69 Fla. 304 | Fla. | 1915
Appellants brought suit against the appellee for an accounting for the proceeds of a life insurance policy issued on the life of N. A. Baker and assigned to secure an indebtedness to W. J. Daniel & Co., a partnership, of which firm the appellee is the surviving partner. There was a decree for the defendant, and the complainants appealed.
The bill of complaint alleges in effect that in 1895 N. A. Baker procured the life insurance policy for $10,000.00 upon his life, made payable to his wife if living at his death, and if not living, to the executors, administrators and assigns of the insured; that N. A. Baker who was engaged in business in Jackson Co., Fla., became indebted to the said firm of W. J. Daniel & Co., composed of W. J. Daniel and the defendant W. H. Milton, and in order to secure the said indebtedness transferred and assigned to the said W. J. Daniel & Co. the said policy of insurance, executing to them an assignment or transfer thereof; that the said assignment and transfer while in form an absolute assignment was intended and understood by all of the parties thereto as being merely a pledge or mortgage of the said policy as a security for the indebtedness of the said Baker, and was accepted and received by the said W. J. Daniel & Co., as such security; that the wife
4. That the whole transaction concerning the assignment of said policy was fair and open and no advantage was taken of said Baker nor of his said wife, who died prior to the death of said N. A. Baker, and as this defendant believes before the full settlement made with said N. A. Baker. But in order to make clear to the court that the settlement was to the great advantage of said N. A. Baker and his estate, this defendant wishes to call attention to the value of said Policy of Insurance at the time the settlement was made with said Baker. The figures are as follows:
Among the options in said policy contained were:
“If after having been in force for three years, it should lapse in consequence of non-payment of any premium, it will have the surrender value in paid up insurance, for as many twentieths of the original policy as complete annual premiums shall have been paid, provided this policy be surrendered within six months after the date of such lapse. It gives to Neill A. Baker a choice of six methods of settlement upon tlie completion of the tontine period, on the sixth day of July nineteen hundred and fifteen (July 6, 1915), namely, ■
*315 1. The continuance of the Policy, and the withdrawal of the accumulated surplus,
Either in 1. cash,
2. paid up insurance,
3. an annuity.
Or II. The surrender of the policy for its full value, consisting of the entire reserve amounting to $5905, Fifty-nine hundred and five dollars together with the surplus then apportioned by the Society, either in
1. cash,
2. paid up insurance.
3. a life annuity.”
That is Neill A. Baker had nothing until 1915, if he lived, unless he surrendered the policy as lapsed, and took paid up insurance (then at time of settlement with W- J. Daniel & Go., 3-20 of the policy, or $1500.00 payable at his death). Or unless he sold the policy for the cash surrender value which was approximately one half of the premiums then paid in, in this instance some six hundred or seven hundred dollars ($700.00), the exact figures, the defendant can supply at the hearing, but is not now exactly advised. But defendant avers that the cash surrender value of the policy was at the time of the compromise settlement hereinbefore set forth less than half of the amount relinquished and paid said Baker in said compromise settlement. Defendant further avers that the amount of paid up insurance which could have been had upon said policy of insurance was much less than the claim of de
That said firm of W. J. Daniel & Co- having made the settlement with said N. A. Baker, and having settled forever the question of the ownership of said policy of insurance, agreed among themselves that rather than take a cash surrender value of something like $700.00, or a paid up policy for $1500.00, in view of the fact that it was their policy from the beginning, they would keep up the policy and- pay the premiums, and this was done by them, and the policy kept in force, the last premium being paid on the 4th day of July 1906 — about three days before the death of said N. A. Baker, who died on or about the 7th day of July, A. D. 1906. That said W. J. Daniel died on the 23rd day of January, A. D. 1906, leaving this defendant as his surviving partner, and also as an executor of his last will and testament. That after the death of said N. A. Baker this defendant as surviving partner of said firm of W. J. Daniel & Co., composed of said W. J. Daniel, deceased, and himself, did make proof of loss and ownership of the policy, and did collect the same less the semi-annual premium which would have been due to complete the premium for the year beginning July 6th, 1906, and did receive from the insurance company as the proceeds of said policy the sum of $9792.80 on the 22nd day.
5. That after the collection of the policy and even prior thereto some of the complainants made inquiry as to the status of the matter, and the defendant submitted all the facts in the case to an attorney and obtained an opinion of such attorney as to what was the legal and proper status of the matter, and the said attorney gave as his opinion that the said policy and its proceeds was the property of said W. J. Daniel & Co. and that the heirs of said N. A. Baker had no interest therein or right thereto, and1 thereupon the inquiry of the complainant, or complainants who had written was answered stating that such opinion had been given and was relied upon by this defendant and the executors of the estate of said W. J. Daniel. That defendant has never accounted, nor attempted to account to the heirs of Baker, not from any unwillingness to disclose the true status, but because he knew the assignment to be absolute and had the advice of counsel that in law the policy was not a pledge nor a mortgage, and that neither the estate nor the heirs of said N. A. Baker had any right, title, or interest therein. That after the institution óf suit by complainant, defendant has sought to maintain his rights and to arrive at such an issue as would enable the court to correctly decide the cause. And defendant avers upon the facts hereinbefore set forth that complainants have no right to an accounting from this defendant, nor any right to a discovery nor any cause of action against defendant in any capacity.
There are other averments in the answer that need not be stated here, though all of them have been carefully considered.
When, a replication is filed to an answer in equity, it puts in issue all the matters alleged in' the bill of complaint that are not admitted by the answer, as well as those matters contained in the answer that are not responsive to the bill of complaint. Matters set up in answer that are not responsive to the bill, as new matters in opposition to or in avoidance of the allegations of the bill, must be proved by the defendant.
The averments in the answer of new matter not responsive to the bill that are not proven, cannot avail the defendant.
Affirmative averments in an answer that are not required by the bill of complaint, that do not grow out of any transaction of facts alleged in the bill or admitted in the answer, and that are not inseparably connected therewith, constitute new matter not responsive to the bill of complaint and if not proved, cannot avail the defendant.
Where the answer in an equity cause sets up affirmative averments of new matter not stated or enquired of, and not inseparably connected with matter stated or equired of, in the bill of complaint, and such new matter is in opposition to, or in avoidance of, the plaintiff’s demand or claim of right, and a general replication is filed, such affirmative averments are of no avail to the defendant unless proven by independent testimony. Griffith v. Henderson, 55 Fla. 625, 45 South. Rep. 1003.
Averments of a sworn answer must be as to matters of personal knowledge and múst be directly and positively responsive to material allegations of the bill in order to be conclusive evidence in favor of the parties answering unless overcome by the testimony of two witnesses or by the testimony of one witness and corroborating circumstances. Mayo v. Hughes, 51 Fla. 495, 40 South. Rep. 499; Maxwell v. Jacksonville Loan & Improvement Co., 45 Fla. 425, 34 South. Rep. 255.
An answer in equity contradicted in a material point loses all weight as evidence, and serves the purpose only of a pleading in the cause. Nobles v. L’Engle, 58 Fla. 480, 51 South. Rep. 405.
An instrument must be deemed and held to be .a mortgage, whatever may be its form, if, taken alone or in connection with the surrounding facts and attendant circumstances, it appears to have been given for the purpose or with the intention of securing the payment of money, and the mere absence of terms of defeasance can not determine whether it is a mortgage or not.
Under the statutes of this State a mortgagee' acquires only a specific lien on the property of another described in the mortgage, and an “instrument of writing convey
If an instrument is a mortgage when executed its character does not afterwards change, for once a mortgage always a mortgage is a maxim of the law.
Where an agreement that a conveyance is not a mortgage but an absolute conveyance is wholly inconsistent with the facts of the case, such agreement does not make absolute a conveyance that under the satute may be shown to have been executed “for the purpose and with the intention of securing the payment of money.” Connor v. Connor, 59 Fla. 467, 52 South. Rep. 727.
The bill alleges that “N. A. Baker became indebted to W. J. Daniel & Co., and in order to secure the said indebtedness transferred and assigned to the said W. J. Daniel & Co. the policy of insurance issued in 1895,” executing to them an assignment or transfer thereof; that the said assignment and transfer while in form an absolute assignment, was intended and understood by all of the parties thereto as being merely a pledge or mortgage of the said policy as a security for the indebtedness of the said Baker * * * and was accepted and received by the said W. J. Daniel & Co. as such security.” The answer denies the allegations of the bill “setting up a claim against the defendant in the manner and form as therein alleged and set forth except in the particulars hereinafter admitted in the narration of the true facts.” The answer avers that in a settlement between N. A. Baker
If the above stated portion of the answer may be regarded as being a direct and positive averment that is responsive to the material allegation that N. A. Baker made a written assignment of the policy prior to the time referred to by the answer, the averments of the answer as to a verbal transfer of the policy subsequent to its written assignment as a pledge or mortgage to secure an existing indebtedness, is contradicted in essential particulars by the evidence eminating from the defendant as well as from the complainant. Besides this the answer avers facts that show the original transfer of the policy was to secure a debt which under the statute made it a
The testimony clearly overcomes any probative force to which the answer may be entitled, particularly in view of the original relation shown in connection with the reciprocal obligation to pay the debt on the one side and on the other side to account for the remainder, if any is left of the security after the debt is fully paid.
The equities appear to be with the complainants, and the decree is accordingly reversed, and the cause is remanded with directions to proceed in accordance with the equities as herein adjudged.
It is so ordered.