Penn Mutual Life Insurance v. Utne
This text of 207 F. Supp. 521 (Penn Mutual Life Insurance v. Utne) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
This a non-jury diversity action to recover amounts allegedly due and owing plaintiff on five promissory notes executed by defendant. The substantive law of Minnesota controls disposition.
Plaintiff is The Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company, a Pennsylvania-corporation. Defendant is a citizen of Minnesota. The complaint alleges that while defendant was a general agent of plaintiff, the plaintiff made several loans of money totaling $20,500.00 to defendant in return for which defendant made, executed and delivered to plaintiff five promissory notes. Dui'ing the continuance of his general agency and up to the termination of his agency contract on November 30, 1957, defendant made payments of accrued interest and principal on said notes'by personal checks drawn payable to plaintiff and in this manner reduced the unpaid principal balance due on said notes to $17,470.77. Subsequent to November 30, 1957, plaintiff applied the commissions and fees, which would have otherwise been due defendant, in payment of the accrued interest on said notes up to September 1, 1959, and the remainder of said commissions and fees was applied in reduction of the unpaid principal. On October 1, 1961, the unpaid principal balance due on said notes amounted to $12,168.32, and the accrued interest on the declining balances of the notes at the rate therein provided from September 1, 1959 to October 1, 1961, amounted to $1,314.41. Accordingly, as of October 1, 1961, the total amount of principal and interest due and owing on said notes was $13,482.73.
It is further alleged that although demand has been duly made upon defendant, no further amounts have been paid on said notes either by way of principal or interest, and defendant owes plaintiff the amount of said notes and interest as set forth above, together with interest on the principal balance of said notes from October 1, 1961, up to the time of commencement of this action.
Defendant by his answer denies the allegations of the complaint and asserts the defense of failure of consideration. Defendant alleges that the notes sued on by plaintiff were executed by defendant without any consideration whatever.
Plaintiff’s Exhibit 1 was received in evidence without objection and consists of the complaint together with copies of the five notes which are the subject of this suit.1 Defendant admitted the execution and delivery to plaintiff of these instruments, all of which were executed [523]*523in St. Paul, Minnesota. The aggregate of the amounts expressed in the instruments is $20,500.00.
Plaintiff’s Exhibits 8 to 11 inclusive, which were received in evidence without objection, are checks from plaintiff made payable to the order of defendant for the identical amounts expressed in four of the instruments in Exhibit 1. The aggregate of these checks, each of which is endorsed by defendant, totals $8,500.00. Defendant admits receiving said checks in connection with the said four instruments in plaintiff’s Exhibit 1 and endorsing same as general agent of plaintiff. The remaining note in plaintiff’s Exhibit 1 is dated January 8, 1954 and is in th’e amount of $12,000.00. Defendant, in his deposition and later at the trial, admitted receiving $12,000.00 on or about January 8, 1954 in connection with said note. Defendant was unable to recall whether payment was made by check or by a transfer of this amount to the general agency account at the time he took over as general agent.
The five instruments in plaintiff’s Exhibit 1, which defendant admits' executing and delivering, do not contain terms of negotiability, such as the words “or order,” “or bearer” and consequently are not negotiable instruments under the law of Minnesota.2 Nevertheless, each of these instruments contains a promise to pay and admits the receipt of a stated sum of money as consideration for the promise. The instruments are, therefore, good as ordinary contracts between the parties thereto, and the introduction of them on the trial is prima facie evidence of consideration which, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, entitles plaintiff to recover.3 Defendant has asserted the affirmative defense of failure of consideration.4 Plaintiff contends that the defendant has failed through any effective means to successfully show a failure or lack of consideration which [524]*524it was defendant’s burden to establish as the pleader of an affirmative defense.
The evidence discloses that defendant first became associated with plaintiff on July 1, 1940 at which time he was employed as a supervisor in charge of plaintiff’s office at St. Paul, Minnesota. He continued in this capacity until June or July of 1942 when he entered the military service. On January 1, 1946, after his release from the service, defendant rejoined plaintiff in the capacity of manager of the office at St. Paul. This office had by that time become a separate agency. On December 30, 1953, defendant executed a general agency contract with plaintiff which took effect January 1, 1954.4 5 This association continued until defendant involuntarily terminated it on November 30, 1957. The instruments in question were executed between January 8, 1954 and November 2, 1955. Defendant is well characterized by plaintiff’s brief wherein he is described as a capable and intelligent businessman with considerable experience in the insurance field.
Defendant contends that although parol evidence cannot be used to vary or contradict a written contract, it can be offered to show that no consideration passed to defendant.6 This is the rule in Minnesota7 and a review of the evidence in this connection is entirely appropriate.
Defendant attempts to establish failure of consideration upon the grounds that he did not directly receive the amounts referred to in the notes, but that the checks issued pursuant thereto were endorsed by defendant for deposit only to the general agency account. Defendant testified that said account was set up, pursuant to the order of plaintiff’s auditor, solely for the purpose of advancing money to agents and that the money was never used personally by defendant.
On the other hand, the evidence discloses that defendant was in charge of the agency in St. Paul and that plaintiff had no agents working in St. Paul who did not report to defendant; that any money advanced by defendant to an agent was returnable to defendant. It was further shown that defendant did not receive a salary from plaintiff but received compensation in the form of commissions derived from the business written by the agents under his supervision. In accordance with the agreements set forth in the five instruments, payments of the sums advanced to defendant were made to plaintiff out of defendant’s commissions.
It cannot be said that defendant did not receive consideration for the instruments in question where, as here, defendant received, either by check or otherwise, the amounts expressed in said instruments which he in turn deposited in an agency account f®r the purpose of advancing money to agents in whom he had a direct financial interest. Although defendant’s case has been well presented, there is no substantial evidence to support a defense of failure of consideration. Nor has there been a showing of fraud or duress or any other valid defense to the instruments in question.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
207 F. Supp. 521, 1962 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3697, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/penn-mutual-life-insurance-v-utne-mnd-1962.