Phillips v. Prudential Ins. Co., No. 11-3870 (7th Cir. 2013)
Annotate this CasePhillips was beneficiary of a life insurance policy purchased by her fiancé, Strang, issued by Prudential. When Strang died, Prudential informed Phillips that the default method of payment was the “Alliance Account settlement option,” under which the insurer, instead of paying a lump-sum benefit, creates an interest-bearing account for the beneficiary and sends her checks that can be used to draw the funds, in part or in whole, at any time. The funds are held in Prudential’s general investment account, which allows Prudential to profit from the spread between its investment returns and interest paid to the beneficiary, in Phillips’s case, three percent. In a putative class action, Phillips claimed that establishment of the Alliance Account as the default payment method and her enrollment in it breached the insurance policy and unreasonably delayed payment of benefits in violation of the Illinois Insurance Code and that Prudential breached a fiduciary duty by not disclosing information regarding investments made with her funds and by keeping investment profits. The district court dismissed. The Seventh Circuit affirmed. “Whether this practice is disreputable is open to debate,” but It did not breach the policy, did not effect an unreasonable delay, and did not breach any fiduciary duty.
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