Bristol Mutual Liability Insurance v. Leard

1 Mass. App. Div. 328

This text of 1 Mass. App. Div. 328 (Bristol Mutual Liability Insurance v. Leard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts District Court, Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bristol Mutual Liability Insurance v. Leard, 1 Mass. App. Div. 328 (Mass. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

Jones, P. J.

An action of contract in which plaintiff seeks to recover $17.41 on an account annexed for an assessment upon the defendant as policy holder under a mu- ■ tuai liability policy of insurance issued by the plaintiff. The answer is general denial, plea of payment and that the attempted assessment made on the policy of insurance was made, and the defendant notified more than one year after the expiration of the policy under which the same was attempted to be levied, contrary to her contract and that the attempted assessment on the policy named in the declaration was not laid by the company in accordance with law and her contract on account of losses and expenses incurred while she was a member.

The report says that at the trial the plaintiff introduced in evidence a certified copy from the Supreme Judicial Court containing a list of assessments among which appeared the name of the defendant, which may be referred to. At the hearing before the Appellate Division, it was agreed that the name of the defendant therein appearing was in fact the defendant in this case.

The certified copy above referred to was exhibited at the arguments before us and was in this form:

“COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS.
Suffolk, ss. Supreme Judicial Court.
I, CHARLES S. O’CONNOR, Clerk of said Court, hereby certify that it appears from among the lists of assessments filed in the case of Commissioner of Insurance v. Bristol Mutual Liability Insurance Company, No. 52411 on the Equity docket of this Court, the following assessments were computed and, by decree of this Court dated January 10, 1933, were ratified, confirmed and established.
[330]*330. Policy No. Name Address Amount
• * •• • • • •
12287 Una M. Leard 154 Jefferson *Av. Everett, 17.41 In witness whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and affixed the seal of said Court, this twenty-fifth day of October, A. D. 1935.
CHARLES S. O ’CONNOR, (seal) Clerk.

This certificate was admitted without objection.

The defendant, over the objection of the plaintiff, offered in evidence and the court admitted the defendant’s policy of insurance dated January 1, 1929 expiring January 1, 1930, and the plaintiff’s notice to the defendant of the assessment in question, dated February 1933, and the admissibility of this evidence is properly before us. This notice is that “by decree of the Supreme Judicial Court for Suffolk County, Massachusetts, it is found and decided that you are indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of $17.41 under the assessment of all policy holders.”

At the close of the trial and before the final arguments the plaintiff made the following requests for rulings:

1. The introduction and admission in evidence of the certified copy of the decree of the Supreme Judicial Court, showing the assessment against the defendant, upon which the plaintiff’s action is predicated, made out a prima fade ease for the plaintiff.

2. The defendant, as a matter of law, introduced no evidence to rebut the plaintiff’s prima fade case.

The Court failed to act on any of the plaintiff’s requests for rulings. The Court found for the defendant and made the following findings of facts:

“Plaintiff offered certificate of the Clerk of the Supreme Court that Defendant’s name appeared on a list of assessments against policy holders of the Plaintiff, which assessments had been ratified, confirmed and established by decree of the Court dated January 10,1933.
Plaintiff rested.
[331]*331Defendant, over objection of Plaintiff, offered and the Court admitted Defendant’s policy of insurance dated Jan. 1, 1929, expiring Jan. 1, 1930 also Plaintiff’s notice to Defendant of the assessment dated February 1933.”

The report contains all the evidence material to the questions reported.

We are left in considerable doubt in this case regarding the basis of the finding for the defendant. John L. Hetherington & Sons v. William Firth, 210 Mass. 8,17. He made no specific denial of the requests for rulings. Under the general rule where there is a general finding for the defendant with no specific treatment of rulings requested by the plaintiff such rulings are deemed denied. Plimpton v. New York, New Haven & Hartford, 221 Mass. 548, 551; John Hetherington & Sons v. William Firth, 210 Mass. 8, 17; Jasuikiewicz v. Wright, 288 Mass. 63, 65; Sullivan v. Roche, 257 Mass. 166, 169.

The first request in substance asks for a ruling of law that the evidence contained in the certificate of the clerk of the Supreme Judicial Court above quoted made out a prima facie case for the plaintiff. It is undoubtedly a rule of evidence in Massachusetts that “to prove a fact of record by a record not produced requires a duly authenticated copy of the record itself, or of so much thereof as relates to the fact in question”. Wayland v. Ware, 109 Mass. 248, 250; Wigmore on Evidence, §1678, 1904 Ed. Oakes v. Hill, 14 Pick. 448; Green v. Durfee, 6 Cush. 362, 363.

But the certificate of the clerk, having been admitted without objection, became competent evidence the same as if it had been in the form of a certificate duly certified and having been admitted without objection and being material it should have been weighed with the other evidence and given any evidentiary value which it may have possessed. [332]*332“It was entitled to its natural probative force”. Damon v. Carroll, 163 Mass. 404, DuBois v. Powdrell, 271 Mass. 394, 397, Mahoney v. Harley Private Hospital, Inc., 279 Mass. 96,100.

As a general rule, “incompetent evidence which is introduced without objection becomes evidence in the particular case, and must be treated as any other competent evidence . . . When evidence has been offered for a particular purpose and no objection made thereto, it must be-treated as competent evidence for the purpose for which it is offered”. 9 Enc. Ev. 111, 112. Goldstein v. Northern Pacific Railway Company, L. R. A. 1918, A. 612, 615.

The certificate, therefore, giving it its evidential value, was sufficient to prove that in the Supreme Judicial Court there had been a suit in equity in which there had been a computation of certain assessments upon the policy holders of the plaintiff company, including this defendant, and by decree of that court dated January 10, 1933, ratified, confirmed and established; and that among the assessments was one made on policy No. 12287, Una M. Leard, (admitted here to be the person identical with the defendant). In our opinion these evidentiary facts appearing from the certificate and being uncontradicted clearly proved due adjudication that the assessment was duly levied.

The adjudication was made as provided by G-. L. e. 175, §84, which provides :

“If the directors by authority of law make an assessment or call on the members for money . . . they or any person interested in the company as an officer, policy holder or creditor may apply to the supreme judicial court ...

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Bluebook (online)
1 Mass. App. Div. 328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bristol-mutual-liability-insurance-v-leard-massdistctapp-1936.