Atlanta Life Ins. Co. v. Ash

153 So. 261, 228 Ala. 184, 1934 Ala. LEXIS 163
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMarch 1, 1934
Docket6 Div. 521.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 153 So. 261 (Atlanta Life Ins. Co. v. Ash) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atlanta Life Ins. Co. v. Ash, 153 So. 261, 228 Ala. 184, 1934 Ala. LEXIS 163 (Ala. 1934).

Opinion

*187 KNIGHT, Justice.

Suit' by plaintiff against the defendant to recover damages for two alleged fraudulent acts, perpetrated by an agent of defendant, against the plaintiff, in the collection of premiums'upon an insurance policy issued by defendant upon the life of plaintiff’s brother.

When the suit was first filed, the complaint consisted of two counts. Thereafter, on the day set for the trial of the cause, the plaintiff, by leave of the court, amended her complaint' by adding two additional counts numbered 3 and 4. These counts, added by way of amendment, appear in the report of the case.

There was a demurrer to each of the counts of the complaint, but the judgment entry discloses that the court made no order thereon, and the judgment recites: “Defendant files pleas 1, 2 and 3; attorneys in open court agree to plead in short by consent.”

The case was tried upon the theory that the defendant had pleaded the general issue, and an election on the part of plaintiff to hold the agent, Nedrie Thompson, not the principal, the Atlanta Life Insurance Company. liable to her for the wrongs complained of.

The evidence on the part of the plaintiff tended to prove each and every material allegation of the complaint, and that she had not elected to look to the agent for repayment of the amount due her, and had not re-pounced any remedy she may have had against the Atlanta Life Insurance Company, for and on account of the fraud of its agent.

On the part of the defendant, there was evidence tending to show that the defendant’s ■ agent, Nedrie Thompson, practiced no fraud : or deceit upon the plaintiff; that while he ’ did get from her, on the dates set out in counts 3 and 4, a check for $140, and a check .;for $200 drawn on the First National Bank 'of Birmingham, Ala., which were afterwards ■paid to him by said bank, the transactions .'represented, in truth and fact, two loans 'made by the plaintiff to said Thompson. .There was also testimony offered by the defendant tending to show that, after this suit 'was brought, the plaintiff and her attorney, duly authorized, entered into negotiations for the repayment of the money by £be said 'agent, and that the said Thompson had ac *188 fnally repaid, to tlie plaintiff, or to her attorney, $15, for which plaintiff executed to Thompson a receipt, and had also paid to the plaintiff’s attorney $10 on his fee. That he also executed his note to the plaintiff for the sum of $300, payable in the monthly sum of $20 until paid in full.

The testimony on the part of the plaintiff tended to show that she specifically informed her attorney that she would not settle her case against the defendant until she was paid in full. That plaintiff did not authorize the taking of the note, and has never x’atified the act. In other words, the question of an. election was, under the pleading and the evidence in the case, one for the jury, assuming that, in a case like the present, such a plea would present a defense to the action— a question we are not now called upon to decide, as the parties treated the plea as presenting a defense, if it was proven.

Let it be here understood, however, that this action is to recover damages for a tort committed, so it is charged, by the defendant’s agent against the plaintiff., It must not be taken for granted that, in anything said above, we commit ourselves to the proposition that the principle of an election applies, nor do we commit ourselves to the proposition that the plaintiff, in such a case as the one now before us, could not have sued the defendant and the derelict agent jointly, or severally, and successively, until she had recovered of one or both the amount of her loss. Stapler v. Barter, 212 Ala. 644, 103 So. 573.

There is manifestly no merit in appellant’s first and second assignments of error. There was no exception reserved by the defendant to the allowance by the court of the amendment of the complaint, by adding counts 3 and 4. In the absence of-an objection and exception to such action of the court, there is nothing presented here for review.

The appellant’s third assignment of error is predicated upon the action of the court in sustaining plaintiff’s objection to the following remarks made by the defendant’s attorney in his opening statement to the jury: “And that it was only after she had had a falling out with this man Thompson, and that he didn’t pay her when she first requested the money, that she thought that the company was better able to pay and had more money and it would he a surer proposition.”

The right of counsel to make a preliminary or opening statement to the jury is fully recognized in this jurisdiction, but this right is not unlimited. The purpose and' function of such a statement is to advise the-jury of the facts relied upon to make up his-right of action or defense, “to define the nature of the questions involved, and advise them of the issues to be tried so as to enable them to understand the ease to be tried.”' Counsel, of course, may, in a reasonable way, outline what he expects to> prove, unless it is manifest that such proof would be incompetent, or the offer or statement is made for the-purpose of improperly influencing the jury. Prudential Ins. Co. v. Calvin (Ala. Sup.) 148 So. 837; 1 Atlanta Life Ins. Co. v. Canady, 225 Ala. 377, 143 So. 561; O’Connell v. Dow, 182 Mass. 541, 66 N. E. 788,; Sinclair Co. v. Waddill, 200 Ill. 17, 65 N. E. 437; 64 C. J. § 251, pp. 235, 236.

We do not think that the excepted to. part of the opening statement of defendant’s counsel was proper, and the court committed' no error in sustaining the plaintiff’s objection thereto.

The plaintiff’s counsel in replying to-the opening statement of the defendant’s attorney, among other things, said: “So far as-to the settlement, why gentlemen of the jury, we expect the evidence to show that Thompson, the man who we claim the evidence will show, defrauded this woman out of her money, had a suit himself against the Atlanta Life Insurance Company for damages because they had him arrested forsaking money that belonged to them.”

Assuming that defendant’s objection was-made and limited to the above-quoted portion of the statement of plaintiff’s counsel, yet a part of the statement was borne out by testimony thereafter introduced in the case, and. at the time it was so introduced, it was legally admissible. I-Iad the defendant confined: his objection to the following portion of the statement, to wit: “Por taking money that, belonged to them,” we are not prepared to-say that it should not have been sustained. As it was, the defendant’s objection was too-broad, and was, therefore, overruled without error.

After the examination of the witness Rosa Ash, recalled by the plaintiff, the-following appears in the bill of exceptions:-

“Mr. Wheeler: That is all for the plaintiff,, the plaintiff rests.
“Mr. Davis: We rest also.
“(1-Iere the court excused the jury while he made up the issues.)
*189 “After a statement by the court as to "what he conceived the issues to be, Mr. "Wheeler stated he wanted to testify 'himself.

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Bluebook (online)
153 So. 261, 228 Ala. 184, 1934 Ala. LEXIS 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atlanta-life-ins-co-v-ash-ala-1934.