Bankers Life And Casualty Company v. Guarantee Reserve Life Insurance Company Of Hammond

365 F.2d 28
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedAugust 4, 1966
Docket15368
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 365 F.2d 28 (Bankers Life And Casualty Company v. Guarantee Reserve Life Insurance Company Of Hammond) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bankers Life And Casualty Company v. Guarantee Reserve Life Insurance Company Of Hammond, 365 F.2d 28 (7th Cir. 1966).

Opinion

365 F.2d 28

BANKERS LIFE AND CASUALTY COMPANY, a corporation, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
GUARANTEE RESERVE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF HAMMOND, a
corporation, andNational Protective Life Insurance
Co., a corporation, Defendants-Appellants.

No. 15368.

United States Court of Appeals Seventh Circuit.

June 17, 1966, Rehearing Denied Aug. 4, 1966.

Claude A. Roth, Charles D. Stein, Noel Kaplan, Chicago, Ill., Gottlieb & Schwartz, Chicago, Ill., of counsel, for appellants.

Charles F. Short, Jr., Chicago, Ill., Brundage & Short, Chicago, Ill., of counsel, for appellee.

Before KNOCH, CASTLE and SWYGERT, Circuit Judges.

SWYGERT, Circuit Judge.

Bankers Life and Casualty Company, an Illinois corporation with its principal office in Chicago, brought this diversity action against Guarantee Reserve Life Insurance Company of Hammond and National Protective Life Insurance Company, Indiana corporations with their principal offices in Hammond, Indiana.1 Both the plaintiff and the defendants are engaged in the sale of accident, health, and life insurance. Bankers' three-count complaint charged essentially that Guarantee and National wrongfully obtained and used a quantity of IBM cards containing the names of Bankers' policyholders. After a trial without a jury, the district court entered findings of fact and conclusions of law favorable to Bankers and rendered judgment in its favor on all counts of the complaint. The court assessed $400,000 as compensatory damages and $400,000 as punitive damages. Guarantee and National have appealed, challenging the district court's findings both as to liability and the amount of damages. We have concluded that certain critical findings underlying Bankers' right to recover are clearly erroneous-- in substance, that Bankers failed to prove its case.

The evidence introduced at the trial, taken in the light most favorable to Bankers, tended to show the following.

Richard M. Seidel is the son-in-law of Ben Jaffe who, with his family, owned a seventy-three per cent interest in Guarantee. During 1957 and 1958, Seidel held stock in Guarantee and was a trustee of other Guarantee stock owned by the members of his family. In October 1957, Seidel became one of the incorporators, a director, and the secretary of National. He became an officer of Guarantee and an employee of both Guarantee and National in January 1958.

Prior to that time, since 1949, Seidel had also been a mailing list dealer or broker in Chicago. In that capacity in 1957 he schedualed mailing lists for Guarantee, substantially at this own discretion. At that time Seidel also shared an office with Rapid Mailing and Advertising Company which was purchased by Guarantee in the latter part of 1957 and moved to Hammond, Indiana.

At the trial Seidel, called as an adverse witness, testified that early in 1957 he was approached by a man who said his name was John Thompson and who offered approximately 150,000 IBM punch cards for sale. Each card had a name and address stamped on it, together with a series of dates and figures. On some of the cards, the word 'lapsed' was also present. Seidel stated that, after testing the names by sending Guarantee literature to 5,000 of the addresses and receiving a satisfactory percentage response, he purchased the cards for $10 per thousand. He testified that he paid $1,500 for the cards and that Thompson insisted on being paid in cash. Seidel added that although he learned nothing from Thompson at first about the source of the cards othere than that they had been used by an insurance company, he ultimately was told that the cards had come from Bankers and that Thompson had purchased them from a scrap dealer who was responsible for sweeping the offices of Bankers.

At this point it should be noted that Alan Drey, the vice president in charge of the Chicago office of a New York concern in the mailing list and direct mailing business, also testified that a man who gave the name of Thompson contacted him sometime around 1957 or 1958 in an effort to rent him 'several hundred thousand' IBM-type punch cards with names and addresses on them and which had allegedly been used by an insurance company.

Next, according to Seidel's testimony, he arranged to have the names on the IBM cards typed onto a list by employees of Rapid Mailing, from which list two sets of labels were prepared. He then destroyed the cards. One set of labels was rented to Guarantee during 1957 at $15 per thousand names for solicitation of insurance by mail. The second set of labels was retained at Rapid Mailing and was delivered to Guarantee when Rapid Mailing was purchased and moved to Hammond, Indiana. These labels were used to solicit insurance for National early in 1958.

During 1956 and 1957, Bankers used a three-part IBM card system for the purpose of notice and collection of premiums, rather than the premium history card system traditionally employed by insurance companies. Under Bankers' system, two parts of the IBM card were went to the policyholder, one part to be retained by him and the second part, the 'premium notice' card,2 to be returned with his premium check. The third part, known as a 'status card,' was retained in Bankers' accounts receivable file. The status card did not bear Bankers' name. It contained only premium payment information and the name and address of the policyholder. When a premium was paid and the premium notice card was returned to Bankers, the premium notice card was matched against the accounts receivable file and then filed in a separate room for state examination purposes. A 'paid to' date was punched into the status card, the status card was placed in an 'active status' file, and the old status card was removed from this file and discarded. Status cards were similarly discarded after a certain grace period upon nonpayment of the premium.

In the early part of 1958, after he had taken charge of direct mail soliciations for Guarantee and National. (and while Rapid Mailing was in the process of moving to Hammond), Seidel employed Mailers, Inc. of Chicago to handle the mailing of several million pieces of literature. An employee of Mailers, Inc. testified that Guarantee provided his firm with groups of addressed labels together with matching code numbers to identify the mailings. During January and February 1958, Mailers, Inc. either mailed or labeled and delivered to Guarantee and National approximately 1,500,000 envelopes corresponding with doce numbers which included the figure '2729.' The invocies covering this work showed that several mailings in varying quantities were actually involved and that the number '2729,' common to this group of mailings, occasionally appeared alone but more often appeared with letter prefixes and suffixes.3 The Mailers, Inc. employee testified that the code number '2729' represented a single list and that the letter prefixes and suffixes merely indicated portions of the master list. He stated that he knew this because of his dealings with employees of Guarantee over the years.

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