Metropolitan Life Insurance v. Fuller

23 A. 193, 61 Conn. 252, 1891 Conn. LEXIS 93
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedDecember 19, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 23 A. 193 (Metropolitan Life Insurance v. Fuller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Metropolitan Life Insurance v. Fuller, 23 A. 193, 61 Conn. 252, 1891 Conn. LEXIS 93 (Colo. 1891).

Opinion

Festn, J.

For a proper understanding of this case a statement will be necessary. The plaintiff, a New York corporation, claims an injunction, restraining each of the defendants from prosecuting in any court in this state or elsewhere any claim growing out of certain alleged assignments to the defendants of claims against the plaintiff; from obtaining other like assignments; from transferring any interest claimed by the defendants by virtue of such assignments; and a judgment that the defendants are not, as to the plaintiff, the lawful assignees of any claim upon the plaintiff by virtue of said pretended assignments. Upon its application a temporary injunction was issued which remains in force. The substance of the material portions of the finding made by the court below which reserved the case, is, that the plaintiff, in the prosecution of its business of life insurance, during the years 1872,1873 and 1874, entered into separate written contracts, of a similar nature, to insure the lives of certain persons named in the pleadings and of many others. Most of these contracts, or policies of insurance, ran for ten years, but a few were for longer terms. In all cases, however, at the end of ten years there was due and payable to the insured a sum of money under what is called the “Reserve Dividend Plan.” At the end of this period of ten years from the date of the respective policies, the plaintiff, of its own accord, sent to each of the policy-holders insured under this form of policies during the years named, circulars, *254 in which a sum was stated as the amount due to such policyholder. No information was given to policy-holders as to the amounts due, except by these circulars. Upon receipt of the circulars the policy-holders named in the pleadings, without other knowledge, inquiry or investigation, and upon the supposition and belief that such statements were correct, filled in each case a blank left in the circular for such purpose, with the option to “surrender the policy for its present cash value,” as stated in the circular, and signed their respective names thereto, and returned the circular, so signed, to the plaintiff. The plaintiff thereupon sent its checks for such stated sum to the policy-holders, who on receipt thereof delivered up their policies and each signed and delivered to the plaintiff a receipt, previously prepared by the plaintiff, by filling in a blank form used for that purpose, stating the sum received to be “in full paj^ment, settlement and discharge of all claims and dividends, surrender value or otherwise, under and by virtue of policy No. —.” All of said circulars, policies and receipts have ever since been in the possession of the plaintiff, between whom and the policyholders no further communication ever passed.

The defendant Austin B. Fuller resides in New Haven. He had been the insured, and his wife, the other defendant, the assured, under a similar policy, which had been litigated, resulting in the recovery of a very much larger sum than that stated by the plaintiff in its circular to be due. After the close of this litigation, and in the year 1889, he solicited and obtained assignments from the policy-holders named in the pleadings. He believed their cases to be like his own, and that there was more due under their policies. The assignments, executed by the assignors under seal, stated that such assignors “ for one dollar, and other good .considerations, * * * do hereby sell, set over, transfer and assign unto Harriet A. Fuller of New Haven, Conn, all the claims, demands and causes of action which we, or either of us, have or may have against the Metropolitan Life Insurance Oo. of New York.” No money was in fact paid,-the real consideration and contract being expressed in a writing signed by said *255 Austin B. Fuller and delivered to each of the assignors, in which is the following statement: — “ Said assignment is made upon the following understanding, namely: Said A. B. Fuller is to employ attorneys and counsel for the purpose of prosecuting said claim in the name of said Fuller, and without any liability on the part of said [assignors] to pay the expense or any part thereof. If no recovery is had, the said [assignors] are not to make any claim against said Fullers or either of them. But if the suit results in a judgment and recovery for the plaintiffs, then said A. B. Fuller will pay to [the assignors] one half of such sum as remains to him after paying lawyers and other expenses. If said Fullers find it advisable to give up the attempt to prosecute the claim, then the right is reserved to re-assign the said claim to the former holder, whereupon their liability under this agreement will cease.”

These assignments were made to the defendant Harriet A. Fuller, with her authority and consent, her husband transacting the business. She had no pecuniary interest in any of the assignments, but gave general authority to her husband to do what he pleased in respect thereto, in the hope that he, and through him his brother, who was a lawyer in New York, who had conducted the former litigation, would make some money.

« The plaintiff having in the complaint alleged that the policies had become of no binding effect, but had been fully discharged and satisfied, the defendants, to the first defence of general denial, added a second, alleging that the surrender of the policies and the receipts were fraudulently obtained by the plaintiff, and that the assignments to the defendants were made for the purpose of enforcing and collecting the claims of the several assignors against the plaintiff, by suits to be brought in court in the state of New York, — the state in which the plaintiff corporation was organized, and where it is located, and in which such assignments and contracts were lawful. The defendants also filed forty-one counterclaims, each of which is based on one of said assigned claims, and they asked, by way of equitable relief, a cancellation *256 of the receipts given by their assignors to the plaintiff; an account, and judgment for the amount found due by the account; and $100,000 damages. They also asked the answer to numerous interrogatories, and filed a motion for the production of papers and for disclosure.

Upon motion of the plaintiff, and against the earnest protest of the defendants, the court directed “ that the issues made by the first defence be heard and determined before any other issue in said cause is tried.” The motions aforesaid for answer, disclosure and production, were denied as not relevant to the issue presented by the first defense, and the case, as presented to us upon reservation, was tried solely upon such issue.

Upon the facts found it is not possible for us to see how, under any view which may be taken, the plaintiff can be held entitled to the equitable relief claimed. Surely we ought not to be asked to assume those allegations of the complaint to be true, which the plaintiff did not prove, and the defendants were not permitted to disprove. If any presumption of full payment would naturally and ordinarily arise from the surrender of policies and the giving of receipts in full, such presumption ought not to be invoked against a party who is forbidden to rebut it, or in favor of one who insists that the assignors’ right to sue the plaintiff “is a question wholly irrelevant to our cause.” The plaintiff explicitly says this “ action is founded upon the theory that the defendants had no right to sue the plaintiff

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

Related

Lydall, Inc. v. Ruschmeyer
919 A.2d 421 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 2007)
Osprey, Inc. v. Cabana Ltd. Partnership
532 S.E.2d 269 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 2000)
Bongaret v. Lampasona
29 Conn. Supp. 243 (Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, 1971)
Bongaret v. Lampasona
282 A.2d 580 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1971)
Corbin v. Corbin
226 A.2d 799 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1967)
Miller v. Miller
15 Conn. Super. Ct. 20 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1947)
Rice v. Farrell
28 A.2d 7 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1942)
Luckenbach Terminals, Inc. v. Township of North Bergen
11 A.2d 46 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1940)
Bethlehem Fabricators, Inc. v. H. D. Watts Co.
190 N.E. 828 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1934)
Sleeping Giant Park Asso. v. Connecticut Quarries Co.
160 A. 291 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1932)
Garford Motor Truck Co. v. Buckson
143 A. 410 (Superior Court of Delaware, 1927)
Rulnick v. Shulman
136 A. 865 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1927)
Flick v. Murdock
225 P. 119 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1924)
Perry v. M. M. Puklin Co.
123 A. 28 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1923)
United Zinc Companies v. Harwood
103 N.E. 1037 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1914)
Hyland v. Crofut
86 A. 753 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1913)
Conaway v. Co-Operative Homebuilders
117 P. 716 (Washington Supreme Court, 1911)
President of City Bank v. Thorp
61 A. 428 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1905)
Gaffney v. Tammany
46 A. 156 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1900)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 A. 193, 61 Conn. 252, 1891 Conn. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metropolitan-life-insurance-v-fuller-conn-1891.