98 F. 234 | 6th Cir. | 1899
This action was brought against the insurance company to recover certain moneys alleged to have been paid to the company, upon two grounds, set forth in the plaintiff’s declaration filed in the circuit court. The first is in substance: That the defendant company, on or about the 8th day of May, 1889, solicited and obtained from the plaintiff his written application for two policies of life insurance to be issued upon the life of the plaintiff for the sum of $25,000 each, the annual premium to be paid on the policies being $1,230 each, or for the two the sum of $2,460. The defendant, it is averred, at the time of obtaining the application, as a part thereof, and as a special inducement for obtaining the same, orally agreed that after the policy was issued, and after the expiration of the first ■year, it would allow, the plaintiff a reduction on the annual payment
Section 649 of the Revised Statutes provides that a jury may be waived, and the issues of fact tried by the court upon written stipulation. Section 700, Id., provides for the reviewing of the judgment so rendered. This section is as follows:
“When an issue of fact in any civil cause in a circuit court ft" tried and determined without the intervention of a jury, according to section six hundred and forty-nine, the rulings of the court in the progress of the trial of the cause, if excepted to at the time, and duly presented by a bill of exceptions, may be reviewed by the supreme court upon a writ of error or upon an appeal; and when the finding is special the review may extend to the determination of the sufficiency of the facts found to support the judgment.”
An examination of the findings of the court discloses that the issues were found against the plaintiff on both of his alleged causes of action. The court found that the agreement was not as claimed in the first ground of complaint, but that at the time the insurance policies were delivered to the plaintiff, which the court finds the plaintiff accepted, the separate written agreement, in accordance with the company’s contract through its representative, was delivered, agreeing to allow plaintiff, in the reduction of the second and succeeding annual premiums, an amount equal to one-tenth of 1 per cent, of the annual premiums paid on the new insurance written by the company in the state of Michigan for the year ending December 31, 1889. The court finds that this written agreement, and not the agreement set forth in the declaration, was in accordance with the preceding oral agreement of the parties, and that it gave to the plaintiff all the rights that had been stipulated for, and the court finds:
“I find that tbe plaintiff intended to and did accept tbe said policies unconditionally on tbe 25tb day of May, 1889. And I find, as a matter of law, that the plaintiff thereupon became insured under said policies, and the defendant became liable to plaintiff for tbe amount of tbe insurance in case of bis death during tbe continuance of tbe policies; that tbe plaintiff, having thus received .the benefit of a part of the consideration for which the premiums were paid, could not afterwards recover back tbe premiums from the defendant. In view of the foregoing findings, it becomes unnecessary for the decision of this case to consider the questions relating to the separate agreement by which an allowance was to be made to the plaintiff in reduction of his annual premiums after the first year. Whether that agreement was what the plaintiff claims it to have been is immaterial in this case; for, in either event, it could not enable the plaintiff to recover the premiums paid, which is all that is sought in this case. The terms of that agreement could become material only in a suit to recover damages for breach of the agreement after the defendant had failed to perform it. At the time of the commencement of this suit there had been no breach of that agreement, and, in fact, there could be no such breach until after the expiration of the first year 'of insurance, which would be several months after the commencement of this suit. There is now no pretense or claim that the plaintiff, after the first year of insurance, sought to avail himself of tbe special agreement, or that the defendant was guilty of any breach of it.”
The court makes further special findings as to certain details connected with this first ground of complaint, not necessary to he .herein
“Wlien a party in the circuit court waives a jury, and agrees to submit his case to the court, it must he done in writing; and if he wishes to raise any question of law upon the merits in the court above ho should request special findings of fact by' the court, framed like a special verdict o-f a jury, and then reserve his exceptions to those special findings, if he deems them not to he sustained by any evidence; and, if he wishes to except to the conclusions of law drawn by the court from the facts found, he should have them separately stated and excepted to. In this way, and in this way only, is it possible for him to review completely the action of the court below upon the merits. A general finding in favor of the party is treated as a general verdict. A general verdict cannot be excepted to on the ground that there was no evidence to sustain it. Such a question must be raised by a request to the court to direct a verdict on the ground of the insufficiency of the evidence. If the views which the court takes of the law are deemed to be prejudicial to a party, he is required to except to the charge at the time that it is delivered, indicating those parts of it to which he objects. Where a cause is submitted to the court, however, the court cannot, in the nature of things, charge itself, and therefore no opportunity is presented to the party objecting to the views which the court entertains of the law to take his excepüons, unless he procures a special finding of fact to be made and special conclusions of law to he drawn therefrom. We regret that, in a number of cases brought before us, the submission of a law case to a court upon stipulation has proved a trap to counsel in this court, and we say what we have with the hope that it may direct the attention of those who shall bring cases here in the future to the fact that great care must he taken in the preparation of a case for error proceedings when no jury intervenes.”
We are therefore limited to an examination of the alleged assignments of error upon the rulings of the court in the progress of the trial, as shown in the bill of exceptions. Humphreys v. Bank, supra.