Robinson v. Metropolitan Life Insurance

4 Balt. C. Rep. 750
CourtBaltimore City Court
DecidedSeptember 18, 1928
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Balt. C. Rep. 750 (Robinson v. Metropolitan Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Baltimore City Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robinson v. Metropolitan Life Insurance, 4 Balt. C. Rep. 750 (Md. Super. Ct. 1928).

Opinion

STEIN, J.

In support of the motion for a new trial, defendant’s counsel urged :

A. That, having rejected all prayers offered, the Court should have instructed the jury.

B. That, while the plaintiff had permission at the trial to amend, it did not do so; and the jury in their deliberations did not have the amendment authorized.

C. That, while the parties agreed in open Court that certain documentary evidence should be supplied, that was not done before the verdict.

D. That the Court erred in not granting the prayer for a directed verdict for the defendant.

Objections A, B and C were made for the first time at the argument on the motion for a new trial.

A.

The law permits, but does not compel the Court to volunteer instructions to the jury.

Poe’s Practice, Tiffany Ed., Sec. 292, folio 253.

B.

In asking permission to amend, plaintiff’s counsel explained in open Court, in the presence and hearing of the jury, the terms of the amendment to be made; so that the jury knew the nature thereof.

C.

This agrément was made in open Court: it included an agreement that the necessary writing could be put in at any time plaintiff’s counsel wished; and that, in the meanwhile, the case should go on and the plaintiff's counsel could and did use his copy of the writing.

D.

This involves the correctness of tlie Court’s refusal to grant the defendant's demurrer prayer, offered at the close of the whole case. Its discussion requires a summary of such of the evidence at the trial that tends to show defendant’s liability.

The suit is to recover on two of the defendant’s insurance policies; was tried on an amended declaration filed November 14, 1927; consisting of the six common counts and two special counts; to which two general issue pleas, and a special plea of payment, were filed. The testimony taken at the trial tends to show the following, viz:

That the defendant, a life insurance company, issued on the life of Laura. If. Dorsey, two life industrial insurance policies; the premiums on which were payable weekly; the first policy is dated November G, 3911; in it Eliza Dorsey, the mother of the insured, is the named beneficiary; the other policy is dated March 22, 1920; the beneficiary in it is not named, but is described as the insured’s “executor or administrator.” The insured died intestate on April 23, 1926, when each policy was in force; the amount then payable under the first policy to the mother, as beneficiary, was one hundred and forty-six dollars ; the amount then payable under the second policy to the beneficiary, the insured’s executor or administrator, was two hundred and twenty dollars. Each policy contains the “facility of payment clause,” which, among other things, authorized the company:

“To pay any other person appearing to said company to be equitably entitled to the same by reason of having incurred expense on behalf of the insured or for his or her burial. And tlie production of a receipt signed by either of said persons shall be conclusive evidence that all claims under this policy have been satisfied.”

The mother, Eliza Dorsey, who became Eliza Dorsey Messick, survived the insured; as did Warren Crockett, with whom the insured lived, and who, in the proofs of death, is called her husband.

For some years immediately before the insured died the mother was an inmate of the Shelter for Aged and Infirm Colored Persons, located in this city at 517 West Biddle street; which “Looks after old colored women until they die, and pays their funeral expenses and everything of that kind.”

After the insured died. Warren Crockett gave to the undertaker who buried her the two insurance policies declared on and the book containing the receipts for the premiums thereon; [752]*752these all of which were given to Miss Laura H. Robinson, the president of the board of managers of the Shelter, either by the coroner, who held an inquest over the body of the insured, or by the above-named undertaker. Miss Robinson took them and with Mrs. Harrison, one of the managers of the Shelter, went to the defendant’s office in the Munsey Building, this city; saw there first a young woman clerk; then an elderly man whom “we” understood was a manager and “who understood exactly what we came for,” while there Miss Robinson told those whom she saw that:

“She was claiming under the policies for the insured’s mother — that they wanted to put in the claim under the policies for the insured’s mother — that they wanted to put in the claim promptly, because a colored man named Warren Crockett, whom they did not think had a proper claim, might put in a claim himself.”

The manager told Miss Robinson and her companion “that they would have to wait about ten days before it would be paid and that we must surrender the policies and premium book.” Miss Robinson refused to do this unless she was given a receipt therefor; which was given to her by the young woman clerk; Miss Robinson also testified that she and Mrs. Harrison then left; “in good faith expecting to be paid”; that relying on getting the money from the defendant, she thereafter paid the undertaker one hundred and forty dollars on account of the insured’s funeral expenses, which sum she paid out of the proceeds of another policy on the life of the insured. Miss Robinson testified she “would not have surrendered the policies and book; would not have paid this one hundred and forty dollars on account of funeral expenses, if we had not expected some payment to be made to them.”

Thereafter the defendant paid Warren Crockett the amounts due under each policy, who paid the undertaker the balance due on the funei’al expenses. The young lady clerk, above referred to, testified for the defendant that she did not recognize either Miss Robinson or Mrs. Harrison in Court; that she gave the receipt for the policies and book; that she did not make any statement about tbe person to whom the money due would be paid; that she asked when the agent was to call and where the claimant would be, made a memorandum of it, attached it to the claim and put it in the agent’s box in the company’s office.

The defendant’s testimony also tends to show that while the agent did not get the memorandum the young lady clerk made of the claim and attached to the policy, he did get the policies and book; and he forwarded to the defendant’s home office in New York City, the policies, book, proof of death and claim he made oixt for and on behalf of Warren Crockett for the amounts due under these policies; that the officer in New York City, who considered the claim under these policies, did not have notice or knowledge of the claim made for the mother; had only before him the claim of Warren Crockett; which claim he approved: and the defexidant paid the amount of the policies to Warren Crockett. The policies, book and Crocketts receipt were produced ixx Court.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Balt. C. Rep. 750, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-metropolitan-life-insurance-mdcityctbalt-1928.