Dillon v. Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance

44 Md. 386, 1876 Md. LEXIS 47
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 9, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 44 Md. 386 (Dillon v. Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dillon v. Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance, 44 Md. 386, 1876 Md. LEXIS 47 (Md. 1876).

Opinion

Miller, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

A motion has been made to dismiss this appeal which is taken from an order directing the appellant, Dillon, to pay into Court the sum of $21,400.19. Alter answer filed, all the testimony now appearing in the record, was taken under an order to show cause why the money should not be brought in. We do not propose to state at length the avei’ments of the bill or of the answer, but simply such facts admitted by the pleadings, and established by the proof, as are necessary to a correct understanding and decision of the immediate question before us.

Dillon from the year 1864 until his discharge on the 5th of March, 1875, was a general agent of the appellee, a life insurance company, and had the office of his agency in the City of Baltimore. It wras part of liis duty as such [389]*389agent, to collect, for a certain commission, and remit to the company from time to time, all premiums on policies issued by the company and on renewals thereof. In September, 1874, the company for the better protection of its interests, and those of its policy holders, directed all its agents to deposit all premiums collected by them, less their proper commissions, in some hank which they shoull select, in a separate account, showing the deposits to he for the sole use of the company, and subject to he drawn by the agents, by cheeks payable to the order of the company or its officers only. In compliance with this direction, Dillon selected the First National Bank of Baltimore as his depository, and made deposits therein accordingly. But from the 1st of Januaiy, 1875, up to the time of his discharge in March following, he did not so deposit all the money he thus collected for the company, but retained in his own possession and deposited elsewhere, the amount now in controversy. The bill which was filed on the 10th of March, 1875, charges that this retention and withholding of the money was with intent to defraud the company, and to convert the money to his own use, and amongst other relief, prays that he mai7 be required to render an account of the money so received by him, and to pay over the same to the company, and forasmuch as the complainant lias just cause to believe, and does believe and charge, that if not prevented, he will, pending these proceedings, make way with the money so that it will he wholly lost to the complainant, it prays in the meantime, for an order requiring him to bring the money into Court, or that a receiver he appointed to take charge of the same, to abide the further action of the Court in the premises. It must he conceded, (as it was in fact at bar,) that the hill makes out a case within the jurisdiction of a Court of equity.

In his answer, Dillon admits that he has collected and retained in his own' possession, and has now in his hands [390]*390or under Iris control, this sum of $21,400.19, hut indignantly and emphatically denies and repels all the charges of fraud and assaults upon his integrity, contained in the bill. He avers that when he entered into the company’s service, it was agreed he should receive certain specified commissions on all old and on all new business, and that it was expressly agreed, that he should continue to receive this percentage on suchbusiness so long as the premiums should continue to be paid to the company; that the mode, character and duration of the pay thus to be received by him, were at that time customary in life insurance business, no agent of character or capacity, being willing, except under special circumstances, to undertake the arduous duties of such an agency, and pay out the large commissions required by sub-agents for procuring customers, unless secured in the right to receive his commissions as aforesaid, pending the running of the policies and renewals, whether he remained in the service of the company or not. He then charges that from certain acts of the company or its officers, which are stated at length, and especially by their requiring him to execute a bond, the terms of which would involve an abandonment of the benefits of his contract, and by the declaration to him, of Greene, the company’s secretary, that he would not recognize any right of respondent to receive commissions, after ceasing to be agent, and that the company would insist on its right to terminate his agency, and deprive him of such commissions at its pleasure, he became assured it was the purpose and object of Greene and the company, by the exaction of this bond and their subsequent course, fraudulently and illegally to drive him to such action, as would give them a pretext for pretending to remove him from office for cause ; that he became finally and fully convinced of this purpose and determination on the part of the company, in December, 1874, and he then on his part, resolved to protect and indemnify himself as far as he was [391]*391able, against snob injustice, and for that, reason alone, and not {'or any fraudulent or improper purpose whatever, he retained and deposited elsewhere than in the hank, and still retains under his control, the money in question, but kept the amount so retained, largely within the damages to which the breach of the contract by the company would entitle him, and is prepared to prove by competent actuaries that this sum is much less than what he will he entitled to receive under the contract for the value and broach thereof. He further states, that before receiving process in this suit, he instituted an action at law in the Superior Court, where the same is now pending, to recover damages from the company for its breach of this contract, over and above the amount so retained, which amount he avers is wholly inadequate to his sufficient indemnity and compensation. He admits the company is entirely able to pay all its just dues, but submits be is in no way com pelable on that account to surrender rights which attach to the nature of the transaction, and not to the pecuniary abilities of the parties.

Besides the admissions in the answer, it appears by the proof' that all of this money was collected by Dillon, before he was discharged from his agency, and that the sum ordered to he brought into Court, is a balance remaining after deducting all the commissions to which he was entitled. Had he any legal or equitable right to retain this mono}’'? We know of no ground upon which that right can he placed, unless the position suggested in the answer and elaborated in the argument for the appellant, can he sustained. That position is, that Dillon had the right to recoup the damages he sustained by the breach of the alleged contract, out of the moneys he so retained, and consequently has the right to retain them for that purpose. Let us briefly consider this proposition. It is claimed, (as it must he to sustain the point,) that he had the right to bring his action against the company for [392]*392breach of this contract, and to recover in such action the present value in gross of the future commissions. Assuming then for the sake of the argument he could do this, when did the right to bring this action arise? Not in our opinion until he was discharged, or ceased to be the company’s agent. So long as he continued agent, collecting premiums and receiving the accruing commissions on them, it would, we think, be impossible fox him to sustain such a suit', no matter how unequivocally and positively the company may have declared its refusal to recognize his right to receive commissions after the termination of his agency, or denied the existence of any con-ti'iict to that effect.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 Md. 386, 1876 Md. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dillon-v-connecticut-mutual-life-insurance-md-1876.