Price v. Mutual Reserve Life Insurance

2 Balt. C. Rep. 452
CourtBaltimore City Superior Court
DecidedJanuary 8, 1907
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Balt. C. Rep. 452 (Price v. Mutual Reserve Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Baltimore City Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Price v. Mutual Reserve Life Insurance, 2 Balt. C. Rep. 452 (Md. Super. Ct. 1907).

Opinion

NILES, J. —

In this case the questions now to be decided arise upon the pleadings, which are voluminous.

[453]*453There is a declaration of thirteen counts, to which are pleaded twenty-three jileas, and there are replications, rejoinders, surre-joinders, rebutter and snrre-but ter.

Demurrers have been filed to several of these pleadings, and under these demurrers, almost every pleading upon both sides is attacked by the opposite party.

First. The Declaration. The declaration is assailed by the defendant upon the ground that there is a misjoinder of twelve counts in contract with one count in tort. In this State, if such a misjoinder exists, it is fatal. The first four counts in the narr are the common counts in assumpsit. The next eight counts are for alleged breaches of contract of insurance. The last count is as follows:

“And for that 13th, the defendant, by false and fraudulent representations made to the plaintiff’s testator, induced the said testator to accept a policy of insurance No. 8000, issued by the defendant on the life of said testator; and said testator from 1882 to 1898, inclusive, paid the defendants, for xjremiums and mortuary assessments, the sum of twenty-three hundred dollars ($2,300), which payments were made by the said testator to the defendant, on representations of the said defendant, which represent ations were false and fraudulent; and the said mortuary assessments during said period of time, viz., from 1882 to 1898, inclusive, were illegal and wrongfully made, and assessed on said 1’olicy No. 8000 by the defendant, and of which said fraud and wrong the plaintiff’s testator was ignorant at the time of making said payments.”

In the opinion of this court this is a count in deceit.

The action of the defendant complained of is a tort, to wit: The fraudulent procurement of money from the plaintiff, the fraud consisting in certain representations made by the defendant to the plaintiff in relation to a certain pmlicy of insurance and the X>remiums and mortuary assessments thereon.

The fact that this count is in tort becomes perhaps still more api>arent, when we consider that the plaintiff joined issue upon the nineteenth plea of the defendant, which applies to the count in question, and is “that it did not induce the plaintiff’s testator by any false or fraudulent rex>resentations whatever to accept the policy of insurance in said count mentioned.”

The issue, then, ux>on this count, as accepted by the jilaintilf, is whether or not the defendant induced the plaintiff’s testator by fraud to accept a certain contract. When such is the issue, it is idle to argue that the count declares upon the contract itself, or can be united in one suit with other counts declaring upon the contract. The demurrer to the plaintiff’s declaration will be sustained.

Second. The Pleas. The judgment of the court, as just stated, will be that the demurrer to the plaintiff’s declaration will be sustained, but inasmuch as the plaintiff can easily amend his declaration by striking out the thirteenth count, this court will take up and express its opinion in regard to what seems to it the controlling points arising upon the succeeding pleadings.

The plaintiff attacks the twenty-third plea of the defendant. This plea is as follows:

“23rd. And for a further and final l>lea to the 5th, 6th, Tth, 8th, 9th, 10th, lltli, 12th and 13th counts of the amended declaration, it says that on or about the 1st day of April, 1898, the plaintiff’s testator, with full knowledge of all the facts and doings- of the defendant with reference to the making and collecting of assessments upon the policy of insurance in said counts mentioned, and without any concealment or misrepresentation whatsoever made by the defendant to him, voluntarily elected to discontinue payment of the mortuary assessments and dues lawfully levied and assessed by the defendant and ui>on said policy, and thereby voluntarily súffered the said policy to lax>se.

“And the defendant says that by said voluntarily discontinuance on the part of the plaintiff's testator to pay said assessments, all his rights and claims against the said Mutual Reserve Fund Life Association, and against the defendant as the alleged successor of the said Mutual Reserve Fund Life Association wholly ceased and determined, according to the express terms and conditions of said policy, and that all the obligations of said Mutual Reserve Fund Life Association and of this defendant as the alleged successor thereof wholly ceased [454]*454and ended, and the said policy in said counts mentioned became wholly null and void. And the defendant in fact says that, when the plaintiff’s testator departed this life in June, 1902, he had, as hereinbefore stated, full knowledge of all the acts and doings of the defendant in relation to said policy, and had had such full knowledge thereof for more than four years, and had with such knowledge fully acquiesced in and assented for more than four years to the acts and doings of the defendant in making and collecting the assessments on his said policy, and well knew that his said policy had lapsed and had become null and void, and that all his rights and claims thereunder had wholly ceased.”

It seems to this court that this plea is double; that it contains two distinct grounds of defense, when one alone would be effectual at law.

If, by “voluntary discontinuance,” all the rights and claims of plaintiff’s testator against the defendant wholly ceased and determined, according to the express terms and conditions of the policy, the plaintiff has no case. Such a defense is good whether the plaintiff lived one hour or forty years thereafter, and whether he spent the rest of his life in glad acquiescence or in sad self-reproach.

On the other hand,. if more than four years had elapsed since the last payment complained of,was made, and if plaintiff, during all those four years had “full knowledge of all the facts and doings of the defendant in relation to said policy,” the plaintiff has no case, no matter what the provisions of the policy might he, and Ono matter whether there was a voluntary discontinuance or not. In such case, limitations would be a complete bar. Duplicity seems, in Maryland, to be a defect of substance making a pleading bad upon general demurrer and, in the judgment of this court, the defendant’s twenty-third plea is bad upon this ground.

A similar plea to this was filed in the case of Eldridge O. Price vs. The Mutual Reserve Life Insurance Co., 102 Md., 683. A demurrer was interposed to that plea, but does not seem to have been passed upon by the Court of Appeals. The plea is merely referred to in the opinion of the court as showing what were the facts admitted on the pleadings; but inasmuch as, by the decision of the court, the demurrer was sustained to the declaration, and thereby the whole case practically decided in favor of the defendant, the validity of the plea was not, and could not have been, determined by the Court of Appeals.

Third. Replications and Subsequent Pleadings.

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Related

Price v. Mutual Reserve Life Insurance
62 A. 1040 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1906)

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Bluebook (online)
2 Balt. C. Rep. 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/price-v-mutual-reserve-life-insurance-mdsuperctbalt-1907.