Home Indemnity Co. v. Learned

8 Mass. App. Dec. 95
CourtMassachusetts District Court, Appellate Division
DecidedDecember 8, 1954
DocketNo. 4774
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Mass. App. Dec. 95 (Home Indemnity Co. v. Learned) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts District Court, Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Home Indemnity Co. v. Learned, 8 Mass. App. Dec. 95 (Mass. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

Brooks, J.

This is an action in contract in which plaintiff seeks to recover premiums on defendant’s bond as administratrix of the estate of Leroy C. Thayer. Defendant has pleaded general denial, payment, lack of consideration, agreement that the obligation to pay premiums were to cease on the disposal of the assets under court order. (Espovich, J.)

The only evidence at the trial was the testimony of the Register of Probate and counsel for the defendant. The attorney for the defendant testified that the photostatic was not an exact copy of the original. The amount of the premium was not in the original bond application. The original was left with the agent of the insurance company. The amount of the bond sent in by the plaintiff and a $20.00 payment was made for the bond premium. In 1948, the defendant’s attorney paid the agent, the bond [96]*96premium of $.20.00. No final account ever filed. A petition was filed that the estate was insolvent and notice was sent to the agent of the insurance company; that the assets of the estate had been disposed or. John J. Costello, Register of Probate for the County of Essex testified on the estate records, Docket No. 223196. The bond dated March 4, 1948 was admitted in evidence. No final account or decree was filed or allowed.

Defendant filed the following requests for rulings:

"1. The evidence in this case warrants a finding for the defendant.
2. The only consideration for premiums due to a surety company is the assuming or continuing the legal responsibility of a surety. American Surety Co. v. Vinton, 224. Mass. Page 341.
3. After the entire proceeds of the estate of Leroy C. Thayer had been disposed of, in accordance with the order of the Court, no liability could have been incurred by the defendant as administratrix or by the plaintiff as surety for her. American Surety Co. v. Vinton, 224 Mass. Page 341.
4. Any premiums charged by the plaintiff, after the proceeds of the estate were disposed of in accordance with the order of the court, was unearned and was without consideration.
5. The order of the court determining the attorneys fees and expenses terminated the liability of the defendant to the plaintiff for premiums on surety company bonds. General Laws, 206 Article 17.
6. The court will relieve an administratrix from what it considers to be unconscionable contract. Allen v. Moushagin, 320 Mass. 746.
7. To hold the defendant liable in this case would be to make her responsible out of her own personal funds with no possibility of reimbursement from the estate.
[97]*978. Upon ail of the evidence, the iack of consideration furnished by the plaintiff would result in an undue hardship on the defendant if she were required to pay unearned premiums on the bond.”

The court made the following findings and rulings:

"The plaintiff, at the request of the defendant, on March 4, 1948, did become surety upon the bond of the defendant, as administratrix of the Estate of Leroy C. Thayer. The plaintiff is a surety company qualified to do business in this state, and this bond was furnished to the defendant by the plaintiff, at the request of an agent of the plaintiff company acting in behalf of the defendant . . .
I find that the bond is a continuing bond, and that at no time was there ever any judicial decree terminating the liability of the defendant or the plaintiff upon the same. At the trial there was testimony that the estate of the defendant’s intestate had been by decree declared insolvent.”

The findings were filed in the Clerk’s Office April 6, 1954, and notice mailed to both parties the same day. The defendant received notice of the findings April 10, 1954, and filed a request for a report with the Clerk’s office April 14, 1954. The defendant’s draft report was filed April 21, 1954. On the same day, the defendant’s attorney mailed to the plaintiff’s attorney an envelope containing a notice of the filing of the draft report, which the plaintiff’s attorney received after the filing of the draft report; three cents postage was prepaid on the envelope, but when it was tendered to the office of the plaintiff’s attorney, the envelope was marked "Due 3c” and a three cents’ postage due stamp was affixed to the envelope. The plaintiff’s attorney was required to pay and did pay three cents before receiving the envelope. The draft report was not otherwise served upon the plaintiff. No motion for extending the time for filing the draft report was filed. The foregoing facts were not controverted.

The plaintiff filed a motion to dismiss the defen[98]*98dant’s request for report and draft report, as follows:

"MOTION TO DISMISS CLAIM OF REPORT AND DRAFT REPORT
The plaintiff says that the defendant did not deliver a copy of the draft report to the Plaintiff before the close of the next business day after filing of such draft report, and the plaintiff further says that the defendant did not mail postage pre-paid a copy of the draft report to the Plaintiff before the close of the next business day after filing of the original of Defendant’s draft report, as required by Rule 28 of the District Courts.

Wherefore the plaintiff moves that the defendant’s claim of report and draft report be dismissed.”

The plaintiff filed an affidavit in support of the above motion, as follows:

"AFFIDAVIT IN SUPPORT OF PLAINTIFF’S MOTION TO DISMISS DEFENDANT’S CLAIM OF REPORT AND DRAFT REPORT
Thomas V. Sullivan, of counsel for the plaintiff says that the findings and rulings were filed with the Clerk’s office April 6, 1954, and a copy thereof received by the counsel for the plaintiff April 7, 1954; that the request for a report by the defendant was filed with the Clerk’s office April 14, 1954, at 9:00 A.M.; that the plaintiff’s counsel received a copy of said request for a report on the said fourteenth day of April in an envelope postmarked April 13, 1954; that the draft report was filed April 21, 1954, and the plaintiff’s counsel received an envelope on April 22, 1954, postmarked April 21, 1954, with the return address of defendant’s counsel, and presumably containing a copy of the draft report. Said envelope was tendered to the office of plaintiff’s counsel with a postage-due stamp attached to said envelope, and plaintiff’s counsel was required to pay three ($0.03) cents in order to obtain said envelope and contents. To the best of your affiant’s knowledge and belief, the draft report was not served upon the plaintiff except as herein stated.”

[99]*99The plaintiff also filed six requests for rulings on the motion, of which two were waived in writing at the time of filing. The remaining four requests are set forth below:

"3. The evidence is sufficient to warrant a finding that the defendant or her attorney mailed a copy of the draft report to the plaintiff’s counsel without providing sufficient postage for the same.
4. The evidence is sufficient to warrant a finding that no other copy of such draft report was delivered or mailed to the plaintiff.
3.

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Related

Coleman v. Hall
12 Mass. 570 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1815)
McKim v. Bartlett
129 Mass. 226 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1880)
American Surety Co. v. Vinton
224 Mass. 337 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1916)
Chamberlain v. Barrows
184 N.E. 725 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1933)
Campbell v. Employers' Liability Assurance Corp.
67 N.E.2d 230 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1946)
Allen v. Moushegian
71 N.E.2d 393 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1947)

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Bluebook (online)
8 Mass. App. Dec. 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/home-indemnity-co-v-learned-massdistctapp-1954.