Hackett v. Equitable Life Assurance Society

30 Misc. 523, 63 N.Y.S. 847
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1900
StatusPublished

This text of 30 Misc. 523 (Hackett v. Equitable Life Assurance Society) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hackett v. Equitable Life Assurance Society, 30 Misc. 523, 63 N.Y.S. 847 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1900).

Opinion

Gildersleeve, J.

The complaint is padded with a mass of irrelevant and redundant matter, which may be disposed of briefly by saying that the alleged representations of the defendant’s agent have no relation to the plaintiff’s cause of action whatever. They were made prior to the date of the policy issued by the defendant to Thomas Hackett, and nearly ten years before the date pf the policy in suit. The first policy was surrendered and cancelled when the present policy was issued, and it is safe to say that whatever cause of action those representations gave, Thomas Hackett did not survive the surrender of his policy to the defendant and its cancellation; nor, since she. was an entire stranger to the transactions between Thomas Hackett and the defeudant regarding the first policy, can the plaintiff take any advantage of them. Besides the representations in question were promissory only in character; they related not to what had been, but to [525]*525what should be in the future, and were not actionable, even though shown to have failed of verification. Moreover, they are not even alleged to have been false in fact, much less so to the knowledge of the agent or of the defendant, nor to have been fraudulently made, nor to have misled Thomas Hackett to his injury. The history of the plaintiff’s cause of action begins August 3, 1893, when the policy in suit was issued to her by the defendant. This cause of action might have been amply stated in ten folios of the complaint, whereas the pleader expatiates through forty. I must confine myself to a consideration of the few well-pleaded facts stated in the complaint relating exclusively to the policy issued to the plaintiff. The action is, in form, one at law for the recovery of damages for the breach of the contract contained in the policy. The complaint avers, in substance, the making of a policy insuring the life of Thomas Hackett in $10,000 on the semitontine plan,” for the benefit of the plaintiff; the payment of an annual premium of $571; the completion of the dividend period on December 9, 1898, when the policy was to be paid; the performance of the stipulations on the part of the plaintiff. It also avers that, by the terms of the policy, no dividend should be allowed or paid unless Thomas Hackett should survive the completion of the tontine period and the policy should then be in force; that all surplus or profits derived from policies issued by defendant on the tontine plan should and would be apportioned equitably by the defendant among the holders of such policies as should complete their tontine period, and that, on the completion of that period, the policy then being in force, plaintiff might, at her election, withdraw, in cash, her policy’s entire share of defendant’s assets, i. e., the accumulated reserve of the policy and the surplus apportioned by defendant to plaintiff’s policy. The complaint further avers that the policy was not determined by the death of Thomas Hackett before the expiration of the dividend period or otherwise; that in July, 1899, the plaintiff notified the defendant of her election to withdraw her policy’s entire share of the accumulated reserve thereon and her equitable share of the surplus; that said share• of the accumulated reserve amounted to $6,296.36, which the defendant actually then held for her account, and that her equitable share of the surplus was at least $6,603.70. It is further averred that the defendant refused to pay the plaintiff her said equitable share of the assets, claiming that it was [526]*526$9,960.60 only, and stating that this was all it would pay, and that the defendant has refused to apportion and pay to the plaintiff her share of its assets, and has paid no part of the moneys due her under the terms of the policy; by which she has suffered damages in $13,000.

The question presented is whether these facts constitute a cause of action at law. The defendant insists that the plaintiff’s remedy is not at law, but by suit in equity for an accounting, without which, and the presence of a large number of other persons holding policies of the same class as the plaintiff’s and having a like interest in the fund in which the plaintiff seeks to share, her' rights cannot be completely determined. The defendant also claims that, an accounting being necessary, the provisions of section 56 of chapter 690, Laws of 1892, prohibit such an action except by the Attorney-General.

In determining the sufficiency of the complaint, such inferences as can be fairly drawn from the facts stated in the complaint must be allowed in support of the complaint, excluding, of course, all mere conclusions of law and all allegations of immaterial and irrelevant matter. Greeff v. Equitable Life Ass. Soc., 160 N. Y. 19.

The position taken by the defendant requires the determination of two principal questions, viz., first, whether the amount due to the plaintiff has been already sufficiently ascertained; and, secondly, whether in the nature of the case, it is ascertainable except by a formal accounting between the plaintiff and the defendant and all other persons who have a like interest in the surplus here in question. Obviously, if the plaintiff’s share in the surplus is capable of ascertainment without an accounting, and has actually been ascertained, there can be no need of an accounting and the case is not within the act of 1892. The complaint states, distinctly, that the plaintiff’s share of the accumulated reserve is $6,296.36, and her share of the surplus $6,603.70, and the demurrer admits the fact. In view of this admission, and of the fact that the defendant was under an express obligation to make an equitable distribution of the surplus at the expiration of the dividend period, December 29, 1898, but refused to do so, the defendant can hardly be heard to say that the amounts due to the plaintiff can be ascertained in but one way, and that by an accounting. .

How the plaintiff ascertained these amounts it is not now [527]*527material to inquire; it is enough that they have been definitely ascertained, and so stand admitted on this record. Upon this state of facts the plaintiff has a complete cause of action at law, in which no accounting can be necessary. The argument that an action at law cannot be maintained where the necessity for an accounting will arise is without support in the authorities; they are quite the other way. They put the equity jurisdiction in matters of account upon three grounds, viz.: “ The complicated character of the accounts; the need of a discovery, and the existence of a fiduciary or trust relation. The necessity for a resort to equity for the first two reasons is now very slight, if it can be said to exist at all ”. Finch, J., in Marvin v. Brooks, 94 N. Y. 71-80; Smith v. Bodine, 74 id. 30; Uhlman v. N. Y. Life Ins. Co., 109 id. 421-423; 1 Story Eq. Juris., § 459.

The main stress of the argument of defendant’s counsel is laid on that clause of the policy which provides that the surplus or profits derived from policies issued by the defendant on the tontine plan should and would be apportioned, equitably, by the defendant among the holders of such policies, etc., and it is urged that, until this apportionment is made, no cause of action has accrued to the plaintiff. But, assuming this to be so, that clause does not apply to the accumulated reserve; and if the plaintiff’s right to the latter has accrued as, upon the facts, I think it has, she is certainly entitled to recover her share of it.

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Related

Marvin v. . Brooks
94 N.Y. 71 (New York Court of Appeals, 1883)
Greeff v. Equitable Life Assurance Society of United States
54 N.E. 712 (New York Court of Appeals, 1899)

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Bluebook (online)
30 Misc. 523, 63 N.Y.S. 847, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hackett-v-equitable-life-assurance-society-nysupct-1900.