Cable v. United States Life Insurance

191 U.S. 288, 24 S. Ct. 74, 48 L. Ed. 188, 1903 U.S. LEXIS 1451
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 30, 1903
Docket28
StatusPublished
Cited by93 cases

This text of 191 U.S. 288 (Cable v. United States Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cable v. United States Life Insurance, 191 U.S. 288, 24 S. Ct. 74, 48 L. Ed. 188, 1903 U.S. LEXIS 1451 (1903).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Pecicham,

after making the foregoing statement of facts, delivered the opinion of the court.

It is contended, upon the part of the administratrix of the estate of the assured, that the court below had no jurisdiction on the ground that there existed a complete and adequate remedy '(or defence) at law when the company was sued upon the policy, and that the effect of allowing this jurisdiction in the Circuit Court is to improperly deprive the defendant herein of a trial by jury.

It is conceded by the plaintiff in error that no cause of action existed in favor of the complainant herein upon the law side of the Federal court, the contention being that the company could set up, as a defence to any action brought against it in the Federal court, those allegations of fraud which, being proved, would constitute a .perfect and complete defence to any action upon the policy.

*303 The company, however,, avers that the administratrix has elected not to bring her action in the Federal court, although she might have done so on the gound of diversity of citizenship, but has, instead of so doing, brought it in the state court/ and hence the company would have no opportunity of setting Up its defence in a Federal court in an action brought on the policy, and it insists that on that account it has not that complete and adequate remedy or defence at law, in the same jurisdiction, which it contends is necessary in such case.

It is true that the remedy or defence which will oust an equity court' of jurisdiction must be as complete and as adequate, as sufficient and as final, as the remedy in equity, or else the latter court retains jurisdiction, and it must be a remedy which may be resorted to without impediment created otherwise than by the act of the party, and the remedy or defence must be capable of being asserted without rendering the party asserting it liable to the imposition of heavy penalties or forfeitures, arising other than by reason of its own act.

It is also urged, as an answer to the claim of the company, as to jurisdiction, that even though the remedy or defence at law must exist in the same (Federal) jurisdiction, yet it is within the power of the company, if it see fit to do so, to remove the action in the state court to the Federal court, and thus its defence at law,' while adequate, would also be within the same jurisdiction in which its suit in equity was .commenced.

It is further insisted by the administratrix that it is unnecessary that an action at law should have been Commenced in the same jurisdiction, but it is sufficient that the defence would be available and complete if such an action should be commenced in a Federal court of law.

As to the removal of the action from the state to the Federal court, the company avers that, even assuming it had the right so to remove, yet it insists that such removal would be too hazardous to the company by subjecting it to a possible revocation of its license to do business in the State to be of any adequate avail.

*304 It is algo argued upon the part of the company that the position of a defendant in an action is not so advantageous as that of a plaintiff, as the plaintiff has the conduct of a cause largely within his own control; and it is said that the law as administered in the state court is not so favorable to insurance companies as is the case in the Federal courts, and that the company had the right to an administration of the law by the Federal instead of the state court by reason of the diversity of citizenship.

These objections are to be considered.

In Hurd’s Revised Statutes of Illinois, chap. 7B, title “Insurance,” in relation to foreign'insurance companies,-it is provided: That any such company must first file a written application for a license, in which it shall state that it desires to transact the business of insurance, and . that it will accept a license according to the laws of the State, “ and that said license shall cease and terminate in case, and whenever, it shall remove or make applipation to remove into any United States court, any action or proceeding commenced in any of the state courts, of this State, upon any claim or cause of action arising out of any business transaction, in fact, done in this State,” etc. The statute also provides that if any company thereafter removes or applies to remove into the United States court any action commenced in a state court of .the kind above mentioned, “it is hereby made the imperative duty of the auditor of public accounts, at once to revoke, cancel and annul the license issued to such incorporated company, association or partnership; and thereafter no such incorporated company, association or partnership shall transact within this State any business for which it was incorporated until again duly licensed. In case such revocation of license shall be.made because of the removal of or the attempt to remove any action from a state court of this State to any United States court no renewal of such license shall be made within three years after such revocation.” Provision is also made that if the license is revoked, publication of the fact shall be made in the newspapers.

*305 This court has held that, although there may be power in a Federal court of equity in a proper case to order the delivery up and cancellation of a policy of insurance obtained upon fraudulent representations and suppression of facts, yet it will notlgenerally do so when those representations and suppres-sions can be perfectly well established in a defence at law in a suit upon the policy, and it, therefore, affirmed a decree which dismissed, without prejudice, a bill filed for obtaining the delivery up and cancellation of a policy so issued, although the evidences of the fraud were considerable and a suit on the policy had been begun in an action at law after the bill in equity was filed. Insurance Co. v. Bailey, 13 Wall. 616.

That was a suit by the company to obtain the delivery up and cancellation of certain policies of life insurance after the death of the assured, on the ground that the policies had been procured by the defendant, the widow of the deceased, by fraudulent suppression .of material facts, and by the misrepresentation of others of the same class. The answer denied the allegations made.- It.was held that the company would have a perfect defence at law in an action by the holder upon the policy of insurance, and for that reason equity would refuse to take jurisdiction of an action to compel the delivery- up and cancellation of the policies. The court said:

“By the death of the c.estui que vie the obligation to pay, as expressed 'in the policies, became fixed and absolute, subject only to the condition to give notice and furnish proof of that event within ninety days. Notice having been given and the required proof furnished, the obligation to pay certainly became fixed by the terms of the policies and the sums insured became a purely legal demand, and if so, it is difficult to see what remedy, more nearly perfect and complete, the appellants can have than is afforded them by their right to make defence at law, which secures to them the right of trial by jury.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
191 U.S. 288, 24 S. Ct. 74, 48 L. Ed. 188, 1903 U.S. LEXIS 1451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cable-v-united-states-life-insurance-scotus-1903.