A Newark federal judge has awarded legal fees to John Hancock Insurance Co. and to Lincoln National Life Insurance Co. in connection with a battle over a $3.4 million payout from life insurance policies taken out on the late conservative activist and attorney Phyllis Schlafly. But the underlying dispute between her children and followers appears far from resolution.
Schlafly, known for her opposition to the Equal Rights Amendment, died at age 92 in 2016. Since then, a battle has been waged for control of the organization she founded, Eagle Forum, which is listed as beneficiary on the policies.
Her son Andrew, a Far Hills resident, sued the two insurance companies in Morris County Superior Court in March 2017, seeking an injunction against the distribution of policy proceeds to "anyone other than proper representatives acting in the interests of and under the direct instructions of the members of Eagle Forum."
Other suits concerning the control of the assets of Eagle Forum are pending in federal courts in Illinois and Missouri, and in a state court in Missouri.
In the New Jersey case, Andrew Schlafly, who is pro se, claims that since his mother's death, Eagle Forum lacks a properly functioning board of directors. He claims that the people purporting to control Eagle Forum have dissipated its assets and "are attempting to take Eagle Forum in a direction other than its mission," U.S. Magistrate Judge Steven Mannion wrote in his May 21 report and recommendations.
U.S. District Judge Esther Salas on Wednesday issued an order adopting Mannion's recommendations and awarding the fees.
The insurance companies brought Eagle Forum into the case as a third-party defendant, and the organization opposed the award of fees to the insurance companies, claiming that determining the beneficiary of a policy is part of an insurer's routine course of business.