Security Trust & Life Ins. Co. v. Stuart

163 S.W. 396, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 212
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 3, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 163 S.W. 396 (Security Trust & Life Ins. Co. v. Stuart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Security Trust & Life Ins. Co. v. Stuart, 163 S.W. 396, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 212 (Tex. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinions

In this case the appellant, after the cause was set for submission, filed a motion, requesting a rebriefing of his cause, stating that, at the time the case was tried in the lower court and briefed by counsel, the act of April 4, 1913 (Acts 33d Leg. c. 136), declaring that the assignments of error in the motion shall constitute the assignments in the cause, was not published, and that counsel were not aware of the same. Accompanying the motion were new briefs, tendered by appellant, containing the assignments embraced in the motion for new trial, and which the appellee asks us to refuse to consider. We will permit the new briefs to be filed as a part of the cause, and will consider them in the review of the case. We can see no injury to appellee in pursuing this course, and upon inspection of the new briefs and the old briefs, and the original brief of appellee and his reply brief, the issues are tendered and met, and considerable injury could result to appellant by a suppression of the new briefs.

In October, 1904, R. T. Stuart, the appellee, was an agent and insurance solicitor for the appellant, the Security Trust Life Insurance Company, and at the same time one S. L. Ewing, of Dallas, Tex., was the state agent for said company. At that time one Bradley was insured in said company, the policy having been solicited and sold by Stuart some time prior thereto, and Bradley, being unable to make a payment of a certain premium upon the policy, executed a note for the sum of $256.50 in favor of the company, maturing five months from date, and delivered by Stuart to the company. Stuart, on November 1, 1904, evidently in response to a letter from S. L. Ewing, the state agent, in regard to Bradley and the note, wrote Mr. Ewing that he "would stand for the term if the company was afraid of Bradley." Stuart, in using the word "term" in said letter, meant "term insurance" connected with said policy, which also meant the net cost of said insurance, which in this instance *Page 397 was $55.50. In so far as the record shows, there was no direct response to this letter; however, in October, 1905, Stuart communicates to Mr. Ewing that Mr. Bradley did not make as much wheat as he expected, "but he will pay the term anyway, for I will see that he pays same, if possible, and I am confident he will." Some time in 1906 negotiations occurred between Stuart, the local agent, and Ewing, the state agent, in regard to the payment of the "term insurance" by Stuart and the transfer of the Bradley note by the company to Stuart in consideration of the payment of same. In pursuance of those negotiations, the note was indorsed by the insurance company to R. T. Stuart, as follows: "Pay to the order of R. T. Stuart. Security Trust Life Insurance Company, I. C. Gaverick, Treasurer. With recourse."

The note, with its indorsement, was mailed to a bank at Vernon, Tex., with a draft evidencing the amount of the term insurance, $55.50, which was paid by Stuart, and on September 17, 1906, Stuart instituted this suit against Bradley and the Security Trust Life Insurance Company, the appellant, upon the note.

The insurance company answers that the note was intended to be returned to the plaintiff indorsed "without recourse," but that, by mistake of the draftsman in making the indorsement, the same was left off of said note, and that plaintiff accepted it with knowledge of such mistake, and further pleads that "there was no consideration moving to it from plaintiff for the indorsement of the note except the payment of $55.50, which Stuart was obligated to pay, and which was not a consideration for the transfer," and that the "same was made at his request for his own benefit." The indorsement "with recourse" upon this note is an unusual one. It did not broaden the blank indorsement, nor did it restrict the same. Mr. Ewing, the state agent, testified that the note was to be indorsed without recourse; Stuart testifying to the opposite. The last negotiations, if we interpret the record correctly, between Stuart and Ewing were at Dallas, and whatever agreement was made was to be submitted by Mr. Ewing to the company at its home office for its acceptance and approval. Mr. Gaverick, the treasurer of the company testified that he placed the indorsement on the particular note, and "the indorsement which appears on the note is not the indorsement that was intended to be placed on same; the indorsement that was intended to be placed on the note was "without recourse."

The appellant offered in evidence a letter written by Mr. Ewing to Geo. B. Luper, vice president and general manager of appellant, communicating the negotiations between himself and Stuart in regard to the latter paying the term insurance, and which contains the following: "He [meaning Stuart] refuses to pay the amount as promised, unless you will indorse the note over to him. He is perfectly willing for you to make it without recourse to yourself, but insists that he may have something against Mr. Bradley in order to get his money. * * * Now I am returning this note, and would ask you to make the proper indorsement to R. T. Stuart, without recourse, and send it to the Waggoner National Bank, Vernon, Texas, with the draft attached for the $55.50 on Mr. Stuart, and he has agreed to take it up." The introduction of this letter in evidence was objected to by appellee, and sustained by the court, on the ground that the letter was self-serving and an ex parte statement; the bill of exceptions showing that the letter was offered for the purpose of evidencing "the real basis for the company's indorsement of the note to Stuart, and as evidencing the agreement between defendant company, made by its agent, S. L. Ewing, and the plaintiff, R. T. Stuart, it having been admitted by plaintiff that he never made any agreement with any one about the purchase of the note except S. L. Ewing, agent." We think the letter was clearly admissible and a deprivation of a legal right to appellant. It may be that appellee had shown that he was not legally liable for the "term insurance" spoken of in this letter; but the evidence clearly indicates that the $55.50 paid by him was in the nature of idemnification to the company on account of the cost of this insurance carried for the term paid for by the note representing the premium. The policy had lapsed when the negotiations were consummated, and the note was long past due and unpaid. "A note indorsed and delivered after dishonor is between the indorser and indorsee a note on demand, and subject as such to the rules as to demand and notice." 2 Parsons, Bills and Notes, p. 13. Stuart was paying the amount of the term insurance for the note, and, the note having matured, it is unusual that a note for $256.50 would be sold for the sum of $55.50, with liability for immediate payment upon demand by the transferee. Appellant says that Ewing had testified to practically the same thing with reference to the contents of the letter, and the error, if any, was harmless. We think not.

It is true the appellee contends that the agreement to pay $55.50, the amount of the term insurance, and the payment of it, was a purchase of the note; but upon analysis of this record upon the question of its transfer, and considering all the testimony as to the agreement between these parties, we are inclined to think that the appellant was entitled to every "scrap" of material testimony which could be offered on its theory of the case, and the error was not a harmless one on account of other testimony, rather conduced, along the same line. This letter does not come within the rule of hearsay. We *Page 398

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Bluebook (online)
163 S.W. 396, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/security-trust-life-ins-co-v-stuart-texapp-1914.