Genworth Sues Trustee Over Life Insurance Claim Delays

The insurer wants to avoid having to pay 6% interest on the death benefits for more than 60 days.

Genworth wants to keep a trust in Georgia from using a state interest payment requirement to earn extra cash on life insurance death benefits.

An affiliate, Genworth Life and Annuity Insurance Co., has sued Patricia Gold over her delay in completing a $750,000 claim.

Genworth worries that the delay will trigger a Georgia death benefit interest law, according to a complaint filed June 25 in the U.S. District Court in Atlanta.

The law could increase what Genworth owes a trust established by Gold’s husband, Homer Gold, by more than $200,000.

Genworth has asked the court to prevent that by declaring the policy to be unclaimed property and stating that Genworth owes interest payments for just 60 days.

Genworth declined to comment. Gold could not immediately be reached for comment.

The policy: Patricia Gold is the widow of Dr. Homer Gold Jr., a physician who set up a trust in 1999 and named his wife as the trustee. He then arranged for a life insurance policy to pay death benefits into the trust.

The policy was issued by a company later acquired by Genworth.

Homer Gold died in August 2021. His family reported his death to Genworth nine days later.

Genworth mailed a claim form to Patricia Gold Aug. 27, 2021.

Since then, Genworth has asked Patricia Gold for the documents it needs to process the claim many times, and Gold has failed to send in the documents, Genworth says.

Gold’s lawyer told Genworth that Gold has been working diligently to resolve issues related to the estate, Genworth says.

The interest law: Georgia requires a life insurer to pay 6% interest on the death benefit starting 30 days after a claim is received until the policy is found to be unclaimed property.

In Georgia, a policy can become unclaimed property after five years.

Five years of 6% interest on $750,000 is $225,000.

Letting Gold collect five years of interest by failing to perfect a claim “would produce an absurd result,” Genworth says.

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