Lackey v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.

174 S.W.2d 575, 26 Tenn. App. 564, 1943 Tenn. App. LEXIS 111
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 13, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 174 S.W.2d 575 (Lackey v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lackey v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 174 S.W.2d 575, 26 Tenn. App. 564, 1943 Tenn. App. LEXIS 111 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

FELTS, J.

Plaintiff brought this action against the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company to recover $50,000 damages for slanderous words charged to have- been spoken of him by the company’s agents with its authority.

After the suit had been pending more than six months plaintiff abandoned his declaration and filed a substitute declaration in one count. The matters of inducement alleged were these: Plaintiff was licensed to do, and was doing, the business of investigating and adjusting insurance claims in Nashville under the name of the Insurance Adjustment Bureau. By reason of his having formerly worked for several insurance companies, he had acquired an extensive knowledge of insurance and had ascertained that the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company had outstanding many old lapsed insurance policies with cash surrender values not shown by the policies. Many holders of such policies had placed with him their *569 claims and lie was undertaking to collect from defendant the cash surrender values for the policyholders. On this account the defendant took a'very hostile attitude toward him, and undertook by slanders to destroy his business, character and reputation. The part of the declaration charging the slanders was as follows:

“Now, in order to beat down, destroy and put out of business the plaintiff and to keep the public from being-informed that these old lapsed policies do have a value, the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, through its representatives, J. I. Lasky, H. Gr. Bland, acting within the scope of their authority, have, on many and different occasions, falsely and maliciously charged the plaintiff of larceny, stating that he was a thief, a robber, a crook, that he was (operating a racket; further that he was crazy and that if they let him collect their money for them they would not get anything from him, that he would take it all and they would get nothing, and further, that he was in the chain gang, that they had padlocked his door, and closed up his business and that they were going to put him in the penitentiary; and, in particular on or about the 15th day of April, 1939, the defendant, by its agent, H. Gr. Bland, falsely and maliciously stated to one Della Dickerson and her husband, James Dickerson, that the plaintiff was a crook, that he was robbing the public, and that he would take all the money and give them nothing, and that he was running a racket, that he was a crazy dog, that he was in the chain gang, that they were going to put him out of business and put him in the penitentiary where he belonged; and on many prior and subsequent occasions the defendant had falsely and maliciously repeated these same statements through its agents, to many other people with whom the plaintiff has had business *570 dealings, all these statements were made with the intention to, and calculated to do, and has resulted in, irreparable damages to the plaintiff’s business and reputation, and has caused and resulted in mental anguish, strained and unfriendly relations with many of the persons with whom he has dealings. The conduct and actions and false and malicious statements of the said defendant, through its agents, concerning and about the plaintiff, has alienated the people with.whom he has had business relations and the public in general.”

Defendant demurred upon the grounds, among others, that plaintiff’s alleged business constituted unlawful practice of law, and that the alleged slanderous words were not set out with enough particularity. The demurrer was overruled, with leave to rely on it at the hearing. Defendant then filed a plea of not guilty. After a trial lasting 18 days there was a verdict and judgment in favor of defendant. Plaintiff appealed in error, and seeks a reversal and a new trial upon numerous grounds.

Seven of the assignments of error (1st to 6th inclusive and 8th) all complain of matters allowed upon the cross-examination of plaintiff, which, for the most part, were instances or details of his prior conduct. Though his counsel objected to going into them, plaintiff himself volunteered many details and amplified them much beyond what was called for by the questions asked him. The trial judge admitted these matters as evidence of the truth of “the alleged.charge of insanity of plaintiff” in mitigation of damages. While they took up a large part of the cross-examination of plaintiff, they may be briefly summarized as follows:

In 1936 plaintiff brought a suit against the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Corporation in Los Angeles, California, *571 for $500,000 damages for alleged assault and battery, false arrest and false imprisonment. He bad gone, be said, to California in December 1935, with letters from President and Mrs. Roosevelt, Secretary of State Hull, and others of like note, to reform the moving picture business. Almost as soon as be arrived, agents and officers of the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Corporation asked him to leave the state. He refused and told them he would have to go on with his work. They arrested him, took his papers, beat him, fractured his jaw, and illegally imprisoned him. His declaration in that suit, after setting out these things, alleged that the agents and officers of the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Corporation told his wife that he was “insane, dangerous, and a menace” to her and their small child, and would have to be “ confined in a padded cell.”

When these agents released him, he and his wife and child started back to their home in Nashville in his automobile. When they reached New Mexico, due to his injuries and the infection in his broken jaw, he became unconscious. His wife deserted him, taking the child; and he was adjudged insane and committed to the New Mexico Insane Asylum. His trouble was diagnosed as “Dementia Precox” (Tr. pp. 872, 873). He later escaped, was brought back, and underwent horrible punishment. After being in the insane asylum for about six months, or until May 1936, he was released as improved.

He brought a suit in 1939 against the Interstate Life Insurance Company for $5,000 for assault and battery; and in 1941 he sued Hugh Freeman, Circuit Court Clerk of Davidson County, for $50,000 for willful failure to perform his duties as clerk.

*572 When plaintiff was released from the New Mexico Insane Asylum and returned to Nashville, he was served with process in a suit brought by his wife for divorce ■and custody of their child. She had alleged that he had •failed to provide for her, threatened to lull her, was dangerous, and should not be permitted to come about her or the child; and he was enjoined from coming about them. That suit was heard by the Honorable A. B. Neil, then Judge of the Second Circuit Court, now a Justice of the Supreme Court of Tennessee. He granted the wife a divorce and awarded her custody of the child.

Plaintiff was in Vanderbilt Hospital for a month or so in 1938. There, he said, they seemed to think “I would commit suicide”; and they put him in a strong room with bars on the windows. In this connection he stated many matters which were not called for by any questions put to him.

He labored under the idea that the decree granting the divorce, and custody of the child to his wife was “an injustice” and “an insult” to him. He, however, did not appeal from that decree.

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Bluebook (online)
174 S.W.2d 575, 26 Tenn. App. 564, 1943 Tenn. App. LEXIS 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lackey-v-metropolitan-life-ins-co-tennctapp-1943.