Valton v. National Loan Fund Life Assurance Society

22 Barb. 9, 1854 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 179
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 4, 1854
StatusPublished

This text of 22 Barb. 9 (Valton v. National Loan Fund Life Assurance Society) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Valton v. National Loan Fund Life Assurance Society, 22 Barb. 9, 1854 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 179 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1854).

Opinions

Wright, J.

I endeavored to bring to the trial of this cause the utmost care. The actors were all foreigners, Germans on the one side and Englishmen bn the other, and for any thing that appeared by the evidence, of equal respectability and entitled to an equal measure of consideration at the hands of the courts. Through the probably careless discharge of duty by their agent, and his eagerness to obtain risks, the defendants were involved in a litigation for a large sum. The principal defense set up in the pleadings was, that the policy was obtained by fraud. The complaint averred the-issuing, of the policy, the payment of the premium, and the death of Schumacher, upon whose life the insurance was effected, none of which averments were denied by the answer. The answer alleged as new matter, that upon the application to insure, Schumacher was represented as a merchant, a partner with Valton and Martin in business, and a man of large means, which representations were untrue and avoided the policy ; and that the policy was obtained by fraud, and with the fraudulent intent of Martin and Valton, with or without the concurrence of Schumacher, of soon thereafter secreting or otherwise disposing of Schumacher, and making claim under their pretended articles of partnership, on the [25]*25defendants for the amount of the insurance, and that Valton and Martin, or one of them, had secreted or otherwise disposed of Schumacher with such fraudulent intent. It was not pretended in the pleadings that Martin or Valton, or either of them, procured or paid for the policy for their own benefit, and that it was thereby void as being a wager policy. No such issue was presented or hinted at: nor when the case was submitted was there really any competent or sufficient evidence to go to the jury on the question of a fraudulent evasion of the statute against wagers.

It is admitted that upon the issues made by the pleadings, and indeed on the whole case, the questions of fact were properly submitted to the jury; and they have found against the defendants. I anxiously desired on the trial that right only should prevail, and I am still desirous if any error in law has been committed by me, to the prejudice or injury of the defendants, that a new trial should be aw'arded. But I frankly confess that I am not willing or desirous, more in this instance than any other, that the parties should be allowed to present the case to another jury, for the reason only, that mystery, as my brother Harris expresses it, “ still seems to envelop some of its principal features,” or that a shadowy, undefined suspicion of wrong still attaches to it.

It is the opinion of one of the members of the court, that no error was committed in the admission or rejection of evidence, or in the charge or refusal to charge as requested. Another has come to the conclusion that the deposition of Oltman should have been suppressed; that the defendants should have been permitted to prove his declarations made to their agent, as to the circumstances attending the death of Schumacher; and that it was erroneous, under the evidence in the case, to refuse to charge, that if the jury found that Martin or Valton, or either of them, procured or paid for the policy, for their own benefit, though with the assent of Schumacher, it was void, as being a wager policy. The first two objections were but feebly urged on the trial, and the last was not thought of, as being in the ease, until after the jury had been charged, Indeed, had the [26]*26first been allowed, pretty much all of the defendants’ theory of a fraudulent conspiracy to secrete Schumacher and claim the insurance money, would have vanished, for it was upon Oltman’s “marvellously strange” narrative of the death of Schumacher, that the theory was principally based. Under the pleadings, it was not necessary that the plaintiffs should have introduced the deposition of Oltman, for it was only important to prove the death, and that was averred in the complaint, as well as the time at which it occurred, and not so denied in the answer as to put in issue either the fact or the date. These being material allegations, were, for the purposes of the action, to be taken as true. {Code, § 168.) The plaintiffs might have rested their case, on showing the assignment from Martin to the plaintiff Adams, and proving the fact that the required notice had been given to the defendants of the death of Schumacher. But they chose to proceed as though by the pleadings they were put upon proof of all the material allegations in their complaint, and as the case was novel in some of its aspects, and the sum involved . large, I was not disposed to interfere. With the view of substantial justice between the parties a most liberal construction was given to the answer of the defendants. Had the plaintiffs stopped after proving the facts put in issue by the pleadings, leaving to the defendants to establish affirmatively the frauds set up in their answer, there would have been little “ mystery surrounding the case,” and nothing “ peculiar in the character and circumstances of the principal witness.” The defendants would scarcely have made an approach towards establishing the fraud charged in their answer. As it was, not a single fact was affirmatively shown by the defendants, bearing on the issue of a conspiracy between Valton, Martin <fc Schumacher, to' defraud the insurance company by obtaining the policy, and either secreting, kidnapping or murdering Schumacher, that two of the conspirators might claim the moneys secured to be paid by the policy. They relied not on facts proved by themselves, but upon the improbability and inconsistency of the statements of the plaintiff’s witnesses to prove Schumacher’s death. Fraud was to be inferred, riot from facts and circumstances proved legiti[27]*27mately and directly tending to the conclusion, but because the defendants had succeeded in throwing some mystery about the case, and stoutly declared that the principal witness of the plaintiffs to prove Schumacher’s death was not to be credited. Oltman’s deposition, with the testimony of their agent, was all the defendants had on which to go to the jury upon the questions of fraud or false representations. The objection, therefore, to the deposition was feebly put forth, but as the plaintiffs chose to offer it, and insist upon its reception, we are now to say whether there was error in refusing to suppress it.

The case states that upon the deposition of Oltman taken on commission, being offered in evidence, the defendants objected, on the ground that two cross-interrogatories, the first and the ninth, were unanswered in part: and after the deposition had been received and read the same objection was renewed, and exception taken. If this meant any thing definite, it was that the court was asked to suppress the entire deposition on the ground of a partial failure to answer what the defendants’ counsel termed two cross-interrogatories. That which is called the first cross-interrogatory embraced nineteen questions; the ninth, five questions. Which of these numerous questions Oltman had foiled to answer was not pointed out: but the court was left to ascertain from an examination of the interrogatories, and indeed the entire deposition, whether the witness had foiled to tell the whole truth. In what respect the interrogatories were unanswered was not specifically stated. Under these circumstances, and with such an indefinite objection, I should have deemed it an unjustifiable exercise of discretion to have suppressed the deposition.

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Bluebook (online)
22 Barb. 9, 1854 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/valton-v-national-loan-fund-life-assurance-society-nysupct-1854.