Ford v. New York Life Ins. Co.

180 S.E. 37, 176 S.C. 186, 1935 S.C. LEXIS 190
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMarch 5, 1935
Docket14012
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 180 S.E. 37 (Ford v. New York Life Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ford v. New York Life Ins. Co., 180 S.E. 37, 176 S.C. 186, 1935 S.C. LEXIS 190 (S.C. 1935).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. C. J. Ramage, Acting Associate Justice.

*188 On May 10, 1933, the respondent herein commenced two actions in the Court of Common Pleas for York County.

Each action was for the recovery of certain disability benefits alleged to be due under two separate policies of insurance, together with premiums paid during such period of disability.

On October 31, 1921, John M. Ford, the plaintiff, was issued two policies of insurance with the appellant-company. The policies were of the same date, each in the sum of $2,000.00, and each identical in wording. The only difference was in the number of the policies.

On April 12, 1932, John M. Ford became totally disabled and on that date made proof to the defendant company of his disability, and demanded payment of $20.00 per month under each policy, this being the monthly payment provided in the policies in case of total and permanent disability. This demand was refused, and action was brought on each policy, asking for the sum of $260.00, representing thirteen months’ disability at $20.00 per month, and also the sum of $80.70, premiums paid on each policy during this period of disability and which, under the terms-of the policy, he was entitled to recover if disabled.

The complaint alleges that proof of disability was duly made. The defendant admits that plaintiff did furnish some forms in which he claimed to have been totally and permanently disabled, but denied that he was totally and permanentfy disabled. The proof of disability, as filed by plaintiff, is not set forth in the printed case, as prepared by appellant, and its contents are referred to in the cross examination of Dr. Dulin.

By Exception 1 the appellant alleges error in requiring a consolidation of the two actions. The policies in question were identical as to dates, amounts, and provisions. They differed only as to numbers. Suits on both policies were started the same day. The testimony and law were applicable alike to each policy. If there had been two *189 trials, one on each policy, the second trial would have been but a repetition of the first, with the same witnesses and the same testimony. The Court, in order to save time and the expenses of the trial, consolidated the two suits for trial.

The appellant admits, in its brief, that the plaintiff could have at the outset consolidated the two actions by setting forth separately in the same complaint. This could have been done pursuant to provisions of the statutes. Section 487, Code 1932.

Quoting from 1 R. C. E., 359: “It is a common practice to consolidate actions pending in the same Court that might have been brought in one action, the purpose of the consolidation being to prevent a multiplicity of suits. Formerly it was considered that a Court of chancery had no power to consolidate causes pending therein, but the rule at the present day is the same in equity as at law. Independently of statutes, the power of consolidation has been exercised with the greatest freedom, according to the will of the particular Judge before whom the actions consolidated have been pending, to subserve the interest of the parties and the public. * * * The consolidation of actions is not, in the absence of statutes, a matter of right but rests in the sound discretion of the Court, and its discretion will not be interfered with unless abused. The actions sought to be consolidated must be pending in the same Court, and generally between the same parties, though not always, and should relate to substantially the same question or transaction involving substantially the same defenses, providing a defense is intended.”

Applying the tests above set forth, we find that each of same causes was pending in Court and between the same parties and relates to the same question. It took the same proof to make out the allegations .of the complaint, and the defense in each case was identical. The Court properly consolidated the two actions for the purpose of trial.

In the case of Barrett v. Broad River Power Company, 146 S. C., 85, 143 S. E., 650, 653, Mr. Justice Blease quotes *190 the above citation from Ruling Case Raw with approval and further says:

“Speaking for this Court, Mr. Justice Mclver said:

“ ‘It has long been settled, in this State at least, that a motion to consolidate is addressed to the discretion of the Court; not, of course, an arbitrary or a capricious discretion, but a legal discretion, to be exercised in view of all the surrounding facts and circumstances.’ Pelzer Mfg. Co. v. Sun Fire Office, 36 S. C., 213, 15 S. E., 562.” And further he says: “When two causes of action pleaded are so allied in substance, time, and parties as to make them so akin, they may be tried together. Cline v. Southern Railway, 110 S. C., 534, 96 S. E., 532. When they may be tried together, and there is no real good reason for separate trial, why should they not be tried together?

“Although the provision quoted from the Code may have been enacted for the benefit, mainly of plaintiffs, it can, and should, be invoked, in a proper instance, for the protection of defendants. While a plaintiff has the right, in the first instance, to elect if he will unite his several causes of action in one suit, the Court, as shown by the authorities before mentioned, may require him to try all of them together, if he refuses to unite.”

And again quoting from the same case: “Where actions may be properly consolidated without injury to any of the parties, that course should be taken to prevent a multiplicity of suits, to save costs to the parties themselves, to conserve the time of the Court, to clear congested dockets, and to help the taxpayers, who bear the expenses of maintaining Courts.” In the case of Byrd v. State Highway Department, 159 S. C., 181, 156 S. E., 454, 455, the question of consolidation was again before the Court, and the Barrett case, supra, was approved, and Mr. Justice Stabler, in passing upon an appeal from an order refusing motion of the defendant to consolidate for trial four separate cases brought against it by plaintiff, says: “The four actions now before us are all *191 in tort and grew out of the same act or acts of alleged •negligence, or the same transaction; they are pending in the same Court, between the same parties, and involve substantially the same defense and all of them might have been united in one complaint. The motion for consolidation, therefore, should have been granted.”

Likewise in the case of Bishop v. Bishop, 164 S. C., 493, 162 S. E., 756, the Court again passed upon the question of consolidation for trial, but held in the Bishop case that the ■five cases should have been tried separately because the parties were not the same, the injuries were different in nature and degree and hence held that the Court was in error consolidating the causes for trial.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
180 S.E. 37, 176 S.C. 186, 1935 S.C. LEXIS 190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ford-v-new-york-life-ins-co-sc-1935.