Langworthy v. Republic Mutual Insurance

86 P.2d 610, 103 Colo. 393, 1939 Colo. LEXIS 327
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJanuary 9, 1939
DocketNo. 14,208.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 86 P.2d 610 (Langworthy v. Republic Mutual Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Langworthy v. Republic Mutual Insurance, 86 P.2d 610, 103 Colo. 393, 1939 Colo. LEXIS 327 (Colo. 1939).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Young

delivered the opinion of the court.

The transaction giving rise to this litigation involves the giving of a deed the execution and delivery of which, according to the allegations of plaintiff, were procured by means of false representations.

The parties are here in the same relative position as they appeared in the district court and will be designated as plaintiff and defendants or by name. Defendants ’ demurrers to plaintiff’s second amended complaint were sustained, the cause dismissed, and judgment for costs entered against plaintiff, who is here seeking a reversal of the judgment.

The second amended complaint sets forth that the Be: public Mutual Insurance Company is a Colorado corporation duly organized and existing; that defendant John Chambers is the duly appointed receiver of the company ; that defendants, F. A. Heath, E. W. Larson, H. H. Marshall, H. B. Seeley, Albert W. Metcalf and Joseph Bitchey *395 “were officers, directors, agents and employees of the defendant company and were in control of said company. ” It is farther alleged that plaintiff was the owner in fee and in possession of a certain 320 acres of land therein described, of the reasonable value of $3,000.

The action is in fraud and deceit and the false representations alleged to have been made by defendants, Heath, Larson, Marshall and Seeley respecting- the defendant insurance company were': (a) That it was a successful insurance company; (b) that it was in sound financial condition; (c) that it was well managed; (d) that its assets and income had never been used or diverted to any unauthorized and dishonest uses; (e) that its officers, directors, agents and employees were persons of honesty and integrity; (f) that the corporation was the contemplated grantee and purchaser of plaintiff’s property; (g) that the corporation’s assets were unimpaired. It is alleged that such representations were false; that their falsity was unknown to plaintiff, and that she believed them and acted upon them to her damage. Plaintiff further says that by reason of the premises she was induced to enter into a certain agreement with the defendant company and the defendants Heath, Larson, Marshall and Seeley, the terms of which are substantially as follows: “That the plaintiff would convey the above described lands and premises to the company; that the defendant company and the defendants F. A. Heath, E. W. Larson, H. H. Marshall and H. R. Seeley would pay to the plaintiff, in consideration for the plaintiff’s conveying as aforesaid, the sum of Twenty-Seven Hundred Dollars ($2,-700.00) ; that the Two Hundred Dollars ($200.00) of the aforesaid sum would be paid to the plaintiff at the time plaintiff should convey as aforesaid, and the balance of Twenty-Five Hundred Dollars ($2,500.00) would be paid to the plaintiff within about two and one-half years after the plaintiff should convey as aforesaid, and that the defendant company and the defendants F. A. Heath, E. W. *396 Larson, H. H. Marshall and H. R. Seeley would secure the said balance by securities of the said company; that the said balance would bear interest at the rate of 6% per annum on the unpaid balance until paid.” Pursuant to this agreement it is alleged, that plaintiff executed the deed in question to defendant Ritchey, who also was a director of the company. It is further alleged in the complaint: “That on or about October 16, A. D. 1934, plaintiff received by mail a paper described as a ‘ Guarantee Fund Certificate, ’ numbered 131 and dated October 8, 1934, issued by the defendant company to Mrs. Evelyn Langworthy, who is the plaintiff herein.

“That on or about December 14, A. D. 1934, at the office of the defendant Company in the United States National Bank Building in Denver, one Schectel, his first name being unknown to plaintiff, gave to the plaintiff a check for Fifty Dollars ($50.00), made by the Company; that plaintiff cashed the check and received the money therefor.

“That plaintiff offers and hereby tenders into the Registry of this court the aforementioned ‘Guarantee Fund Certificate,’ together with the sum of Fifty Dollars ($50.00), to be disposed of as the court may direct.

“That the defendants have wholly failed to perform except as hereinabove alleged; that said ‘ Guarantee Fund Certificate’ is worthless and of no value.”

The complaint then sets forth that as a part of the scheme to defraud plaintiff there was an agreement between the defendant Ritchey and the defendant company and the defendants Heath, Larson, Marshall and Seeley, that Ritchey would permit the company and these defendants to receive titles of lands in his, Ritchey’s name and that he would then execute purported promissory notes secured by purported mortgages on the lands that were put in his name without any consideration other than ten per cent of the face amount of the purported notes which would be paid to him by the said defendant company and *397 the other four defendants for signing sneh notes which were then to be used as assets of the company; that it was agreed that defendant Ritchey would not be bound by the notes and that he would convey the equity in the lands to whomsoever the defendant company and the defendants ■ Heath, Larson, Marshall and Seeley might direct. It is further alleged that pursuant to this agreement Ritchey ■executed a note dated October 11, 1934, due five years after date, in the sum of $1,250, secured by mortgage on the land that plaintiff conveyed to him which mortgage was duly recorded October 26, 1934, in the office of the clerk and recorder of Elbert county, Colorado. It is further stated that defendant Metcalf, who it is alleged was aware of, and familiar with, the fraudulent operations and methods of the company from his association with it and with the defendants Heath and Larson prior to October 8, 1934, and who, it is further alleged, had entered into a contract with the company on or about October 5, 1934, to act as its medical director for life at a salary of $250 per month, on or about February 21, 1935, procured a judgment by default against the company on which he sued out an execution and levied on the $1,250 note before mentioned as an asset of the company; that the levy on the note was made on or about May 23, 1935; that the execution sale was had on or about June 7, 1935; and that a certificate of purchase was issued to Metcalf on or about June 12, 1935. Plaintiff also avers that prior to June 7, 1935, the date of the execution sale, and on or about April 15,1935, she personally notified and related to Metcalf all the facts and circumstances surrounding the procurement of the said deed from her as aforesaid and advised him that it had been procured fraudulently; that the purported note and mortgage signed by Ritchey were wholly without consideration; and that the mortgage had been filed so that the note and mortgage would appear as assets of the company. Plaintiff further states in her complaint that shortly after October *398 8,1934, she demanded from the company and the defendants Heath, Larson, Marshall and Seeley a reconveyance of the land to her, and that during the period from December, 1934, to March, 1935, at the office of the company in Denver, she made about seven demands for such reconveyance ; that on or about January 6,1936, she demanded a reconveyance from'defendant Eitchey.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Page v. Clark
592 P.2d 792 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1979)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
86 P.2d 610, 103 Colo. 393, 1939 Colo. LEXIS 327, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/langworthy-v-republic-mutual-insurance-colo-1939.