Citizens Mutual Automobile Insurance v. Gardner

24 N.W.2d 410, 315 Mich. 689, 1946 Mich. LEXIS 373
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 7, 1946
DocketDocket No. 60, Calendar No. 42,647.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 24 N.W.2d 410 (Citizens Mutual Automobile Insurance v. Gardner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Citizens Mutual Automobile Insurance v. Gardner, 24 N.W.2d 410, 315 Mich. 689, 1946 Mich. LEXIS 373 (Mich. 1946).

Opinion

Carr, J.

Defendant Gardner, hereinafter referred to as the defendant, appeals from an order of the circuit court denying a motion to dismiss garnishment proceedings to enforce a judgment. The mo-, tion was based on a discharge in bankruptcy granted to defendant following the judgment. The question at issue is whether the defendant was released from liability on the judgment as a result of the proceeding in the bankruptcy court.

The plaintiff is a Michigan corporation and, for a number of years past, has been engaged in the writing of insurance oil motor vehicles. For some time prior to September, 1935, defendant was plaintiff’s agent at 'Williamston, Michigan. In such capacity he wrote insurance for plaintiff and collected premiums, such premiums including money owing to plaintiff and commissions owing* do defendant. February 3, 1933, defendant issued a check, payable to plaintiff in the sum of $34.75. February 9th, he issued a second check to plaintiff for $25.64. Apparently these checks did not clear prior to the bank holiday of 1933, nor were they subsequently paid by the bank on which they were dráwn. However, November 8, 1937, defendant paid plaintiff the sum of $20, and on March 10, 1938, the further sum of $40, which payments were credited on the cheeks.

Under date of September 3, 1935, plaintiff and defendant entered into a written agreement reciting in substance that defendant had acted as plaintiff’s agent in the sale of insurance with the understanding that all payments should be remitted promptly to plaintiff. Said agreement* further set forth that *692 defendant had not made payments as required, and that there was dne and payable to plaintiff, the sum of $463.46, which defendant was unable to pay at the time. Following such recital the' contract set forth that defendant would pay plaintiff not less than $20 per month on the account, and that he would endeavor to collect the balance due on insurance that he had sold and pay over all such collections to plaintiff. The concluding paragraph of the agreement read as follows:

“It is understood and agreed that if the party of the first part defaults in the payments in accordance with the aforesaid, that the said party of the second part will be at liberty to proceed with their regular remedy, said party of the first part acknowledging that he has had possession of the money and not delivered it in accordance with the company regulations.”

Defendant failed to carry out the agreement of September 3, 1935, and also failed to pay the checks in full. In March, 1939, plaintiff brought suit in assumpsit, the first -two counts of the declaration being based on the checks, the third count on the written agreement referred to above, and the fourth count on the common counts in assumpsit. On July 12, 1940, plaintiff recovered a default judgment against defendant in the sum of $591.48, with costs taxed at $24.10. The proofs offered by plaintiff in support of its right to recover established, the agency, the obligations relied on as evidence of the debt, and the amount owing by defendant to plaintiff, including interest.

Following the obtaining of the judgment against him, defendant filed his petition in the bankruptcy court, and on September 22, 1943, was discharged from all debts and claims provable under the bankruptcy act, other than debts expressly excepted by *693 said act from the operation of the discharge. Thereafter, plaintiff instituted garnishment proceedings on the judgment. Defendant moved to dismiss the proceedings claiming that the discharge in bankruptcy was a bar to the enforcement of the judgment. The trial court denied the motion to dismiss on the ground that the debt on which the judgment was based was created by the wrongful conversion of insurance premiums collected by defendant and was not within the operation of the discharge in bankruptcy.

Section 35 of the bankruptcy act (11 USCA, chap. 3, § 35) provides, insofar as material here, that:

“A discharge in bankruptcy shall release a bankrupt from all of his provable debts, except such as * * * (fourth) were created by his fraud, embezzlement, misappropriation, or defalcation while acting as an officer or in any fiduciary capacity.”

Plaintiff’s claim that defendant received the insurance premiums while acting in a fiduciary capacity is scarcely open to question. 3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 12369 (Stat. Ann. § 24.174), reads in part:

“Any money, substitute.for money or thing of value whatsoever, received by any agent, solicitor or broker as premium or return premium, on or under any policy of insurance or application therefor, shall be deemed to have been received by such agent, solicitor or broker in his fiduciary capacity. ’ ’

Citing this section it was said in Travelers Insurance Co. v. Bishop, 298 Mich. 600:

“Premiums collected by.an agent for an insurance company are received and held by the agent in a fiduciary capacity. The agent who collects and receives such premiums acts in a fiduciary capacity.”

*694 See, also, with reference to interpretation of the section in question Globe & Rutgers Fire Insurance Company of New York v. Fisher, 234 Mich. 258.

In determining whether the collection of plaintiff’s judgment is barred by defendant’s discharge in bankruptcy the controlling issue is the exact nature of the debt on which such judgment was based. It is well settled that the form of action in which the judgment is obtained is not material. It is also settled law that in determining the nature of the obligation the inquiry is limited to the record on which the judgment is based. In Field v. Howry, 132 Mich. 687, 693, this court quoted with approval from the opinion in Madison Township v. Dunkle, 114 Ind. 262 (16 N. E. 593), as follows:

“It is well settled that the courts will look behind a note, a mortgage, or even a judgment, to ascertain the nature of the debt, and, if it is ascertained to be one which a discharge (in bankruptcy) does not bar, it will be so adjudged.”

In Rice v. Guider, 275 Mich. 14, the judgment in question was based on a note but the record failed to show the nature of the debt so evidenced. Defendant, as in the case at bar, obtained his discharge in bankruptcy, and based his motion to stay the execution of a writ of garnishment to collect on the judgment on such discharge. In opposing the motion plaintiff sought to introduce testimony for the purpose of showing that the judgment was based, in large part, on fraud. It was held that such evidence was not competent, the court saying:

“A judgment is but an adjudication upon a record. Plaintiff could go back of the judgment but not back of the record.”

*695 Citing Rice v. Guider, supra, and other prior Michigan decisions, it was said in Horner v. Nerlinger, 304 Mich. 225:

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Bluebook (online)
24 N.W.2d 410, 315 Mich. 689, 1946 Mich. LEXIS 373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/citizens-mutual-automobile-insurance-v-gardner-mich-1946.