29 Wis. 125 | Wis. | 1871
This action is brought upon a policy of insurance issued by the defendant on the life of Allen A. Grant, deceased, and claimed by the plaintiff to have been assigned to her by him on or about the day of its date. The company in its answer alleges that the insured died in Washington in the Dis
Afterwards, on tbe trial of tbe cause in tbe county court, tbe defendant, before a jury was' empannelled and sworn, moved orally, without having given any notice of sucb motion, in writing or otherwise, that tbe court upon tbe pleadings enter an order making tbe administrator a party to tbe action, wbicb ¡motion being opposed by tbe plaintiff, was denied. This ruling
The facts which the plaintiff must prove in order to recover, would constitute a complete defense to an action brought by the administrator on the policy. For, if the insurance money belonged to the plaintiff, then the administrator had nothing to do with it. And whether it did in fact belong to her, was the issue raised by the pleadings. Besides, we do not very well see how the court could bring in the administrator, he being a nonresident. We do not think that he could be brought in under
The particular objection taken to the complaint is, that it does not aver that any proof was ever made or furnished the company that the plaintiff had any interest in the policy sued on, or'that any demand of payment was ever made upon the company at Hartford, Connecticut, where by its terms the policy was payable. It is alleged in the filth paragraph of the complaint that Allen A. Grant, on the 15th day of July, 1868, duly
In the case of Rheinstrom v. Cone et al., (unreported,) this court,
It is proper in this connection to make a remark upon the case of John v. The State, 23 Wis., 504. There a party was indicted for forging an indorsement upon a draft. After conviction a motion in arrest of judgment was made upon tbe ground that there was no allegation that tbe draft was stamped. This court thought tbe motion should have been sustained for tbe reason that it did not appear that tbe draft was of any validity. In tbe opinion, Mr. Justice Paine says that there can be no doubt that under tbe act of congress an unstamped draft is void. Our attention, however, was not called in that case to tbe decisions upon tbe act of congress, and to the fact that tbe words “ with intent to evade the provision of tbe act ” were connected with and qualified tbe clause declaring an unstamped instrument invalid. The broad language used by Mr. Justice Paine is, doubtless, incorrect, and needs some qualification.
But that such laws as We afe considering are to be strictly
The last objection taken by the defendant, is that the judgment must be reversed for the reason that the charge of the court was not reduced to writing before it was given to the jury. The court told the jury that there was no proof in the case on the issues joined on the part of the defendant, and the assignment produced in court being duly stamped they oould not go behind to enquire when it was stamped, the presumption being that it was duly stamped within the law, that they must find a verdict for the plaintiff.
This was substantially nothing more than directing the jury to find for the plaintiff. We do not think such a direction is a charge within the meaning and intent of chapter 101, Laws, 1868.
It follows from these views that the judgment of the county court must be affirmed.
By the Court. Judgment affirmed.