Hartford Life Insurance v. Sherman

78 N.E. 923, 223 Ill. 329
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 23, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 78 N.E. 923 (Hartford Life Insurance v. Sherman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois 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. Sherman, 78 N.E. 923, 223 Ill. 329 (Ill. 1906).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellant, the Hartford Life Insurance Company, being indebted to appellees, Nicholas J. Sherman and Mary A. Sherman, his wife, in the sum of $4000 upon a policy of insurance upon the life of their deceased son, Ray Sherman, sent by mail to its agent, Peter Becker, at Somonauk, who solicited and obtained the insurance, two checks for $2000 each, payable, one of them, to the order of Mary A. Sherman and the other to the order of Nicholas J. Sherman, and two receipts for $2000 each, to be signed by them, respectively. By the letter the agent was advised that the receipts must be signed and the policy surrendered before the delivery of the checks, and that claims were paid through agents as a favor to them to aid them in soliciting new business, and therefore they were .not allowed to make any charge for expenses against the claimant or the company. On October 14, 1901, Becker went in the morning to a bank at Somonauk and exhibited the two unendorsed checks and said that he was going out to fix up the matter with the Shermans. He said he would take the checks out and get them endorsed and return them to the bank, and thereupon the bank gave him two drafts for $1000 each on the First National Bank of Chicago and $1859 in cash. He went to the farm of the Shermans, about fourteen miles from Somonauk, and told them that he had come to settle up the insurance matter for the company. As a result of his negotiations with them he gave to each of them one of the drafts of the Somonauk bank for $1000, one-half of the amount due them. He had secured from them insurance on another son, Earle Sherman, for $5000, and the first premium amounted to $141. This premium was credited on the amount due from the insurance company, and Becker gave to Nicholas J. Sherman a note, signed by himself, for $1859, payable to the order of said Nicholas J. Sherman four and one-half months after date, with interest at five and one-half per cent. He then returned to the bank and deposited to his own credit the two checks for $2000 each sent to him to settle the claim, and each bore the apparent endorsement of the payee. The next day he mailed to the insurance company a letter enclosing the policy for $4000 and the two receipts sent him by the company for $2000 each, one of which purported to have been signed by Mary Sherman and the other by Nicholas J. Sherman. The insurance company paid the checks sent by it to Becker, and the drafts of the Somonauk bank were paid. The note for $1859 signed by Becker was not paid, and this suit was brought in the circuit court of Kendall county by appellees, against appellant, to recover the balance alleged to. be unpaid on the policy. There was a verdict for appellees, followed by a judgment, which was affirmed, on appeal, by the Appellate Court for the Second District.

The plaintiffs, in their testimony at the trial, denied that they, or either of them, endorsed the checks for $2000 each or signed the receipts running to the defendant. Their testimony Was to the effect that Becker told them the defendant could not pay the whole policy at that time; that it could only pay $2000 and had only sent that amount to him; that it had had heavy losses, was pressed for money and wanted a little time; that he thereupon produced the two drafts of the Somonauk bank for $1000 each and a receipt for $4000; that Nicholas J. Sherman asked how it was that the receipt was drawn for $4000 when only $2000 was paid; that Becker quieted his apprehensions by telling him that the policy must be surrendered and the receipt given before he could do anything about a settlement, and that it would be all right and he would see that the company paid the balance; that Nicholas J. Sherman asked Becker what he would have to show that the company owed him, and Becker said that he would give his note; that Becker told both the Shermans that the note would be all right and would be just as much the note of the Hartford Life Insurance Company as though the officers themselves signed it; that Nicholas J. Sherman then signed the receipt for $4000, and Becker, having secured the receipt and .the policy, was about leaving when Sherman said that he must have something to show that the company owed him; that Becker then figured the balance after deducting the first premium of $141 on the other policy; that Sherman then produced a blank note and filled it up for that sum and Becker signed it, and that Becker said if they wanted the money before it was due, to write and let him know and he would see that the Hartford Life Insurance Company paid it. There was no contradictory evidence as to the representations of Becker or what occurred at the farm, but there were letters from Nicholas J. Sherman to Becker, at Makanda, Illinois, tending to prove that the plaintiffs looked to him personally for payment of the note. The other evidence for the defendant consisted of the opinions of witnesses that the alleged signatures of the Shermans, which they had denied, were genuine, and the testimony of one of the witnesses to handwriting that Mr. Sherman admitted the signature to the $2000 receipt, purporting to be signed by him, to be genuine. Sherman and his attorney both denied that such an admission was made.

Counsel for both parties have argued at great length the controverted questions of fact, one side contending that the verdict was against the clear preponderance of the evidence and the other insisting that it was fully justified by the evidence, and but a small part of either argument pertains to any matter cognizable in this court. The question whether the finding of the jury was against the weight of the evidence has been finally settled by the judgment of the Appellate Court.

The court gave at the request of the plaintiffs three instructions. The third, which related to the measure of damages, is not objected to, but it is contended that the first and second were wrong. The first stated at considerable length the things which it was necessary for the plaintiffs to prove in order to recover, and one of the things to be proved was that the defendant had not paid to the plaintiffs more than $2141.. It is argued that this clause was misleading because the payment was made in two checks of $2000 each and not in money, and was made through Becker and not directly to the plaintiffs. We do not see how the jury could have supposed from this instruction that if payment was made in the checks and through Becker it was not a payment.

It is further contended that the instruction was erroneous in requiring the jury to believe, in order to defeat a recovery, that the plaintiffs knowingly and understandingly executed and delivered a release and satisfaction of their claim without fraud of the defendant or its agent. It is said that even if the Shermans never knowingly signed the receipts or delivered them, yet if they made an arrangement with Becker whereby they took his personal note there would be no right of recovery. It may be that there would .have been some basis for this criticism if no other instructions had been given, but the tenth instruction given at the request of the defendant informed the jury as to the law if the jury believed, from the evidence, that the plaintiffs used part of the proceeds of the insurance policy by loaning the same to Becker. It is not necessary that the instructions on one side shall include the theory of the opposite party as to' the facts, and it was therefore unnecessary that the instructions asked by the plaintiffs should include the theory that Becker borrowed the money of them or was to account personally to them for the balance unpaid.

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Bluebook (online)
78 N.E. 923, 223 Ill. 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hartford-life-insurance-v-sherman-ill-1906.