Hartzell v. Maryland Casualty Co.

163 Ill. App. 221, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 425
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 4, 1911
DocketGen. No. 15,727
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 163 Ill. App. 221 (Hartzell v. Maryland Casualty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hartzell v. Maryland Casualty Co., 163 Ill. App. 221, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 425 (Ill. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Graves

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a suit begun August 24, 1908, in the Municipal Court of Chicago by Emma L. Hartzell, the beneficiary named in an accident insurance policy issued by the defendant for five thousand dollars taken out by her husband, John H. Hartzell.

The declaration sets out the policy in haec verba. The nineteenth paragraph of the policy contains the following provisions:

“Legal proceedings for recovery hereunder may not be brought until after three months from date of filing final proofs at the Company’s Home Office, nor brought at all, unless begun within six months from time of death * * *”

It is further averred in the declaration that the said John H. Hartzell died September 14, 1905, as the result of external injuries, within the terms of the policy.

The defendant on the 2d day of November, 1908, filed the general issue and two special pleas. The special pleas each set up the substance of the nineteenth paragraph of the policy above quoted, and aver that suit was not begun within the time limited by the contract. To the plea of the general issue the plaintiff filed a similiter, and to the special pleas replied in substance that suit was begun in Henderson county, Illinois, within the time limited by the contract, but that such suit was not disposed of on its merits, but was dismissed on October 4, 1906, by that court for want of jurisdiction, and that the bringing of the suit in Henderson county satisfied the requirements of the limitation clause in the policy, and that by reason of the bringing of that suit there, within the six months’ limitation clause, that clause constituted no bar to the bringing of this action.

A demurrer to this replication was interposed by the defendant and on a hearing was sustained by the court. The plaintiff elected to stand by her replication, and judgment was entered by the court against the plaintiff in bar of her action for costs.

To review this judgment the plaintiff prosecutes this writ of error. The question, presented for determination is whether the bringing of a suit on this policy of insurance in a court not having jurisdiction to hear and determine it on its merits, which suit was afterwards dismissed by the court for that reason, is such a compliance with and satisfaction of the terms of the nineteenth clause of the policy above quoted as that thereafter the only limitation to the bringing of an action on such policy in a court having jurisdiction is that provided by statute, or in other words, whether the bringing of the suit in Henderson county arrested the running of the limitation in the policy agreed upon between the insured and the insurer. It is conceded by counsel for plaintiff in error that, if the beginning of the suit in Henderson county does not have that effect, then the judgment below must be affirmed.

It is insisted by plaintiff in error that the term “legal proceedings” as used in paragraph nineteen of the policy of insurance above quoted, means “any proceedings in a court to enforce a claim, * * * Such proceedings to enforce a claim as the law sanctions and authorizes,” and that “a suit is a legal proceeding. ’ ’

That contention is correct in the abstract, but as applied to a state of facts like those in the case ac bar needs the qualification that such legal proceedings must be the suit in which the limitation is set up as a bar, and not some other proceeding disposed of before the commencement of that suit. The clear intention of the parties in making the stipulation in question was to limit the time to a period not less than three nor more than six months after the right to recover on the policy had accrued, within which suit could be begun to enforce,the claim, and the “legal proceedings” contemplated were such as should result or at least could result in the adjudication of the differ-' enees between the parties.

The intention clearly was that such proceedings should be begun in some court having jurisdiction of the subject-matter and of the parties. The language used is “Legal proceedings for recovery hereunder.” Manifestly it was not intended by that to refer to a proceeding begun in a court without jurisdiction and where recovery could not be had. In the case of Griem vs. The Fidelity & Casualty Company, 99 Wis. 530-534, cited by counsel for plaintiff in error the court says, “Legal proceedings within the purview of this stipulation must mean, such proceedings to enforce the claim as the laiu sanctions or authorises * * *.” And again in In Re Emsile, 102 Fed. 293, also cited by him the court says, “A legal proceeding is any proceeding in a court of justice by which a party pursues a remedy which the law affords him * * *.”

The law neither sanctions, authorizes nor affords a remedy in a proceeding begun before a court having no jurisdiction.

It is not, however, necessary in this case to draw nice distinctions as to whether the suit in Henderson county is one which the law sanctions or authorizes, or whether the law affords plaintiff a remedy in that suit, because it is now the settled law in this state that, whether the limitation is by statute or by contract, it applies to the case in which the judgment was rendered that is attacked by appeal or writ of error. No matter how many other suits were begun and dismissed or how many other declarations were filed in the identical case, if the new case is begun or the new count or declaration setting out a new cause of action is filed after the limitation by statute or contract has run, the right to recovery is barred.

In the case of Baker vs. Baker, 139 Ill. App. 217, there was a limitation by contract. A suit was begun within the limitation, in the United States Court, and was afterwards on the suggestion of the court dismissed by complainant “without prejudice.” After-wards and about four months after the expiration of limitation by contract, a new suit was begun in the Superior Court of Cook county, wherein the bill set out the contract, the former suit and its dismissal. The defendants demurred, urging that the suit was not commenced within the limitation. The court sustained the demurrer and dismissed the bill. The Appellate Court in affirming that judgment on page 231 of the opinion says: “We are of the opinion that the limitation in paragraph 6 of the trust agreement constitutes a bar to the present suit and that the commencement of the suit in the United States Court, which was subsequently dismissed by the complainant, was not a compliance with the limitation.”

In that case the court cites with approval, and as a basis of its conclusion, the case of Riddlesbarger v. Hartford Insurance Company, 7 Wall. 386, and the case of Arthur v. Homestead Fire Ins. Co., 78 N. Y. 462. The Eiddlesbarger case was a suit on an insurance policy containing a limitation clause. One suit had been begun within the limitation and dismissed after the limitation had run. A second suit was after-wards begun, the defendants pleaded the limitation by contract, and the plaintiff replied setting up the commencement of the first suit, the defendant demurred, and as to that question the court says: “The action mentioned which must be commenced within twelve months is the one which is prosecuted to judgment, the failure of a previous action from any cause cannot alter the case.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
163 Ill. App. 221, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 425, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hartzell-v-maryland-casualty-co-illappct-1911.