National Life Insurance Co. of America v. McDermott

186 Ill. App. 157, 1914 Ill. App. LEXIS 839
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 4, 1914
DocketGen. No. 18,834
StatusPublished

This text of 186 Ill. App. 157 (National Life Insurance Co. of America v. McDermott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Life Insurance Co. of America v. McDermott, 186 Ill. App. 157, 1914 Ill. App. LEXIS 839 (Ill. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

The complainant below and appellant here, the National Life Insurance Company of The United States of America, brought a bill in equity in the Circuit Court of Cook county in February, 1911, against Charles H. McDermott, the appellee herein, to cancel a certain policy of life insurance in the sum of $3,000 which it had theretofore on September 9,1910, executed and delivered to the said Charles H. McDermott. It alleged that the terms of the application for said policy provided that the Company should incur no liability until the premium had actually been paid to and accepted by the Company or its authorized agent, and that although McDermott asserted to the contrary and was threatening to assign and transfer the policy, the policy was void because there had been no payment to the complainant' of the premium, which was to be a single premium of $1,948. 20.

The further allegations were that contemporaneously with the delivery of the said policy to McDermott, McDermott had delivered to the complainant a certificate of deposit in the Cosmopolitan Bank of Chicago for the snm of $1,948.20; that while the certificate of deposit bears date July 1, 1910, it was in fact executed at about the time of its delivery to the complainant by McDermott; that at the time of the said transaction between the complainant and McDermott the Cosmopolitan Bank of Chicago was insolvent; that McDermott knew it; that the complainant did not know it; that on December 14,1910, a receiver was appointed by the Circuit Court of Cook county for the Cosmopolitan Bank of Chicago; that the receiver took possession of the property of the bank; that said property is not more than sufficient to pay the expense of the receivership and the certificate of deposit is of no value; that when said certificate of deposit, which was in the following terms:

“COSMOPOLITAN BANK OF CHICAGO.
(Not Inc.)
C. B. Chicago, HI., July 1, 1910.
No. 146
National Life Ins. Co., U. S. A., have deposited in this Bank nineteen hundred and forty-eight (20/100) dollars $1,948.20/100 payable to themselves January 1st, 1911, in current funds, on the return of this certificate properly endorsed, with interest at the rate of 4 per cent, per annum, if left six months, no interest after 7 months.
Milo Franklin Lewis,
Not subject to check. St. Lawrence Chandler,”

became due on January 1, 1911, Lewis and Chandler had left for parts unknown, the bank was closed and there was no person to make demand for payment in Chicago; that the complainant indorsed the certificate of deposit “Without Becourse” and tendered it to McDermott, demanding from him payment of $1,948.20, which he refused to make.

By amendment the complaint alleged further that it never deposited any sum in the Cosmopolitan Bank; that said certificate was issued by said bank at the request of said defendant and not at its request, and that the complainant obtained the certificate by surrendering to said bank a certain other certificate of deposit executed by the said bank for a larger sum and securing in return this certificate for $1,948.20 and other certificates of deposit, and that the larger certificate was not McDermott’s property, but that of one Arvidson, and that McDermott attempted to commit a fraud on Arvidson and the complainant by the surrender of the larger certificate and obtaining the certificate here in question and delivering it to complainant; also that Lewis and Chandler, whose names are appended to the said certificate of deposit, were in September, 1910, and at all times thereafter insolvent, known so to be by the defendant, but not known to be so by complainant.

The policy is made a part of the bill. A provision of it much insisted on by the complainant is:

“This insurance is granted upon condition that the premium be promptly paid when due, and failure to pay the premium or any part thereof when due, or failure to pay at maturity any note given for the premium or any part thereof, shall forfeit and cancel this contract and terminate all obligations of the company under this policy and all payments made hereon shall. thereupon stand forfeited to the company, except as herein otherwise provided.”

The bill as amended was demurred to, but the demurrer was overruled and the defendant McDermott answered. The answer denied knowledge on the part of the defendant that the Cosmopolitan Bank or Lewis or Chandler were in September, 1910, insolvent, and alleged that McDermott offered the certificate of deposit in question “as full payment and satisfaction of the premium upon said policy of insurance and the complainant accepted said certificate of deposit as payment of said premium.”

The chancellor below, after a hearing, dismissed the bill for want of equity, finding that the certificate of deposit was accepted as payment in full of the premium. The complainant appealed.

We think the decision of the chancellor in the Circuit Court was correct.

The evidence, which was entirely offered by complainant, showed that McDermott and an agent of the Company (one Burton) went to the main office of the Company and there submitted to the assistant secretary of the Company, a Mr. McCourtie, an application for a single premium policy of life insurance, ‘ ‘ an unusual form of policy,” and that there Burton spoke about tailing a “certificate of deposit” for the premium; that the assistant secretary said that he couldn’t decide about that, but would “take the thing up” with the proper officials of the Company; that it was usual and customary for the Company “to trade life insurance for things other than money,” “for notes and that sort of thing;” that McCourtie did submit the matter to a superior officer, as he says: “On a question of credit, as to whether or not that could be rightfully received as a settlement of this premium, just as if we had taken a note or something of that sort.”

McCourtie also testified: “I don’t know of another case of this kind of a certificate of deposit being offered in exchange for the premium.”

After the conference alluded to between the officers of the Company, McCourtie went with McDermott, whose certificate of deposit was larger than the amount of the premium, to the Cosmopolitan Bank and took from it or from Lewis and Chandler the “certificate of deposit” in question, running directly to the Company, for which the policy was then delivered to Mc-Dermott.

We think this was done at the risk of the Company and that the transaction shows it was not a conditional payment or security, but an “exchange” of one document for the other—the obligation of the Company to McDermott for the obligation of Lewis and Chandler to the Company.

While it is true that in Illinois, as in the majority of the States, the taking of a note of a third person is not prima facie absolute payment in the case of either a contemporaneous or antecedent indebtedness, but mere conditional payment or security (Cheltenham Stone & Gravel Co. v. Gates Iron Works, 124 Ill.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
186 Ill. App. 157, 1914 Ill. App. LEXIS 839, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-life-insurance-co-of-america-v-mcdermott-illappct-1914.