68 Md. 534 | Md. | 1888
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Judgment was rendered for the appellee in the Court below upon demurrer to the appellant’s declaration ; and the sole question for review is whether the declaration is had as the Court of Common Pleas held it to he.
The narr. begins by charging that the defendants, with others, were the officers of an alleged corporation called the “ Guarantee Life insurance Company of Baltimore, Maryland,” and caused to he issued to the plaintiff two policies of insurance upon the life of Adam Keck, a maternal uncle of the plaintiff, giving their respective dates, and stating that each policy was for one thousand dollars, and that Adam Keck had since died. This is all that is stated in the first count.
The second count charges that, on the demand of the defendants during the life of Adam Keck, the plaintiff paid them a large sum of money as premiums or assessments on the policies, which “ they illegally and unlawfully took and used.”
The third count alleges large payments to the defendants after the death of the insured, Adam Keck, “ which the defendants illegally took and divided and appropriated to themselves.”
The fourth count is in these words: “ And for that the said defendants representing themselves ■ as officers of a corporation conducting a lawful and legitimate business of life insurance in the City of Baltimore and State of Maryland, fraudulently obtained from this plaintiff large sums of money.”
The fifth count reads thus : “ for that the said defendants, demand having been made, refuse to pay to the plaintiff the
The demurrer admits the facts which are well pleaded. If any one count is good the demurrer cannot be sustained ; but to be good it must be so independently of the others which may be deemed bad. “The object of all pleading is that parties litigant may be mutually apprised of the matters in controversy between them.” Penn., Del. and Md. Steam Navigation Co. vs. Dandridge, 8 G. & J., 311. Although,the Code, Art .15, sec. 3,says, “any plain statement of the facts necessary to constitute a ground of action shall be sufficient,” yet it says in the same Article, sec. 2, that whatever facts are necessary to constitute a ground of action shall he stated. This is necessary that the defendant “ may be forewarned of the nature of the proof to be preferred against him, and be prepared to contradict, explain or avoid it.” Dandridge’s Case, 8 G. & J., 311.
Applying these principles to this declaration, it is clear no count thereof is good and sufficient in law. None of the counts can be regarded as being for money had and received, for there is an entire omission in the commencement, of the, prefatory words “ for money payable by the defendant to the plaintiff,” which in Merryman vs. Rider, 34 Md., 98, this Court decided were imperatively required by the Code to make a declaration on the money counts good. The narr. must therefore be regarded as a declaration on the alleged policies of life insurance, or as an action of deceit for the fraudulent procurement of money from the plaintiff through the medium of pretended policies of insurance. It must be for the one or the other ; for the two kinds of action cannot be joined.
It is too plain for argument that the first count, in which the issuance of the policies of life insurance is charged,
If this contention that the so-called first count is merely inducement to the second and others, be accepted, still the second does not set forth a cause of action. It does not state in what way the money “ was illegally taken and used.” The third count is similarly defective.
Treating the suit as an action for deceit, the fourth count comes nearer stating a cause of action, but falls short of it. It simply charges the fraudulent procurement from the plaintiff by defendants of large sums of money, under representation 'that the defendants were legitimate life insurance agents. It does not charge in what way, when, or how much money was taken. It gives no notice what the defendants were expected to defend, and might expect to be proved against them. It is hard to tell what the pleader did design this declaration to be, and in what form of action he sought to proceed. It is so inartificially drawn as to meet the legal requirements of no form of action. The demurrer was properly sustained, and the judgment will be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.