Ruto v. Italian Burial Casket Co.

158 A. 657, 104 Pa. Super. 288, 1932 Pa. Super. LEXIS 353
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 13, 1931
DocketAppeal 155
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 158 A. 657 (Ruto v. Italian Burial Casket Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ruto v. Italian Burial Casket Co., 158 A. 657, 104 Pa. Super. 288, 1932 Pa. Super. LEXIS 353 (Pa. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

In his capacity as administrator of the estate of Maria Antonia Ruto, plaintiff brought assumpsit against the defendant corporation to recover two items aggregating $211.20; the court below held the affidavit of defense insufficient as to one of them, $79.20, and entered a judgment, on the pleadings, in favor of the plaintiff for that amount; the present appeal by the defendant followed.

This litigation had its origin in certain contracts between defendant and Maria Antonia Ruto, and Carmine Ruto, her husband, relative to furnishing “funeral and burial equipment.”

In the cases of Alva W. Bedell v. Oliver H. Bair Company, Inc., 104 Pa. Superior Ct. 146 and Jennie M. Lukens, Admx. v. The Oliver H. Bair Company, Inc., 104 Pa. Superior Ct. 280 we had. occasion to consider the rights and liabilities of the parties under contracts containing provisions similar to, but not identical with, the contracts here involved and it will, therefore, be unnecessary for us to repeat in detail our reasons for some of the conclusions we have reached in the case now at bar.

We held that the “Benefit Bond” involved in the Bedell case was unlawful and void because it was an ultra vires contract of insurance issued in violation of our insurance laws. Bedell rescinded the agreement and demanded the return of the payments made thereunder; we affirmed, for the reasons stated in the opinion in that case, a judgment in his favor, upon the pleadings, for the amount of the payments, with interest from the date of demand.

In the Lukens case there were two contracts — the original bond and a “credit receipt” issued to and accepted by the obligee (in accordance with a pro *290 vision of the bond) when the payments were discontinued. The obligee’s administratrix sued for the amount of the “credit receipt,” contending that both the bond and the “credit receipt” were ultra vires contracts of insurance; the court below held the affidavit of defense sufficient and discharged plaintiff’s rule for judgment. We affirmed, holding that the original bond was an ultra vires contract of insurance but that the second contract was within the charter powers of the Bair Company, was based upon a new and independent consideration, and wasi not so closely connected with the first contract as to be tainted with its illegality.

No material facts were in dispute under the pleadings in either of those cases, but that is not the situation here.

An examination of this record convinces us that a summary judgment should not have been entered for any part of plaintiff’s claim. The pleadings consist of an amended statement of claim (to which defendant filed an affidavit of defense raising questions of law that were decided against it and leave granted to file an affidavit on the merits) and an original and supplemental affidavit of defense.

Undisputed facts are that on April 6, 1926, defendant issued to Maria Antonia Ruto a “Contract for Funeral and Burial Equipment,” No. 6792, by which it agreed, in consideration of the payment by her of sixty cents “on Monday of each week, until the sum of Two Hundred ($200) Dollars is paid,” to care for and inter her remains and furnish the funeral equipment specified. On the same day it issued to her husband, Carmine Ruto, a similar contract, No. 6791, under which he agreed to pay $1 each week until the like sum of $200 should be paid. Payments were made' by the intestate and her husband in accordance with the provisions of their respective contracts up to *291 October 8,1928, the aggregate of her payments being $79.20 and of his $132, or a total of $211.20, the amount for which suit was brought.

Defendant is a New Jersey corporation, incorporated October 1, 1921, “for the purpose of supplying burial caskets and necessaiy articles and equipment for funerals” and has power “to contract with and for any and all persons and organizations for the purpose of supplying burial caskets and all necessary articles and equipment and vehicles for funerals, either on the club installment plan, or premium or guaranty plan, or by direct and individual contract.” Immediately following its incorporation it registered in this state for all the purposes set forth in its charter. It is not clear, therefore, that the contracts here involved were ultra vires, but if they were contracts of insurance they were unlawful because defendant admits in its affidavit that in conducting its business it did not comply with the insurance laws of this state. Its explanation is that prior to its incorporation “it had been advised by the then Insurance Commissioner, upon advice received by him from the' office of the Attorney General of Pennsylvania, that the issuance of said certificates or contracts similar to Exhibit ‘A’ [issued to the intestate] did not constitute the doing of the business of insurance in the State of Pennsylvania.” We think this advice, if given, was mistaken.

The contracts issued by this defendant to the intestate and her husband provide that they “shall be in full and immediate effect” from date and “in the event of the death” of the obligee “all payments provided for shall absolutely cease and determine.” Here is the distinguishing characteristic of a contract of insurance — the chance of gain to the estate of the obligee and loss to the obligor if the obligee should die before the payments aggregate $200.

*292 In Attorney General ex rel. v. C. E. Osgood Company, 144 Northeastern Reporter 371, the contracts related to the sale of furniture upon the installment plan. Under their terms the title was retained by the seller but the property delivered to the customer under a lease providing that title should vest in him upon completion of the payments. The lease contained a provision that in case of the death of the customer before the whole amount had been paid a receipt in full for the balance due on the account (provided it did not exceed $500) would be furnished. It was held that these were insurance contracts. Other cases along this line are referred to in Arlington Cemetery Company v. Baldridge, 19 Del. County Rpts. 625.

We think the contracts now in suit were contracts of insurance and were unlawfully issued. If Maria and Carmine Ruto, when they discontinued their payments on October 8, 1928, had demanded the return thereof, they would have been entitled to enforce their demands: Bedell v. Oliver H. Bair Co., supra. Neither of them did this, and it is at this point a dispute relative to material facts arises in the pleadings.

In the sixth paragraph of the statement it is averred that “on or about the 8th day of October, 1928, it was verbally agreed by and between the intestate and her husband, Carmine Ruto, and the defendant’s duly authorized agent, P. Colucci, who had authority to act for and on behalf of the defendant, that the moneys paid by both the intestate and her husband, on account of both certificates issued to them by the defendant, amounting to $211.20, as aforesaid, be applied and used in full payment of the $200.00 to be paid by the intestate to the defendant under the terms of” the contract issued to her April 6,1926.

These averments are flatly denied by defendant in its affidavit and it is there stated that at the time contract No.

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Bluebook (online)
158 A. 657, 104 Pa. Super. 288, 1932 Pa. Super. LEXIS 353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ruto-v-italian-burial-casket-co-pasuperct-1931.