Gardner v. Fidelity Mutual Life Ass'n

69 N.W. 895, 67 Minn. 207, 1897 Minn. LEXIS 137
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 18, 1897
DocketNos. 10,181, 10,182—(149, 150)
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 69 N.W. 895 (Gardner v. Fidelity Mutual Life Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gardner v. Fidelity Mutual Life Ass'n, 69 N.W. 895, 67 Minn. 207, 1897 Minn. LEXIS 137 (Mich. 1897).

Opinion

COLLINS, J.

These actions were by consent tried before a jury together, but as separate cases, and at the conclusion of the evidence the court directed, and the jury returned, a verdict in each case for defendant. On appeal from orders denying motions for new trials, they were argued and submitted together.

[208]*208The defendant is a mutual benefit association, organized under the laws of the state of Pennsylvania, on the mutual assessment plan. The action in which Mrs. Gardner is plaintiff is upon a certificate of date December 8, 1893, whereby the life of Clarence B. Gardner — who was plaintiff’s unmarried son — was insured for the sum of $2,500, and in which plaintiff was designated as beneficiary. The other action, Warner being plaintiff, is upon a certificate of date January 11, 1894, insuring the lives of the plaintiff, Warner, and said Clarence B. Gardner for the sum of $5,000, payable to the survivor upon the death of either. At the time of the issuance of this certificate, Warner and Gardner were co-partners in business, and so remained until some time in June, 1894. Gardner died in September of the same year, and proofs thereof were duly made and filed with the association. It refused to pay, and these actions were brought.

The complaint in the Gardner case was in the usual form, but in the Warner case it was averred, in addition to the usual allegations, that on August 16, 1894, the defendant association obtained from Warner and Gardner an assignment of the joint certificate by means of false and fraudulent representations and undue influence.

Stated as concisely as possible, the defense interposed by the answers was that on August 10, 1894, the beneficiary named in the certificate for $2,500 had been duly changed by a surrender of the certificate itself, on request made by the insured, and the issuing of a new certificate to him, in which Warner was named as beneficiary, and that immediately afterwards, for a valuable and adequate consideration, and at the express solicitation and request of the insured, Gardner, and the beneficiary, Warner, said new certificate was duly surrendered to the association and canceled. It was also alleged that, at the same time and under the same circumstances, the joint certificate for $5,000 was duly surrendered to and canceled by the association. There was another allegation to the effect that all payments made to defendant on account of these certificates were made by the insured, and by no other person. In the Warner case the answer denied that false or fraudulent representations had been made, or undue influence used, to procure possession of the $5,000 certificate.

The reply in each case denied that either certificate had been sur[209]*209rendered to or canceled by the association. It was alleged, in the Gardner case, that through false and fraudulent representations and undue influence the association had induced the insured to apply for a change of beneficiaries and the substitution of Warner for his mother, and that such change was made on account thereof; and it was also alleged that subsequently, and by means of false and fraudulent representations and undue influence, Warner, the substituted beneficiary, and Gardner, the insured, were induced to make, and that defendant procured, an assignment to it of the new certificate for $2,500 without consideration.

On the issues thus made the trial was had, and from the evidence it conclusively appeared that, at the express request of the insur'ed, the $2,500 certificate had been received by the association, and, in form, a new one had been substituted, and delivered to him, in which Warner had been designated as the beneficiary. It also conclusively appeared that, soon afterwards, Warner and Gardner went before a notary public, made oath to certain affidavits, signed and acknowledged an assignment to the association of each certificate, and handed them to one Pleins, to be. delivered to the assignee. Soon afterwards Pleins appeared at the office of Gardner and Warner with a draft upon the association for $1,500, made by its authorized agent, and payable to the order of Gardner. The latter indorsed the draft, and requested Pleins to obtain the money thereon. Pleins went to a bank, deposited the draft to his own credit, paid $50 upon Gardner’s note then held by the bank, and took a certified check for $1,100, payable to the order of Gardner and Warner. He returned to the office, gave this check to Gardner, and told him of the $50 payment. It was agreed that Pleins was to retain the balance, $350, for his own services in obtaining the money from the association. Both certificates in which Warner was beneficiary were then in the sáfe in the office. Warner took them out, and handed them to Pleins, to be delivered to defendant association. From Warner’s evidence at the trial it is beyond question that he was an active participant in the whole transaction. It was not shown what had become of the certified check, but the money to cash the same had been set apart out of Pleins’ funds by the bank officials, and had not been called for when the cases were tried.

The testimony was undisputed that, at the request of both Gard[210]*210ner and Warner, Pleins went to Pennsylvania as their accredited agent, and for the purpose of inducing the association to make a cash settlement upon the certificates, in view of the alleged fact that Gardner’s health had failed, that he was without means, and that his purpose was, if the settlement could he made, to go South, in the expectation that he might recover; that the officers of the association at first declined to act upon the proposition, but finally, and with reluctance, and not until they had made a thorough examination as to the alleged failure in health, and the good faith of both insured and beneficiary, they consented to take the assignments and pay over the money. Even then they required the representations of Gardner and Warner to be made under oath, and they were contained in the affidavits we have referred to. It was also beyond dispute that, at the time of the transaction, and for some months previous, Pleins was and had been in the employ of the association as a soliciting agent.

The “settled case” on which the motions for new trials were founded, and which has been brought before us on this appeal, does not purport to contain all of the evidence received at the trial below, and therefore we are compelled to treat it as a bill of exceptions only. The final ruling, when the court ordered that a verdict for defendant be rendered in each case, cannot be considered; our investigation. being confined to an examination of the rulings on the admissibility of testimony alleged to have been erroneously excluded. Board of Trustees v. Brown, 66 Minn. 179, 68 N. W. 837.

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Related

Klein v. Funk
84 N.W. 460 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1900)

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Bluebook (online)
69 N.W. 895, 67 Minn. 207, 1897 Minn. LEXIS 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gardner-v-fidelity-mutual-life-assn-minn-1897.