
Home / Legal principles of life insurance / - Simultaneous Deaths
Under a joint life first death life insurance policy with joint assureds, the payment would be made to the surviving assured on the basis that the assured were joint tenants.
The interest of one joint tenant passes to the other automatically on death.
If a claim is made under an own life joint life second death policy, payment will be made to the estate of the second of the assureds to die.
If both lives assured under a joint life policy die in the same incident, it will be necessary to know for title purposes which of the two died first. This may be clear from evidence available, but if not (for example, if both lives assured were killed on an airliner) then s.184 of the Law of Property Act 1925 provides that the younger shall be deemed to have survived the elder.
Payment would therefore be made to the estate of the younger.
However, if the applicants are married or registered civil partners and both die intestate (without a Will) then the proceeds are paid equally to both estates.





