65 Conn. 529 | Conn. | 1895
The Charter Oak Life Insurance Company was put into the hands of receivers on the 22d day of September, 1886. And at a later date an order was duly passed, requiring the creditors of said corporation to present their claims to the receivers. On the 4th day of August, 1887, a committee was appointed to hear and decide upon all claims which had been or might thereafter be presented to the said receivers. Within the time limited, the present appellant presented to the receivers and to the said committee a claim against the said company predicated upon policy No. 36,775, dated December 7th, 1868, on the life of Alexander Austin, for the sum of $10,000, payable to Margaret Austin, wife of the said. Alexander. On the 16th day of February, 1891, the said committee reported to the Superior Court for Hartford County (in whieh court all the said proceedings were then pending) that they had allowed the said claim in favor of the appellant to recover the amount of
There are in effect but two reasons of appeal: That the court erred in sustaining the action of the committee in holding that the amount of the appellant’s claim was only the sum due after deducting (1) the amount of the scaling agreement; and (2) the amount of the outstanding premium-notes.
In respect to the premium-notes we are very clear that there is no error. The policy of insurance under which the plaintiff claims, contains no promise to pay the sum of $10,000 which is the sum insured; but only the sum insured, “ deducting therefrom the amount of all unpaid notes given for premiums or loans by them on this policy, and all deferred premiums, if any, then existing.” It certainly was not error for the committee or for the court to hold that the plaintiff could not recover a greater sum than the insurance company had, in any event, promised to pay. The amount of the premium-notes was a limitation on the sum named in the policy. That amount was one of the elements from which the sum due on the policy was to be ascertained. While these notes were outstanding, the sum of $10,000 was not, and could not become, due. The amount of these notes was not properly an offset; for an offset involves the idea of two independent amounts, one of which is to be set over against the other. But the amount of these notes operated by the terms of the policy itself as air extinguishment of so much of the amount named in the policy.
In the year 1877 Alexander Austin and Margaret Austin, both then in full life, entered into an agreement, called a scaling agreement, with the said insurance company, by
Margaret Austin, to whom said policy was made payable, died in January, 1878, and by her will devised to said Alexander Austin all her interest in the same. Alexander Austin died on the 10th day of September, 1878. The present plaintiff claimed title to said policy by an assignment thereof to her from said Alexander, dated April 1st, 1878. Obviously she cannot possibly have any greater rights under that policy than the said Margaret and Alexander Austin had. As they would have been bound by the scaling agreement it is difficult to see why she is not also bound by it, and why the considerations applicable to the premium-notes do not have equal force as applied to this agreement: that strictly the amount scaled is not an offset, but an extinguishment pro tanto of the amount named in the original policy.
The plaintiff’s counsel have, however, urged another view with a good deal, of force and with great apparent confidence. It is, perhaps, just to them that their claims should be considered.
As already stated, the insurance company was put into the.hands of receivers in this State on the 22d day of September, 1886. Ancillary receivers were appointed in the
The plaintiff insists that because the receivers agreed by the stipulation to abandon all defense to the merits of her claim, and that the same was to be allowed subject to any offset and claims of conflicting claimants, they are precluded from any attempt to lessen her claim from the full sum named in the policy, by reason of the premium-notes or the scaling agreement. Her argument deals mainly with
A defense to the merits of an action is one which denies that the plaintiff has any cause of action at all — one which, if sustained, bars the entire action. It is a defense to the
The plaintiff claims that the Superior Court erred in admitting the sealing agreement in evidence, and also in giving it the effect of reducing the amount due by the face of the policy; because of the proviso in that agreement that it was to be void in case a receiver was appointed.
It is found by the Superior Court, by its acceptance of the report of the committee appointed to pass upon the -claims against the company, that this proviso was added “ simply and only to provide for the possibility of a failure of the sealing plan then on hand, and had reference only to the immediate contingency of a receivership, and not to the possibilities of new insolvency proceedings ” instituted years afterwards, and when the condition of the company might have been essentially changed. It is also found that “ the plan of restoring the company to its standard of solvency by means of the scaling agreements became successful in 1878, and thereafter' the company continued to do business as a mutual company for about eight years.”
So far as concerns the objection to the admission of the scaling agreement in evidence, on account of this proviso, it is sufficient to say it was not made in the court below. The only ground of objection there taken was* that the agreement was irrelevant and inadmissible in view of the
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.