61 So. 944 | Ala. | 1913
This submission is on motion to dismiss the appeal and on the merits. The appeal was taken June 3, 1912, and was therefore returnable to the first Monday of the term of this court next after the expiration of 20 days from the date of the appeal. —Code, § 2870. While the day fixed by statute for the return of the appeal was in June, 1912, and it was not returned and no transcript was filed until December 10, 1912, it does not follow that the appeal should be dismissed on account of this apparent delay in filing the transcript or in docketing the cause on certificate of appeal. When the reason for the rule ceases, the rule itself ceases.
It could have been of no possible benefit or detriment to either party to have filed the transcript in June, 1912, on the day fixed by the statute. There was no call of any division after that date, during that term of the court, at which the case could have been submitted; and the transcript was actually filed in ample time for a submission at the earliest call at which it could have been submitted, and the case was in fact submitted at the earliest possible time after the appeal was taken. Statutes and rules of court on this subject are intended to facilitate and expedite the business of the courts, and
It was decided in the case of Winthrow v. Woodward, 81 Ala. 100, 2 South. 92, that: “The failure to file the transcript during the term to which the appeal is taken, no order in the cause being asked or made during the term, though not a discontinuance of the appeal (Code, § 3953), is legal cause of discontinuance; and the appeal will be dismissed on account of such failure, on motion made at the next term, with due diligence after the transcript has been filed.”
In the case of Porter v. Martin, 139 Ala. 318, 35 South. 1006, it was said : “The return day of the appeal was the first Monday after the lapse of 20 days from March 12, 1902. At all events the record should have been filed in this court on Monday of the week of the call of the Fourth division in this court, which was June -2, 1902. In point of fact, the record was not filed in this court until July 5, 1902, after the term to which the appeal 'was taken. No excuse for this delay is shown. It cannot be affirmed that the appellees were not prejudiced by it. The motion to dismiss the appeal for this unwarranted delay in filing the record in this court was seasonably made at the term of the court following the filing of, the record here. The motion must prevail.”
In the case of Collier v. Coggins, 103 Ala. 281, 15 South. 578, the facts were very similar to the facts in this case. The appeal was taken on the 2d of May, 1893, and was returnable on the 29th of that month, and the transcript was not filed until the 5th of December, 1893,
The action is on a life insurance policy, or, more accurately speaking, a benefit certificate, issued by the appellant, a mutual aid or fraternal society, incorporated, on the life of one of its members, John Sherry. The real bone of contention is whether or not the assured made false and fraudulent representations, in procuring the insurance, sufficient to avoid the policy or to deprive the beneficiary of the fruits of the certificate of benefit in question. This defense Avas attempted to be set up by a great number of special pleas, to which demurrers were sustained; these rulings on the demurrers forming the basis of numerous assignments of error.
The following expression, taken from the brief of the appellant, is a fair statement of the questions and assignments and of the nature of the questions presented and insisted upon in argument: “The first 44 errors assigned relate to the rulings of the court below on
It was said by this court in the case of Leahart v. Deedmeyer, 158 Ala. 295, 48 South. 371: “It may be stated, as a general proposition, that there is no section in our Constitution which prohibits the enactment of a retroactive law.—Aldridge v. Tuscumbia, etc., R. R., 2 Stew. & P. 199, 23 Am. Dec. 307; Lindsay v. United States Savings, etc., Ass’n, 120 Ala. 168, 24 South. 171, 42 L. R. A. 783. Section 22 of our Constitution of 1901 expresses the only limitation in that line, and our courts have held that ‘ex post facto’ laws are necessarily penal laws, so that, unless a law impairs the obligation of a contract, or deprives the citizen of some vested right, or is obnoxious to some other provision of the Constitution, the mere fact that it is retroactive does not render it unconstitutional. The general rule is that a law will not be construed as having a retroactive effect unless it is plain from its terms that the Legislature so intended.—Smith v. Kolb, et al., 58 Ala. 645.”
The Supreme Court of Massachusetts said in the case of Simmons v. Hanover, 23 Pick. 193: “Upon the general question whether any retrospective laws affecting vested rights are valid, there have been conflicted opinions. In the case of Calder v. Bull, 3 Dall. 386 [1 Ed. 648], which is a leading case, Judge Iredell expresses a decided opinion that the legislative power cannot be restrained except by some express provision in the Constitution; and that retrospective laws not thus restrained are clearly valid. Judge Chase was of a different
The object and effect of these constitutional provisions were well expressed by the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of McCracken v. Hayward, 2 How. 612, 11 L. Ed. 397, as folloAVS: “In placing the obligation of contracts under the protection of the Constitution, its framers looked to the essentials of the contract more than to the forms and modes of proceeding by Avhich it was to be carried into execution; annulling all state legislation which impaired the obligation, it Avas left to the states to prescribe and shape the remedy to enforce it. The obligation .of a contract consists in its binding force on the party who makes it. This depends on the laws in existence when it is made; these are necessarily referred to in all contracts, and forming a part of them as the measure of the obligation to per
These sections of the Code being applicable to the contracts sued upon, it follows that the pleas as to which demurrers were sustained were insufficient, for the reason that no one of the pleas in question setting-up the special defenses as to the fraudulent representations of the assured in procuring the policy was sufficient under those provisions of the Code.
The rules as to the sufficiency of such pleas are well stated in the following cases:
“Misrepresentations as to physical conditions by an applicant for life insurance do not operate to avoid the contract of insurance thereupon made, unless they are such as to deceive the insurer about matters material to the risk, thus amounting to fraud, or unless they be warranted as true, and consequently involved a breach bn the part of the insured of the contract of insurance.”,—Providence, etc., Society v. Pruett, 141 Ala. 688, 37 South. 700.
If the representations in question were material to the risk, and were relied upon, and the insurance company or society was deceived thereby, or they induced
The questions involved on this appeal as to the sufficiency of these pleas were considered and treated fully by this court in the case of Insurance Co. v. Gee, 171 Ala. 435, 55 South. 166. It was there said:
“Where fraudulent representations are pleaded in defense to an action on a policy of insurance, it must be shown that false statements have been made with intent to deceive; that they related to matters intrinsically material to the risk; and that the insured relied on them. This rule has not been changed by statute or decision.
“Where, on the other hand, a breach of warranty (that is, a breach of a stipulation of the completed contract) was pleaded under the law as it was prior to the enactment of section 4572 of the Code, that was material which was made so by agreement of the parties, whether intrinsically so or not. Whatever the assured warranted to be true he, by necessary implication, agreed to be material, and its falsity barred him of any recovery on the contract.—Alabama Gold Life Ins. Co. v. Johnston, 80 Ala. 467, 2 South. 125, 59 Am. Rep. 816.”
“The purpose of statutes of this kind is to prevent the unfair practice adopted by some companies of multiplying statements to be made by the insured, to which, by the wording of the policy, the technical character of warranties is given, and to relieve against the hardships arising from strict enforcement of the common law as to warranties.—White v. Provident Savings Society, 163 Mass. 108, 39 N. E. 771, 27 L. R. A. 398; 3 Cooley’s Briefs, 1984.”
“As to mere representations, the statute may well be held to be only declaratory, but as to warranties it is*638 made a new rule. In the opinion of a majority of the court, it speaks in terms, neither of warranties nor of representations, technically so called, but deals with all misrepresentations made in negotiating the contract or policy. Misstatements of fact, whether the statement is said to be by the parties a warranty or representation, are equally misrepresentations, and are placed in each case upon the same footing by the statute which applies to them, if the statements are called Avarranti.es by the parties, no less than if they are mere representations.”
“Perhaps our own statute does not say Avhat it means as clearly as it might. But by its introduction of the word 'warranties’ it makes even clearer than do the statutes of those other states, to which we have referred that it Avas intended to break down in a measure the technical distinction between warranties and representations, for it puts warranties and misrepresentations in a class together by providing that no misrepresentation or warranty shall defeat or avoid the policy, unless 'such misrepresentation’ is made with actual intent to deceive, or unless the matter misrepresented increase the risk of loss.”
Replications á and 5 were not subject to the grounds of demurrer interposed; they alleged that the premiums were paid by the insured and accepted by the company or society with notice and knoAvledge of the falsity of the statements relied upon in the special pleas as a defense. If this Avas true, and the evidence Ave think shows it Avithout dispute, this Avas a waiver of the defense set up in said pleas. There is no such difference between the policy or contract here sued on and the ordinary life policy as to prevent this rule from applying to such benefit certificates. There is nothing in the question of variance raised on the appeal. There Avas
The contract of insurance sued on being proven as alleged, without dispute, and the replications to the special pleas being also proven without dispute, the plaintiff was clearly enitled to a verdict, and any other errors complained of were harmless for this reason.
Affirmed.