Hartford Life Insurance v. Douds

103 Ohio St. (N.S.) 398
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1921
DocketNo. 16833
StatusPublished

This text of 103 Ohio St. (N.S.) 398 (Hartford Life Insurance v. Douds) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hartford Life Insurance v. Douds, 103 Ohio St. (N.S.) 398 (Ohio 1921).

Opinion

Robinson, J.

The plaintiff in error seeks a reversal of the judgment of the court of appeals and the court of common pleas upon three grounds:

1. That exclusive jurisdiction over the subject-matter of these actions lies with the Connecticut courts, and the exercise of jurisdiction by the Ohio courts violates the rights of plaintiff in error under the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.

2. That' the defendant in error voluntarily paid his assessments over a long period of years without any duress or fraud intervening, and after notice of the right claimed by plaintiff in error, and cannot recover payments so voluntarily made.

3. That the claims of defendant in error are barred by the six-year limitation, under Section [422]*42211222, General Code, or by the ten-year limitation, under Section 11227, General Code.

These grounds of reversal will be considered in the order above. ' <

The jurisdiction exercised by the trial court will be considered in the light of the relief granted rather than in the light of the relief sought in the petition, and this court will confine itself to the question whether the jurisdiction of the court extends to the limit it was exercised.

The journal entry in the court of common pleas recites: “It is, therefore, considered and decreed by the court that the plaintiff, Alonzo J. Douds, recover of the defendant, The Hartford Life Insurance Company, the sum of $1857.15, together with interest thereon at the rate of six per cent, from the first day of September, 1919, and his costs herein expended, including a fee of $250 hereby allowed to the said referee, and in all taxed at $......” That court rendered no other judgment, order or decree in the cause.

It will not be possible within the reasonable limits of this opinion to discuss all the cases cited. We will, therefore, confine this discussion to those cases exactly in point and relied upon by counsel.

The plaintiff in error relies largely upon the case of Sauerbrunn, Jr., v. Hartford Life Ins. Co., 220 N. Y., 363, decided by the court of last resort of the state of New York, and upon the case of State, ex rel. Hartford Life Ins. Co., v. Shain, Judge, decided by the supreme court of the state of Missouri and reported in volume 245, Missouri reports, at page 78, and the authorities in those cases cited.

[423]*423In the Sauerbrunn case the facts covered and relief prayed for were not substantially different from the facts covered and relief prayed for in this case, and the action was disposed of by the cburt on a demurrer to the petition, the court there holding that “An action against a foreign life insurance company brought by a member of the company holding one of its certificates to restrain it from' making an assessment against him of more than a certain amount named in his certificate and to compel it to account for moneys theretofore paid by him in excess of that amount relates to the internal affairs of the company, which are conducted at its home office, and its method of assessment against members for the various purposes for which they are liable is governed by local laws and regulations and should be adjusted in an action brought in the home state of the company.” In the discussion of the case the court assumed that an account could not be stated between Sauerbrunn and the insurance company without an exhaustive visitation and examination of the books of the company in a foreign state; and the authorities there cited, in so far as we have examined them, were based upon that theory, and upon the further theory that the court would be unable to enforce any order which it might make in the premises and therefore ought not to do a vain thing.

In the Shain case the action was one in prohibition against the trial court prohibiting it from exercising jurisdiction to enjoin a foreign insurance corporation from assessing one of its policy-holders a rate of assessment in excess of the stipulated rate, [424]*424and for an accounting of such foreign corporation’s business affairs; and the court there, too, assumed that an accounting would involve a visitation and examination of the books of the insurance company at its home office in a foreign state. In each case the jurisdiction of the court to render a money judgment was considered in connection with the injunc-tive relief sought.

If the developments of the hearing before the referee in the case at bar did not refute the assumption that a determination of the issues in this case required an exhaustive visitation and examination of the books of the company, and if the judgment in this case operated to regulate the discretion and internal management of the affairs of the company, we would feel constrained to follow the reasoning and conclusion of the courts in those cases and the authorities there cited. But in the case at bar the referee was able to and did make an accounting between the plaintiff in error and the defendant in error upon the contract of insurance and the assessment calls issued to the defendant in error by the plaintiff in error, and upon the printed ratio for each such call and the rule for determining such ratio issued by the secretary of the plaintiff in error and supplied by a former general agent of the company; and but for the fact that the defendant in error had not preserved all such assessment calls, no other or further data would have been required by the referee in making the computation of the account. The defendant in error, however, having lost or destroyed a portion of the assessment calls, was obliged, as to a considerable number thereof, to [425]*425supply other proof, which was done by introducing in evidence parts of the public report of the insurance commissioner of the state of Connecticut showing the data, from which together with the assessment calls it became a mere matter of mathematical calculation, and the trial court, treating the action as one for an accounting and the recovery of money wrongfully obtained under color of the contract, made an accounting and rendered judgment against the plaintiff in error for the amount so found to have -been demanded and paid in excess of the amount authorized by the contract. While it is true that in such computation the trial court was obliged to assume the correctness of the statements of the plaintiff in error as to the number of death claims, and the amount of insurance in force, and to make no accounting as to the earnings of the million-dollar safety fund, except as those earnings may or may not have been taken into consideration by the plaintiff in error in arriving at the ratio by it fixed, the defendant in error is not complaining of the inadequacy of the relief, and we see no prejudice therein against the plaintiff in error, for it may be assumed, in the absence of a showing to the contrary, that the plaintiff in error did not understate the number of death claims or overstate the amount of insurance in force, nor overstate the earnings of the million-dollar fund, and the fact, if it be a fact, that the relief granted to the defendant in error was not full and complete, is no ground for disturbing the judgment upon the complaint of the plaintiff in error.

[426]

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Related

Dresser v. Hartford Life Insurance
70 A. 39 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1908)
Sauerbrunn v. . Hartford Life Ins. Co.
115 N.E. 1001 (New York Court of Appeals, 1917)
Frick v. Hartford Life Insurance
179 Iowa 149 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1916)

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Bluebook (online)
103 Ohio St. (N.S.) 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hartford-life-insurance-v-douds-ohio-1921.