Union Central Life Ins. v. Deutser

13 F. Supp. 313, 1935 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1101
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedApril 23, 1935
DocketNos. 2223, 2242
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 13 F. Supp. 313 (Union Central Life Ins. v. Deutser) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union Central Life Ins. v. Deutser, 13 F. Supp. 313, 1935 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1101 (D. Md. 1935).

Opinion

WILLIAM G COLEMAN, District Judge.

These are interpleader proceedings, brought under 28 U.S.Code, § 41 (26) (28 U.S.C.A. § 41 (26), to determine who is entitled to payment under certain insurance policies. The cases. arise on the defendants’ motions to dismiss the plaintiffs’ amended answers and cross-bills in proceedings which were instituted by the Union Central Life Insurance Company and the General American Life Insurance Company. The first proceeding was instituted November 17, 1933, and the second December 16, 1933.. The cases were docketed as equity No. 2223 and No, 2242, respectively, and were heard together June 18, 1934.

The policies involved are as follows: No. 981791 of the Union Central-Life Insurance Company for $1,500, with Alex Deutser, brother of the insured, named as beneficiary; No. 177549, No. 137286, and No. 136719' of the General American Life Insurance Company for $2,500, $5,000, and $5,000, respectively, and with Alex Deutser named beneficiary on the first policy, Isidore Deutser named beneficiary on the .second policy, and Isidore Deutser and Celia Zaidenfeld, brother and sister of the insured, named beneficiary on the third policy. These .four policies and five others” (not in suit) were involved in a transaction of June 19, 1933, around which the case centers, and in connection with which the following papers were executed on that date: (1) An agreement between Herman Deutser, of Houston, Tex., the insured, and the defendant, the Marlboro Shirt Company, Inc., of Baltimore (hereinafter called “Marlboro”),- whereby Deutser purported, in consideration of a bill of merchandise purchased from Marlboro on June 19, 1933, to promise to pay $4,540.25, which is the exact amount, within a few cents, of the amount proved in the bankruptcy proceeding of a certain White House, Inc., of Houston, Tex., another shirt company, hereinafter referred to as “White House,” and the amount written "off as a bad debt by Marlboro on December 31, 1931, the day of the adjudication in bankruptcy of White House. The promise to pay $4,540.-25, purported to be evidenced by a demand note, and the agreement further recited that the receipt of merchandise was acknowledged by Deutser; and, finally, the agreement provided that, as further guaranty for the payment of the merchandise, Deutser had executed, in favor of Marlboro, a deed of assignment for “all his equity in life insurance policies as listed in said deed of assignment”; (2) a demand note by Deutser to Marlboro for $4,540.25; (3) a memorandum of assignment which was made out, according to its terms, only as a preliminary paper, until formal assignment could be recorded by the various companies. The assignment memorandum referred specifically, to nine insurance policies, including the four involved in this suit, and purported to transfer all benefit and advantage to be derived from the policies, “as the interest of the assignee may appear” to Marlboro; (4) 'an invoice of shirts purported to be sold to Deutser by Marlboro for $4,540.25; (5) a receipt signed by Deutser for the shirts specified in the invoice; and (6) three blanks filled in as formal assignments of the three policies -issued by the predecessor of General American Life Insurance Company, and dated as formally recorded in the offices of the insurance company, June 23, 1933. (No formal assignment of the Union Central policy, on any blank furnished by the insurance company, appears among the papers.)

In accordance with the agreement of June 19, 1933, the insurance policies were delivered by Deutser to Marlboro. Upon the death of Deutser on August 17, 1933, the beneficiaries' originally named in the policies demanded that Marlboro surrender them, alleging that the shirts named as consideration in the agreement had not been delivered; that they did not now want delivery, because Marlboro’s part in the transaction of June 19th was fraudulent, and should be set aside.

Marlboro refused to surrender the policies, answering that the shirts were never intended to be delivered, but that the transaction of June 19th was executed for the purpose of establishing security for the payment of the old account owed Marlboro by White House. White House was a shirt company in which Deutser was a [315]*315stockholder and for which he was buyer. The obligations of this company Dcutser had allegedly orally guaranteed from time to time on his trips to Baltimore, during which he purchased shirts from Marlboro for White House.

As noted above, interpleader proceedings were instituted by the Union Central Life Insurance Company on November 17, 1933. The money due under the policy No. 981791 was deposited in court. Alex Deutser, the original beneficiary, was designated plaintiff, and Marlboro defendant in the proceedings now before the coiirt, which raise the issue of fraud, alleged by the plaintiff in his amended answer and cross-bill. The same steps were taken by the General American Life Insurance Company on December 16, 1933, with the result that Isidore Deutser and Celia Zaidenfeld, as well as Alex Deutser, became plaintiffs. Prior to the hearing of the two cases on June 18, 1934, the plaintiffs, under Equity Rule 58 (28 U.S.Code §§ 721 to 723 [28 U.S.C.A. following section 723]), had submitted interrogatories, upon leave of the court, to various officers of Marlboro and they had duly filed their answers.

From the oral testimony which has been produced, and from the various letters, telegrams, and accounts received in evidence, the following picture develops of circumstances preceding the transaction of June 19, 1933:

During the period from September 9, 1930, and December 1, 1931, Deutser bought various quantities of shirts from Marlboro for White House, and, according to the testimony of I. Rosenbloom, secretary and treasurer of Marlboro, from time to time orally assured officers 'of Marlboro, sometimes separately and sometimes in the presence of each other, that he (Deutser) would see to it that Marlboro lost nothing on the White House account. December 31, 1931: White House was adjudicated bankrupt and the balance due on the account, $4,540.46, was written off as a bad debt by Marlboro. January 19, 1931: Marlboro notified its credit indemnity company of the loss. This loss appears to have been accepted as $4,540.31. For this loss, and others during the period of the policy, totaling about $32,000, Marlboro subsequently, September 7, 1933, received a settlement from the credit indemnity company of $10,000, and a release by the credit indemnity company to Marlboro of all salvage rights on the had debts. No mention was made by Marlboro to the credit indemnify company of Deutser’s oral guaranty. Dividends totaling $432.36, collected by the indemnity company in the bankruptcy proceeding of White House, were remitted to Marlboro after June 19, 1933. February 16, 1932: Marlboro filed proof of debt in the White House bankruptcy proceeding for $4,540.31. April 30, 1933: Deutser telephoned from Houston, Tex., to I. Rosenbloom, secretary and treasurer of Marlboro, according to the latter’s testimony ; Dcutser explained who he was ; brought up the matter of the guaranty; declared the outstanding debt of White House to Marlboro was bothering his conscience ; and stated that he had finally found what he believed was a method of carrying out his promises. According to Rosenbloom, the method he proposed was to assign his insurance policies to Marlboro as security for the payment of the White House debt; that, upon assurances from Rosenbloom that this arrangement would he satisfactory to Marlboro, Deutser proceeded to announce that he was contemplating opening a new store in Houston.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 F. Supp. 313, 1935 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-central-life-ins-v-deutser-mdd-1935.