Hoyt v. Massachusetts Bonding & Insurance

113 A. 219, 80 N.H. 27, 1921 N.H. LEXIS 10
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJanuary 4, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 113 A. 219 (Hoyt v. Massachusetts Bonding & Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoyt v. Massachusetts Bonding & Insurance, 113 A. 219, 80 N.H. 27, 1921 N.H. LEXIS 10 (N.H. 1921).

Opinion

Parsons, C. J.

The grounds upon which the plea of former action pending was overruled in the second suit are not stated. If the court found the averment that both actions were for the same *30 cause of action was not sustained in fact, the law required the overruling of the plea. Perham v. Lane, 76 N. H. 580. The policy contains no stipulation as to when after proof of loss payment will be made. If as the defendants claim the objection is open to them under the general issue without setting up the defence by plea or brief statement it is because the stipulation postponing the bringing of the suit means that they are not in default until the expiration of the three months. The cause of action set up in the first suit is a default by the defendants before April 14, 1916. The defendants’ answer is that they were not then in default. The charge in the second suit is of a default before April 3, 1918. The plaintiff fails in the first suit as the defendants claim because of the non-existence of a cause of action when the suit was brought which they concede subsequently existed at some time before the second suit was brought. It is a mathematical axiom that something and nothing are not equal, — in legal language are not the same. The law does not ordinarily compel parties to perform their contracts but gives the aggrieved party damages for the failure to perform. Wiggin v. Manchester, 72 N. H. 576, 581. In a suit on a note, policy or other contract the written document 'is not the cause of action but a part of the evidence to sustain it. The cause of action is the failure of the defendants to perform as agreed. A suit alleging the breach of an agreement to pay January 1, is not for the same cause of action as a suit alleging the breach of an agreement to pay June 1 of the same year. The mistake of counsel in bringing the suit upon the erroneous supposition that the evidence relied upon will support it, does not make a later suit, which the evidence will support, one for the same cause of action. But the overruling of the plea in abatement is sustainable upon another ground. Whether the defendants were liable for double indemnity and upon what classification the base rate was determinable were questions fairly in controversy between the parties. For the settlement of this controversy the parties were entitled to the best inventible procedure. Owen v. Weston, 63 N. H. 599. “The test usually applied to determine questions of procedure is to inquire what justice requires in that situktion.” LaCoss v. Lebanon, 78 N. H. 413, 417 and cases cited. The time before which suit must be brought had by the terms written in the policy expired before the defendants objected that the first suit was premature. Unless that time was extended by the statute, Laws 1913, c. 226, hereinafter considered, the second suit could not be maintained, Maynard v. Insurance Co., 76 N. H. 275, while the two years allowed by the *31 statute would expire before the exceptions in the first suit could in the usual practice be determined in the supreme court. To enable the plaintiff to obtain relief by another suit it was necessary 'that such suit be instituted at once. As recovery in the second suit was not certain, abandonment of the exceptions in the first suit might determine the controversy against the plaintiff without any trial of the merits, which might be had if the exceptions should be sustained in the first suit. While the decision in Davis v. Insurance Co., 73 N. H. 425, was apparently fatal to the exceptions, it was by no means certain that the court, upon a reopening of the question and an examination of the numerous authorities holding that the distinct denial of liability by an insurance company is a waiver of proofs of loss and of stipulations of the policy postponing suit (2 May Insurance, s. 469; Whitten v. Insurance Co., 165 Mass. 343, 345), might not reach a different result and conclude, as defendants’ counsel expresses it, that a mistake had been made. As has been stated, the policy did not provide when the loss was payable. The evidence that the company had investigated the accident and offered payment before suit brought might be construed as an admission that the loss was then payable; and as the object of the stipulation deferring payment for a certain time after proof of loss is to enable the insurance company by investigation to determine the fact and extent of its liability, it might be held that the admission that this had been done was evidence of a waiver of the stipulation postponing suit, although the view expressed in Davis v. Insurance Co., supra, was adhered to. If, however, the plaintiff had waived her exceptions relying upon the second suit and failed therein, this would not have prevented further litigation of the first suit. In such case, upon application the plaintiff would undoubtedly have been permitted to renew her exceptions in the first suit and to have the same brought forward and the validity of the exceptions determined in due course. Such procedure might have caused delay, involved two transfers to this court and probably two trials of the fact. It would not be the best invendible. It would not be as prompt, inexpensive, or convenient as the procedure which was adopted; trial of both cases together and their transfer as one presenting all the legal questions involved. The procedure followed was that advised in Tinkham v. Railroad, 77 N. H. 111. The conclusion there reached that when it is doubtful whether the plaintiff’s rights could be secured in the first suit justice does not require the dismissal of the second is here decisive. If Gamsby v. Ray, 52 N. H. 513, is properly construed as holding that a second suit is necessarily in all *32 cases vexatious as matter of law it is overruled by Tinkham v. Railroad, supra, to the extent that the second suit is not to be dismissed as vexatious when justice requires otherwise. This conclusion is now reaffirmed.

The defendants object that the second suit is brought too late, not being brought within six months after the date when proofs wére required to be furnished.

Chapter 226, Laws of 1913, deals in much detail with the provisions of health and accident policies and provides that after the chapter was in force, October 1, 1913, no such policies should be issued or delivered which did not contain the provisions specified in the chapter and further (s. 9) that a policy issued in violation of the act should be construed as provided in the act and that when any provisions in such policy were in conflict with the provisions of the act, the rights, duties and obligations of the insurer, the policy holder and the beneficiary should be governed by the provisions of this act.

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Bluebook (online)
113 A. 219, 80 N.H. 27, 1921 N.H. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoyt-v-massachusetts-bonding-insurance-nh-1921.