55 Ga. 475 | Ga. | 1875
These two bills of exception, one by either party, are in the same case. The action below was by Mrs. Lester against the insurance company, and was founded on a policy of insurance upon the life of her husband. The policy was set out at full length in the body of the declaration. The action sounded in complaint, but there was no direct, positive statement of the amount due on the policy, or when it became due. All the terms and conditions of the policy were set out, and compliance therewith on the part of the insured was averred; and the time of Mr. Lester's death was alleged, and also that proofs of death had been submitted to, and received by, the company more than ninety days before suit was brought. The declaration claimed, in general terms, the amount due on the policy, with interest; and, also, twenty-five per cent, damages for refusal to pay, besides reasonable
The company filed no plea and made no answer to the suit whatever. At the trial term the jury rendered a verdict for the plaintiff, including therein twenty-five per cent damages and $500 00 for attorney’s fees; and judgment was entered up on the verdict, signed by counsel in the usual form of judgments upon verdicts. During the same term the defendant moved for a new trial, and in arrest of judgment.
The first ground of the motion for a new trial was, that negotiations were pending for a reference of the claim to arbitration, and that the company in not making defense had acted on the information and belief that the suit had been withdrawn; that under these circumstances, the verdict operated as a surprise, there being a good defense to the merits, which would otherwise have been presented. This defense was set out, which consisted in alleged violations of the terms of the policy, on the part of the assured, by delay to make certain payments, etc. Affidavits touching the various facts involved in this ground are contained in the record. Other grounds of the motion were, that tfie verdict is contrary to evidence; that it is contrary to law; that the evidence showed no bad faith; that the evidence did not entitle the plaintiff' to damages or to attorney’s fees; and that the damages are excessive. The last ground was a complaint that a certain letter, written by the president of the company, and intro
The grounds of the motion in arrest of judgment were, that there is no sufficient cause of action set forth in the declaration, and several others; one involving the nature of the suit; others, tile want of certainty, particularly as to the amount of the indebtedness.
The presiding judge refused to arrest the judgment, but granted a new trial. The latter judgment comes here at the instance of the plaintiff, and the former at the instance of the defendant.
We do not find it necessary, in affirming the grant of a new trial, to pass definitely on the first ground of the motion, which was the one most amply discussed and most strongly contested in the argument made before this court. The same question of surprise cannot again arise in,the case, and will probably never arise, under like circumstances, in any other case. It is proper for us to observe, however, that we deem the showing made by the company as rather weak, on the subject of diligence. The information which misled came, not from the plaintiff or any authorized.agent of hers, but from and through the company’s agents. It will not do to hold that a corporation can be excused by propositions proceeding from strangers to the suit, or by erroneous information derived from its own agents, where the opposite party has contributed nothing to the error. We are quite sure that we should not, ourselves, have granted a new trial upon this ground; but so much are we disposed to defer to the judgment of the circuit bench where a new trial has been granted, we should feel great reluctance to interfere in the present case, even if this ground stood alone. But so far from standing alone, it is supported by another ground free from all manner of doubt.
In holding that, on the motion made, the judgment should have been arrested only to the extent of the damages and attorney’s fees, we are not to be understood as ruling that the whole of the judgment might not have been arrested, if the motion had embraced the ground that, according to the record, there was no valid trial of the case. For myself, I will say,
Judgment on the plaintiff’s bill of exceptions affirmed.
Judgment on the defendant’s bill of exceptions reversed in so far as damages and attorney’s fees ar.e concerned.