98 N.Y.S. 991 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1906
Lead Opinion
This is an action by an assignee to recover on a policy of life insurance. The insured, Oliff F. Harrison, resided at Rutland, Yt., and upon his applicationK dated August 31, 1891, there was issued and delivered to him at Rutland by the defendant a policy dated at its office in Milwaukee, Wis., September 3, 1891, under which the company agreed to pay “ unto the executors, administrators or assigns of Oliff F. Harrison, the insured, of Rutland, in the County of Rutland, State'of Yermont, Two Thousand Dollars in sixty days after due proof in usual form of the fact and of the cause of his death during the continuance of this Policy.” The plaintiff was then living in Rutland, Yt:, and testified.that at that time she had been acquainted with Mr. Harrison and his family for twenty years; that on or about the 12th day of September, 1891, Harrison brought the policy to her and gave it to her as a gift, and at the same time signed an assignment of the policy and requested her to sign also. Said assignment was duly filéd with the company and is as follows:
“ Rutland, Vt., Sept. 12, 1891.
“ For a valuable consideration, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, I hereby assign and transfer to Mary Agnes Gleason (no relation) of Rutland, Yt., and for her sole use and benefit, all my right, title and interest in and to Policy No. 237990, issued by the Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance, Company. In case of the death of said assignee before the policy becomes due, then and in that case it shall be payable when due to the executors^ administrators and assigns of O. F. Harrison.
“ OLIFF FRANK HARRISON, [l. s.] ,
“ MARY AGNES GLEASON, [l. s.]”
The premiums on the policy were regularly paid by Mr. Harrison down to the last one, which was paid by plaintiff, “ because,” as she testified, “ I heard he was too ill to transact any business, and I
The motion for leave to serve said supplemental answer was denied, the order' being entered on Odtober Id, 1905. The trial came on on October 20, 1905, and at the opening of the case counsel for defendant asked to amend the answer as set forth above, stating: “ I want it to appear on the record that on every occasion when we parné to court we tried to get in that fact.” The motion was denied and the trial proceeded, and at its close the court directed a verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $2,205, judgment thereon being duly entered for $2,309 on October 23,1905. So that it appears that upon this same policy of insurance, the company has a judgment for the full amount thereof entered against it and in favor of the insured’s administrator in the State of Vermont, and a judgment for the full amount in favor of the assignee thereof in this State, it having made but one promise to pay and having received but one set of premium payments. And it further appears that' it attempted, without success, in the suit first commenced and first tried in Vermont to interpose the New York action as a defense, and judgment having gone against it in Vermont with equal unsuccess attempted to interpose that judgment in New York. There seems to. be something unfair in requiring even an insurance company to submit to a double recovery on the same obligation.
The order appealed from should be reversed and the supplemental answer allowed to be served, because it set up facts occurring since the commencement of the action which defendant ought to have been allowed to show in defense. Here was a defendant-sued in two jurisdictions upon the same policy. It could, bring in ' neither plaintiff in the other’s State. The action was brought first in Vermont. It is claimed that it must there be brought on the policy by the administrator. If the plaintiff in the case at bar liad a valid assignment, the administrator in Vermont was suing for her benefit and, if he recovered, would hold the money for her benefit, and she could obtain it by action from him or upon liis- accounting. The defendant could not get her into Vermont. She was a nonresident. If it undertook there to pay the money into court, how x would that have benefited it? If the courts of' this State are not to regard the judgment there obtained why should'they regard money paid into court? The defendant could not bring the Vermont administrator into our court as he was a non-resident and as administrator had no extraterritorial authority. Nor would it have advantaged it to pay the money into our court; Its position would then have been with money deposited in both courts. Now it has judgments entered in both courts. I fail to see how the- defendant could, have protected itself as long as the courts of the two States declined to recognize the pending, proceedings in the other. But the courts do not and should not allow such a condition to exist. The principle of State comity intervenes and jurisdiction is left with the court first obtaining it. In the case at bar the plaintiff is „ suing on what she claims to be a valid assignment of the policy. If her: assignment is valid then the administrator, in Vermont, under the allegations of the proposed supplemental answer as to the law
In Sulz v. Mutual Reserve Fund Life Assn. (145 N. Y. 563) the' insured died in the State of Washington.' His wife was then residing in Brooklyn, She .was appointed administratrix in Brooklyn,,and subsequently one Thomas was appointed administrator of the estate of her husband in the State of Washington. Thomas at once commenced an action in that State to recover upon the policy.Within a few.days thereafter the wife commenced an action in this State to recover the. amount due under the same policy. The defendant set up the pendency of the action against it in Washington and claimed that the plaintiff had no right to maintain the action here because of those facts. Judge Beckham said : “ In such a case as this we think that the principle of comity between the States calls for the refusal on the,part of the courts of this State to entertain jurisdiction.” It was claimed, in addition, that the plaintiff might recover in another aspect and in her own right, irrespective of her character as administratrix. The court said: “We cannot, therefore, see any way by which the plaintiff ought to be permitted to maintain her action either as administratrix or as the widow and alleged -sole beneficiary covered by the policy. We confess that we do not see how the money arising from the payment under this policy or certificate can be made liable for any of the debts of the deceased any more in the State of Washington than in case the action was brought here. The statute under which the company is organized makes provision upon that subject, but as the courts of Washington have jurisdiction of that question, it will be matter for them to .decide, which they will do in’a manner consistent with- ..their views of the law. The judgment in this action ought, not to stand, and it must,"therefore, be reversed, and as the. plaintiff cannot in any event succeed upon a new trial,. her complaint, should be dismissed.” . • . . . ..
.. The Sulz case, was followed in Traflet v. Empire. life Ins. Co. (64 N. J. Law, 387), where an. administrator.having been appointed in Hew York and another in Hew Jersey,-the-action .on the policy in Hew York was first brought and went, to judgment,,.,the court
It seems to me, therefore, that the order appealed from should be reversed and leave granted to serve the supplemental answer upon payment of costs to the time of trial, and that the judgment and order denying the motion for a new trial must be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant.
O’Brien, P. J., concurred.
Concurrence Opinion
I agree with Mr. Justice Clarke that the appeal from the order denying the motion for leave to serve a supplemental answer is now before us, the defendant having in due time taken an appeal directly from that order. I also agree that the coúrt should have allowed the service of the supplemental answer so that the questions as to whether an action brought by the personal representative' of the insured in the State of Vermont, where the person insured resided at the time of his death, is a bar to an action in this State by an assignee of the policy, can be formally determined upon the trial of the action. The defendant having, been refused permission to serve this supplemental answer, the action was tried and the evidence offered to sustain- the defense set up in the supplemental answer excluded. If we reverse the order denying the motion for leave to serve the supplemental answer we are justified in reversing the judgment.
I do not concur in what Mr. Justice Clarke has said in respect to the validity of the defense or that Sulz v. Mutual Reserve Fund Life Assn. (145 N. Y. 563) is at all decisive of this question. In
I concur, therefore, in the result of Mi*. Justice Clarke’s opinion upon the ground that the defendant was entitled to have the facts set forth in this supplemental pleading before the court upon' the trial, in which case there could be a determination of the validity of the defense which can be properly reviewed upon appeal.
Laughlin, J., concurred.
. Order, reversed and. leave granted to serve supplemental answer on payment of..costs to the tizne of trial; judgment and order reversed.and new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide .event. Settle.order on notice. .
Concurrence Opinion
I agree with Mr. Justice Clarke that the appeal from the order denying defendant’s motion for leave to make and s.erve a supplemental answer may "be regarded as a direct appeal from that order, the notice having been served within the time allowed by law for such an appeal.