Jewell v. Franklin Life Insurance
This text of 75 S.E. 592 (Jewell v. Franklin Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
This is a suit by M. T. Jewell against the Franklin Life Insurance Company, of Springfield, Illinois, on three insurance policies, similar in form and provisions, on the life of the plaintiff’s husband. The company pleaded that the policies had lapsed from non-payment of premiums at the time of the death of the insured. The plaintiff served the defendant with a notice to produce its charter, by-laws, resolutions showing dividends earned and not paid out; all the company’s books since its incorporation, including minute-books, cash-books, journals, day-books, and all books of original and final entry, showing the disbursements and earnings of the company; books containing an entry of all the company’s property and its appraised value, and of all its assets; books containing a list of its policy-holders, and also all notes, mortgages, bonds, choses in action, and all other assets of the company. The defendant answered, that it would produce its charter and by-laws, but to comply with the demands of the notice to transport all of its records would be destructive of its business, and would expose all of its records to the possibility of loss in transportation; that the books were daily needed at the home office, and to comply with' the notice to produce all of its books and records since its incorporation wbuld work irreparable injury to the company; that the books were open to inspection of the plaintiff or her counsel or any agent she might appoint at the home office of the company, and copies could be made of such as the plaintiff wished; that it was unable to comply with the notice as to the resolutions as to dividends, because no such resolutions existed; and that it was unable to comply with the notice to produce all of its notes, mortgages, etc., as the greater part of them were held in trust by the superintendent of the insurance department of the State of Illinois. The defendant also demurred ore tenus to the sufficiency of the notice, on the ground that it was too vague and [578]*578indefinite. The plaintiff’s counsel stated in his place that he expected to prove, by the documentary evidence referred to in the notice to produce, that the defendant company was a mutual company, and that sufficient profits had been earned to extend the policy of the insured beyond his death; and moved for a peremptory order requiring the production of the documents within a reasonable time, or, in default thereof, that the defendant’s plea be dismissed. The court denied the motion. The case proceeded to trial, and a verdict for the defendant was directed. The plaintiff sued out a bill of exceptions complaining of these two rulings.
Judgment affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
75 S.E. 592, 138 Ga. 576, 1912 Ga. LEXIS 615, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jewell-v-franklin-life-insurance-ga-1912.