Fidelity Mutual Life Insurance v. Price

20 S.W.2d 874, 180 Ark. 214, 1929 Ark. LEXIS 255
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 21, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 20 S.W.2d 874 (Fidelity Mutual Life Insurance v. Price) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fidelity Mutual Life Insurance v. Price, 20 S.W.2d 874, 180 Ark. 214, 1929 Ark. LEXIS 255 (Ark. 1929).

Opinion

Butler, J.

Appellee’s intestate, James Arthur Price, in 1914 procured a policy of insurance from the appellant, Fidelity Mutual Life Insurance 'Company, in the sum of $5,000. He was at that time, or a short time thereafter, doing business with the appellant, American Southern Trust Company’s predecessor, and, to secure it for any advances made, assigned the policy as collateral security. This assignment contained a stipulation giving full power to the assignee or its legal representatives to receive in any form the value thereof, in trust, without liability on the part of the company to see to the proper discharge of the trust or any part thereof. In April, 1926, this assignment was released in writing, and an “•assignment absolute” was executed, by the terms of which all the right, title and interest in and to the policy and all benefits accruing or arising therefrom were transferred without qualification. The assignee was constituted attorney with full power to do any act necessary for the enjoyment of the policy assigned, and the company was expressly authorized to make all payments under the policy to the assignee.

Price died May 31, 1927. Proof of death was made by the assignee, and on the 16th day of June, 1927, the appellant insurance company made its cheek for the face value of the policy, less a loan which the insured had negotiated in his lifetime, the net amount being $4,571.62. This check was duly paid, and the proceeds appropriated by the appellant bank. The appellee, R. C. Price, as administrator of the estate of James A. Price, his heirs joining with the said administrator, brought this suit against both the appellant insurance company and the appellant bank. The complaint sufficiently alleges a joint liability on the part of the appellants, on the theory that the assignment had been canceled by an oral agreement made between the appellant bank and the insured, and the policy constructively delivered to the insured, and the possession held by the bank thereafter was as agent of the insured, and that he was the owner of the policy, and his beneficiaries entitled to the proceeds at his death; that all of these facts were known to the insurance company, and that, with this knowledge, it colluded with the appellant bank to defraud the beneficiaries, and, in furtherance of the common design, accepted 'from the bank the policy, and made payment of the proceeds to it to enable its confederate to fraudulently convert the proceeds thereof to its own use.

This suit was filed in the circuit court of Arkansas County. Service was had upon the'insurance company, and summons issued and served on the bank in Pulaski County by virtue of § 1176 of Crawford & Moses’ Digest, which is as follows: ‘ ‘ Every other action may be brought in any county in which the defendant, or one of several defendants, resides, or is summoned.” After service upon it, and before issue joined, the appellant bank challenged the jurisdiction of the court by its motion to quash service on it. Upon denial of its motion, proper exceptions were saved, and in its answer, after traversing the allegations of the complaint, it set up the fact that it was a banking corporation, domiciled in Pulaski County, with no branch in Arkansas County, and moved to transfer to chancery. The court sustained the motion to transfer, and the appellees (plaintiffs below) moved to dismiss as to both defendants, which motion was sustained. Thereafter the appellees filed their motion to reinstate. Appellants .contested this motion, but the motion was sustained, and the cause reinstated, appellant bank appearing and contesting the motion to reinstate.

After the cause was reinstated, an amendment to the complaint and response to the motion to transfer to equity was filed, and, on a hearing of the response, the court set aside the order to transfer, and the cause then proceeded to trial, which trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff against both defendants in the amount sued for, to-wit, $2,997.50.

The insurance company raised no question as to the service upon it, but, before answer, moved to strike because there was a misjoinder of parties and no joint liability alleged. These motions were overruled. The insurance company answered, and, at the conclusion of the testimony, moved for a directed verdict, because the facts proved failed to establish any liability as to it. The appellant insurance company and the appellant bank filed their joint motion for a new trial, in which they preserved their objections and exceptions to the action of the court, and, their motion for a new trial being overruled, they have prosecuted this appeal.

They insist that there was no evidence tending to establish the allegations of fraudulent conspiracy of the appellants, The appellees, on their part, contend that there is ample testimony to warrant the trial court in submitting’ this question to the jury. The facts relied upon to establish the allegations of fraudulent conspiracy may be thus summarized:

The insured died on or about May, 31, 1927, and was buried June 2, following: On that day Mr. C. P. Ball addressed a letter to “ft. C. Bright, manager of the Fidelity Mutual Life Insurance Company, Little Rock, Arkansas.” Ball had been a friend of the insured, and was interested in the welfare of his family, and, moved by this, he wrote the letter, in which he informed Bright of the recitals of the decree of the chancery court entered May 28, 1928, showing that in 1922 the insured executed a mortgage on certain lands to secure an indebtedness due the appellant bank’s predecessors, and had pledged two insurance policies issued by the appellant insurance company; that in the decree there was no personal judgment against the insured, and that the delivery of certain personal property, and the foreclosing of lands and sale of same to be made thereunder was in satisfaction and settlement of the indebtedness due. After making these statements, the letter concluded with the request for information relative to the status of the two policies.

On June 4, 1927, Mr. Bright answered the inquiry, stating that there had been one policy issued to the insured by his company for $5,000; that later the insured made application for another policy for $6,000, but that the last named policy was not acceptable to the insured, and was declined; that after this the $5,000 which had been pledged as collateral security was “assigned to the bank absolutely.” He stated that, because of the assignment, the fact that no personal judgment was given in the decree mentioned would not serve to enable the family of the insured to receive the proceeds of the policy, but gave it as his opinion that, notwithstanding the assignment absolute, “as a matter of practice and good conscience, so far as I know,' under the assignment absolute, if an equity exists it is turned over to the heirs of the deceased.” He further stated: “You know that the bank had paid the premiums for several years, and the collection of the policy will not prevent them from sustaining an actual loss. ’ ’

It developed that Bright was mistaken, at least as to the payment of two past due premiums, which the assured paid through the appellant bank in April, 1926, and he also paid the premium due November, 1926, which ivas remitted by the appellant bank to the insurance company, with the request to mail receipt direct to the insured. Insured also paid the premium due November, 1927, by his personal check delivered to Mr. Bright.

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20 S.W.2d 874, 180 Ark. 214, 1929 Ark. LEXIS 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fidelity-mutual-life-insurance-v-price-ark-1929.