Farnam v. Brooks

26 Mass. 212
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1830
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 26 Mass. 212 (Farnam v. Brooks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farnam v. Brooks, 26 Mass. 212 (Mass. 1830).

Opinion

Parker C. J.

This bill seeks to set aside a settlement of accounts and contract made between the defendant and the administrators of Tuthill Hubbart, in the year 1808, the subject of which was an insurance account subsisting between Hubbart and the defendant for several years, and not adjusted in the lifetime of Hubbart. The defendant was an insurance-broker from the year 1785 to the year 1803, keeping an office in which Hubbart and divers other underwriters were accustomed to underwrite policies of insurance, and during that period a vast amount of insurance business was transacted under the particular care and inspection of the defendant, who was the general agent of that office, he keeping all the accounts for the underwriters, receiving premiums and paying losses, and receiving a commission for his services. It appears also, that there was a private agreement of copartnership between the defendant and Hubbart, not known to the other underwriters in the office, in virtue of which the defendant became interested in one fourth part of all sums underwritten by Hubbart in regard to premiums and losses. This copartnership commenced in October 1794, and continued until June 1803, when the defendant discontinued keeping the office ; at which time there were large balances due to Hubbart, which remained unadjusted till his death. In January 1808, Hubbart died intestate, and soon afterwards administration of his estate was committed to Elizabeth Partridge, his sister, and William Gooch, who was the husband of another sister of Hubbart, he having died unmarried agd without children.

On the 4th day of April, 1808, the defendant paid to the .administrators $ 60,C00, as and for a full settlement and discharge of all the claims in behalf of Hubbart’s estate against him, and the administrators, having received that sum, subscribed a receipt in the following words, viz : “ Boston, April 4, 1808. Received of Peter Chardon Brooks sixty thousand dollars in full [218]*218for the whole underwriting account of Tutbill Hubbart deceased, in the office formerly kept by said Brooks, from the period of said Hubbart’s first beginning to underwrite in said office up to this time. The agreement between us »nd the said Brooks being, that the said underwriting account of said Hubbart, with all its advantages and with all its disadvantages, be wholly the property of said Brooks, in like manner as if the said Brooks had been the original underwriter instead of sari Hubbart. E. Partridge, W. Gooch, administrators, &c. Attest, Aaron Bean.”

It is this receipt which is sought to be set aside, and this bill alleges various grounds as operating in equity to defeat the otherwise legal effect thereof. It is alleged, that Hubbart was an old and infirm man during the latter part of his life ; that his mind was enfeebled, so that he was unable to understand and take care of his concerns ; that he did not know and was not informed of the state of accounts between himself and the defendant ; that the accounts were not kept in a clear and intelli gible manner, but were so irregular and confused that Hubbart could not, if he had inclined, gain any knowledge thereof; that an attempt was made by the defendant, after the dissolution of the copartnership, to procure a partial and unjust settlement, by taking advantage of the infirmity and incapacity of Hubbart; that after his death, a statement was made out by the defendant and given to the administrators, showing a balance in his hands of $ 64,0! 0, which was erroneous in omitting many sums which ought to have been credited, and charging others which ought not to have been debited to Hubbart’s estate, so that the real balance in his hands was $ 68,000, and that there was also presented to the administrators a list of claims against the insurance account of Hubbart, which was exaggerated and false, and that upon this statement and list of claims, the administrators, supposing them to be true and reposing confidence in the defendant, were induced to accept his offer of $ 60,000 and give him the receipt, discharge and transfer before mentioned.

The answer to this bill denies all unfair advantages taken or attempted to be taken of Hubbart in his lifetime, or of the administrators ; alleges that the settlement was free and voluntar) on their part ; that Hubbart, though aged and infirm, was oi [219]*219competent capacity to understand his rights, and that he had full knowledge, or opportunity of knowledge, of the state of accounts between them ; that he constantly visited the office, and frequently inspected the books, and that annually he had presented to him, or might have taken, like the other underwriters, an account, showing the exact state of his concerns in the office ; that the defendant never concealed any thing from him, but was always desirous and willing to settle with him and pay any balance that was due ; that after the business of the office was closed, the defendant frequently urged him to a settlement, and was desirous of settling in any way Hubbart should choose, and proposed to pay a gross sum, as he had done to other underwriters, who had concurred in his proposal, only on account of the great difficulty of making a minute adjustment of all the affairs in the office ; that after Hubbart’s death, the defendant made the same proposal to the administrators for the same reason, offering to them an examination of all his books and accounts, and exhibiting the same to a person selected by them, of competent skill, and was ready to assist in any investigation which should be required ; that the person so selected did examine the books and receive all necessary aid from the defendant therein, and that after having examined as far as he desired, he recommended to the administrators to accept the offer of the defendant, and that they did, after full deliberation and after consultation with all interested in Hubbart’s estate, freely and without any influence or misrepresentation on his part, receive the money offered, and thereupon signed the receipt and transfer before mentioned, signed in the presence of Aaron Bean, their confidential friend and adviser.

Many special interrogatories are appended to the bill touching divers subjects connected with the insurance business, and are answered in such manner as to exonerate the defendant from any liability to account.

The amended bill traverses and denies all the exculpatory statements in the answer, and reasserts the charges in the bill.

The answer to the amended bill reaffirms all the denials and assertions contained in the first answer, and thus the parties are bright to issue on a vast mass of allegations and denials, which, though difficult, it is necessary to analyze and reduce into a [220]*220form as simple as possible, in order to come to an opinion upon true merits of the case. The arguments and statements of counsel have much facilitated our labor in the investigation of the voluminous matter of the bill, and yet it is not without anxiety, arising from our incessant devotion to other necessary official duties, that we enter into an exposition of so complicated a case, consisting of disputable points of law as well as fact, and requiring perhaps a more minute examination than, under the circumstances in which we have been placed, we may have been able to bestow.

The general object of the bill is to set aside the contract made between the defendant and the administrators of Tuthill Hubbart in April 1808,.almost twenty years before the filing of the bill.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 Mass. 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farnam-v-brooks-mass-1830.