeholder, now stands dismissed. See DE #24 (Order). Prior to Unum's dismissal, both Unum and claimant Gladys Creech had responded. DE ##21 (Unum Response); 22 (Creech Response). Lutes replied. DE #27 (Reply). Taking account of the origin of the case as an interpleader action, and applying the standards for judgment on the pleadings under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(c), the Court
The case centers on the payment of life insurance proceeds under a policy decedent Patricia Lutes acquired via her employment. DE #1 (Complaint), ¶¶ 8, 10, 17. The employmentbased policy, implicating ERISA, provided a jurisdictional basis for Unum's federal interpleader complaint. Id. ¶ 7. Essentially, Robert Lutes, as primary beneficiary, stands to receive the proceeds ($248,000) unless something disqualifies him. Gladys Creech is the contingent beneficiary
Unum paid the full contested proceeds into the Clerk's registry, DE #16-1 (Letter re: check deposit), and now is out of the case, DE #24, leaving Robert Lutes and Gladys Creech to contest the merits. Lutes seeks to accelerate the disposition and wants a judgment on the pleadings. DE #18. The Court, which perceives a host of impactful legal issues on the horizon,
The applicable pleading and review standard is clear. The Sixth Circuit has stated:
Depositors Ins. Co. v. Estate of Ryan, 637 F. App'x 864, 868 (6th Cir. 2016) (some citations omitted). Further:
Chambers v. HSBC Bank USA, N.A., 796 F.3d 560, 567 (6th Cir. 2015) (some citations omitted).
This case began with a complaint for interpleader, identifying the claimant status and basis as to both Robert Lutes and Gladys Creech. See generally DE #1. Creech alleges in her Answer that disqualification of Robert Lutes would entitle her to the proceeds: "Defendant Robert Lutes is a suspect in the death of his wife, Patricia Lutes, and if Defendant Robert Lutes is convicted for taking the life of Patricia Lutes, Gladys Creech, as contingent beneficiary, would be entitled to the proceeds[.]" DE #7 (Creech Answer), ¶ 8. Further, Creech sought payment of proceeds into court "until said time that a determination is made as to the involvement of Defendant Robert Lutes in the death of Patricia Lutes [and] is finally adjudicated." Id. ¶ A. Unum's pleading referenced the disqualification that would occur via the Kentucky slayer's statute, KRS 381.280, as well as under federal common law. See DE #1 (Complaint) ¶ 15. Interestingly, Robert Lutes pleaded willingness "to accept the allegations" of Unum as to that substantive paragraph. See DE #13 (Lutes Answer), ¶ 6.
Unum's foundational pleading, and the Answer of Creech, certainly state plausible claims. Creech's statement regarding the disqualifying effect of a conviction accurately depicts the toggling legal effect—if Lutes were convicted of murdering Patricia Lutes, he would not take the insurance proceeds under the Kentucky slayer's statute. Creech, building on Unum's allegations, also ultimately contends that a conviction is not a prerequisite to disqualification under the reasoning of Judge McKinley in Reliance Standard Life Ins. Co. v. Stafford, No. 4:06-CV-111-M, 2007 WL 1576719 (W.D. Ky. May 29, 2007). See DE #22, ¶ 8. Unum, as stated, also injected federal common law disqualifying standards into the determination. See DE #21, at 2. These arguments frame the issues for resolution through the litigation process.
Lutes, who as of the briefing faced no charges in the death of Patricia Lutes, predictably seeks to hasten claim disposition. The Court does perceive a latent issue regarding the temporal application and limits of KRS 381.280. However, there are several other related questions the Court, with assistance of party briefing, must answer in the course of the litigation. These include (a) whether ERISA applies to preempt Kentucky law
As to this motion, the Court finds that the pleadings plausibly frame an issue of disqualification regarding Robert Lutes's entitlement to the life insurance proceeds. Future motion practice, after allowing for adequate discovery, can present and address the issues that will determine—as matters of fact, substantive law, and process—the right to the proceeds. Because the Unum interpleader allegations and Creech Answer set forth a plausible disqualifying scenario, the Court
Atwater v. Nortel Networks, Inc., 388 F.Supp.2d 610, 615 (M.D.N.C. 2005). Shoemaker, a Sixth Circuit case under a prior statutory federal benefit scheme, disqualified a beneficiary on a civil finding of responsibility for that beneficiary's killing of an insured; this derived from "public policy founded upon the equitable principle that no person should be permitted to profit from his own wrong." Shoemaker, 263 F.2d at 932; see also Standard Ins. Co. v. Coons, 141 F.3d 1179, 1998 WL 115579, at *1 (9th Cir. 1998) (table) ("Federal common law refuses to let a slayer receive the life insurance proceeds of his victim.").