Assumpsit against an insurance company upon a life policy. Plea,
non assumpsit, with an agreement that either party might
introduce any matter in evidence which would be legally admissible
if it had been specially pleaded. Leave was subsequently granted
the defendant to file a plea of
plus darrein continuance.
There was also an agreement which provided for the admission of the
record of a suit in equity then pending in the supreme court of New
York, whereto the parties hereto, and others claiming the benefit
of the policy, were parties, and stipulated that any further
proceedings therein might be filed as a part of the agreement at
any time before the trial of this action. A decree was rendered by
said court November 26, that the company pay the full amount of the
policy to the credit of the suit, for the benefit of such of the
other parties as should be found to be thereunto entitled, and that
upon such payment the company be released and discharged from
further liability on said policy, and that the several claimants be
enjoined from suing thereon. The amount was thereupon forthwith
paid into court. On the 25th of November, the plaintiff stated his
case, whereupon the hearing was postponed until the 29th of that
month, when the defendant, no evidence having as yet been
submitted, filed with the clerk of the court a duly certified
transcript of said decree. On the trial, leave was refused the
defendant to set up the matter of that suit and decree by way of
plea, or put it in evidence, under the agreement.
Held
that the decree was a final determination of the claim of the
plaintiff below, and should have been admitted as matter of
evidence, having the same force and effect in a court of the United
States as in the courts of New York.
On the 9th of September, 1872, two actions were brought by the
assignee of William H. Brune, against The Mutual Life Insurance
Company of New York, on two policies issued by it in January of
that year, in the name of said Brune, on the life of John S. Barry.
Barry died in March, 1872. By consent, the actions were
consolidated and tried together. The defendant pleaded the general
issue, and the parties agreed that either of them might offer in
evidence any matter that would be admissible if it had been
specially pleaded, and leave was subsequently granted the defendant
to file a plea of
puis darrein continuance. There was also
an agreement which provided for the admission of certain papers and
records, and stipulated that any further proceedings in a then
pending suit, commenced April 4, 1872, in the supreme court for the
City and County of
Page 97 U. S. 332
New York, by Rosalie C. Barry, widow of said John, against said
company, said Brune and his assignee, which either party should
deem material, might be filed as a part of the agreement at any
time before the trial. The matter involved in that suit, and the
decree which was rendered therein by the said court Nov. 26, 1873,
are set out in the opinion of this Court.
The issue was by stipulation submitted for trial to the court.
On the 25th of November, the plaintiff below stated his case, but,
before any evidence was given, further action in the premises was
postponed until the 29th of that month, when the defendant, before
the plaintiff had submitted any evidence, filed with the clerk of
the court a duly certified transcript of said decree.
On the trial, the defendant asked leave to set up the matter of
that suit and decree by way of plea, or put it in evidence, under
the agreement, but the court refused the leave, and the defendant
excepted.
Judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff for the amount
of the policies, and the defendant sued out this writ and assigned
for error that the court below erred: 1, in its refusal to grant
the leave asked for, and 2, in rendering judgment for the plaintiff
upon the agreed statement of facts.
Whitridge, the original assignee, having died, Harris, the
defendant in error, was substituted in his stead.
MR. JUSTICE STRONG delivered the opinion of the Court.
The first assignment of error is that the circuit court refused
to allow the matter of the decree of interpleader in the New York
case, which is mentioned at the end of the first bill of
exceptions, to be set up in any manner, either by way of plea or in
evidence. To understand this assignment, it is necessary to observe
carefully what the New York case was. It was a bill filed on the
4th of April, 1872, in the supreme court of New York, wherein
Rosalie C. Barry was complainant and The Mutual Life Insurance
Company, together with William H. Brune and Horatio L. Whitridge,
were defendants.
Page 97 U. S. 333
The bill averred in substance and effect that two policies of
insurance, one for $20,000 and the other for $5,000, on the life of
John S. Barry, the complainant's husband, dated Jan. 18, 1872,
issued by the insurance company to Brune, belonged in equity to
her; that they were substitutes for or continuations of policies
the company had previously issued to her, upon which she had paid
the premiums for a number of years and which, by the compulsion and
misrepresentations of her husband, she had been induced to assign
to Brune without any consideration; that afterwards Brune arranged
to have the policies surrendered, and those of Jan. 18, 1872 (which
are the same as those upon which the present suit has been
brought), issued to him in lieu of the surrendered ones; that this
arrangement was carried out; that the new policies were issued
bearing the same numbers as those of the old, calling for the same
premiums, insuring the same amounts; that no consideration was paid
for them other than the surrender; that the premiums were paid as
of the times when they were due on the surrendered policies; that
such payment was made principally by the application on account
thereof, without her knowledge or consent, of the cash value of the
dividends to which she was entitled in virtue of the former
policies issued to her, and with which she had been credited by the
company. The bill also charged that Brune paid in money only the
difference between such cash value of her dividends and the
aggregate amount of the annual premiums, and that the cash was
furnished to him, at his request, by the complainant's husband, on
her account. The prayers of the bill were that the insurers should
be enjoined against making any payment of such insurance to Brune
or to Whitridge (who claimed some right as assignee of Brune), and
that payment to her should be decreed. She also prayed that it
might be adjudged she had not parted with or been divested of her
rights under said policies, and that the defendants, Brune and
Whitridge, might be decreed to have acquired no right or interest
therein.
On the 27th of June next following, Brune filed an answer, and
at the same time Whitridge also answered. In neither answer was
there a denial of most of the averments of the bill. Brune denied
that Mrs. Barry's assignments were involuntary,
Page 97 U. S. 334
and claimed that the first policies were taken by him as
collateral securities for loans which he had made to her husband;
that if the assignments were improperly made, it was without his
knowledge or belief; asserted that he had assigned the substituted
policies to Whitridge, and insisted that the court should decree a
dismissal of the complainant's bill, and should give judgment in
favor of Whitridge's right to collect the sums due under the
policies. The answer of Whitridge was similar in substance.
Subsequently the company put in an answer to Mrs. Barry's bill,
accompanying it with a petition for an interpleader. The answer
conceded the company's liability to pay the sums due upon the
policies (those issued to Brune, and the same as those in suit in
the present case), averred readiness to pay to the person or
persons lawfully entitled to receive payment, and to whom payment
could be made with safety, and offered to pay into court. The
petition prayed that the company might be permitted thus to pay,
that thereupon it might be discharged, and that Brune, Whitridge,
and Mrs. Barry might be ordered to interplead.
The case in the supreme court of New York therefore, though not
strictly a bill of interpleader, was in effect that and more. It
was in the nature of such a bill, and was, under the practice of
that state, a proper proceeding to determine the rights of the
parties.
Badeau v. Rogers, 2 Paige (N.Y.) 209. Brune and
Whitridge, as well as Mrs. Barry and the company, were parties to
it, and all of them appeared and pleaded. The court thus had
complete jurisdiction alike of the insuring company, of Whitridge,
Brune, and Mrs. Barry, the persons claiming as assured by the
policies, and also of the subject -- the liability of the company
to the claimants.
On the twenty-sixth day of November, 1873, a decree was entered
in the case which was a final determination of the rights of
Whitridge, Brune, and Mrs. Barry, or either of them, as against the
company. So far as it is necessary to refer to it, it was as
follows:
"It is further ordered that the defendants, The Mutual Life
Insurance Company, within three days next hereafter, deposit the
residue of said $25,000 with the United States Trust Company
Page 97 U. S. 335
of New York, to the credit of this action, for the benefit of
the plaintiff, or either of the other defendants herein who shall
be found to be entitled thereto, and that said defendants, The
Mutual Life Insurance Company, so depositing said amount with said
trust company to the credit of this action, be dismissed from the
further defense of this action, and thereupon be released,
acquitted, and discharged from all claims or liabilities to the
said Rosalie C. Barry, plaintiff, and William H. Brune and Horatio
L. Whitridge, defendants herein, or any or either of them for,
upon, or by reason of the said sum of $25,000, or upon said
policies of insurance, on the payment of said amount, less said
adjusted costs as aforesaid, to the said The United States Trust
Company of New York."
It was further ordered that the several claimants be enjoined
from bringing any other action or proceedings against the
defendant, The Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York, upon the
said policies of insurance, and the claimants were also ordered to
interplead upon the pleadings already interposed.
On the same day, the insurance company paid to the United States
Trust Company, to the credit of the action, as ordered, the amount
of the policies.
It was this judgment of the New York supreme court which the
plaintiffs in error offered to plead at the trial in the circuit
court
puis darrein continuance, and also offered to give
in evidence, under an agreement between the parties, and, still
further, independently of any agreement. But the court refused to
allow it to be pleaded, or to be given in evidence, and this
refusal is assigned as error.
The argument submitted to us has taken a very wide range. Much
has been said which in our opinion has no bearing upon the exact
question before us. It may be admitted that the pendency of an
action between the same parties and for the same cause in a foreign
jurisdiction is pleadable only in abatement. So it may be admitted
that even a plea in bar,
puis darrein continuance, cannot
be received without verification. But the question here is whether
a final judgment determining the rights of the parties against each
other, made by a court having jurisdiction both of the parties and
of the subject of
Page 97 U. S. 336
controversy, was admissible, either as evidence under the
general issue in assumpsit, or when specially pleaded, or in
consequence of any agreement made. The decree made by the supreme
court of New York, if admissible, was certainly material. It will
not be denied that its effect was the creation of a complete bar
against the recovery of any other judgment in that state on these
policies of insurance, against the plaintiff in error. The claim of
Brune or Whitridge became merged in the judgment of that court. It
is perfectly immaterial whether the New York court first obtained
jurisdiction of the subject and the parties, as in fact it did.
When the final judgment was rendered, it closed the controversy,
and after that the person assured by the policies could not have
maintained a suit on them in that state, in the same or any other
court, and if not, he cannot now in any other state of the Union.
This is settled by the Act of Congress of May 26, 1790, which
declares that the records and judicial proceedings of the courts of
any state, when authenticated, shall have such faith and credit
given them in every court within the United States as they have by
law or usage in the courts of the state from whence they are taken.
The meaning of this is that when a judgment or decree has been
given in one state by a court having jurisdiction of the parties
and the subject, it has the same force and effect when pleaded or
offered in evidence in the courts of any other state.
Mills v.
Duryee, 7 Cranch 481;
Mayhew v.
Thatcher, 6 Wheat. 129;
Habich v.
Folger, 20 Wall. 1;
Burnley v. Stephenson,
24 Ohio 474;
Dobson v. Pearce, 12 N.Y. 156.
If, then, the record of the decrees of the New York court was
pertinent to the issue in the case in the circuit court, as we have
seen it was, and was material, why should it not have been
received? There was nothing in the pleadings nor in the agreement
of the parties, we think, that stood in the way of its admission.
The defendant below, now plaintiff in error, had pleaded the
general issue, and, under that in assumpsit, a judgment recovered
may be given in evidence. 2 Stra. 733; 1 Saund. Williams's notes,
67
a;
Stafford v. Clark, 2 Bing. 377;
Young v.
Black, 7 Cranch 565. And if this were not the
general rule, there was an agreement of the parties filed in
the
Page 97 U. S. 337
case, by which it was stipulated that either party might offer
in evidence, under the general issue, any matter admissible, as if
specially pleaded. Of course this agreement did not mean that an
offer of evidence might be made that could have no legitimate
bearing upon a proper decision of the case and that such evidence
should be received. But it did mean that whatever would be
admissible under any plea should, if offered, be received under the
plea of
non assumpsit.
This, however, was not all. The parties entered into another
agreement, that the two causes (
viz., suits on the two
policies) should be consolidated; that a special plea before filed
by the defendant should be waived; that either party should have
leave to offer in evidence any matter admissible, as if specially
pleaded; and that certain facts, papers, and records were admitted
and agreed to, for the purpose of taking the court's opinion in the
case as to the plaintiff's right to maintain the action. Among the
papers and records was the record of the case in the supreme court
of New York, including the original petition of Mrs. Barry, and
subsequent proceedings, together with the answer of the company and
the petition for an interpleader. This agreement was made on the
18th of November, 1873, before the decree discharging the
defendants was entered in the New York court. But the tenth clause
provided for the use of any subsequent action in that case. It was
as follows:
"10th. And the said case, wherein Rosalie C. Barry is plaintiff
and The Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York and William H.
Brune and Horatio L. Whitridge are defendants, is still pending in
New York, and if there should be any further proceedings therein
which either party may think material, they may be filed as part of
this agreement at any time before the trial of this case."
The decree of the New York court was a further proceeding in
that case, and by the agreement it was stipulated that it might be
filed and submitted to the court as an agreed fact in the case. It
is true the agreement allowed filing at any time before the trial,
and the case was called for trial on the 25th of November, 1873. On
that day, after the plaintiff had stated his case but before any
evidence was read, the further hearing was postponed until November
29; and on the 29th, before any
Page 97 U. S. 338
evidence was read, the copy of the final order and decree made
on the 26th of November by the supreme court of New York was filed
with the clerk of the circuit court. It is now contended that it
was filed too late. We do not think so, though the learned judge of
the circuit court said he would consider the trial as having begun
on the 25th. Technically it may be the trial commenced on that day,
but it advanced then only to an oral statement of what was
submitted for trial. All the evidence was given after the record
was filed. The substantial trial was afterwards. The agreement
between the parties should not have been construed technically, but
rather in accordance with its spirit and in furtherance of
justice.
And if the filing, when it was filed, of the final decree of the
New York court as a part of the agreed facts was not allowed by the
tenth clause of the agreement of November 18, the decree was still
admissible in evidence. That agreement stipulated that either party
might offer in evidence any matter admissible as if specially
pleaded. It did not require the court to enter judgment upon the
admitted facts alone.
It is argued by the defendant in error that the decree rejected
by the court was not filed, and that the offer of the plaintiff in
error was only to show a
lis pendens. It is true the
record did not show that the interpleading between Mrs. Barry and
Brune and Whitridge had terminated. But the decree was a final
determination of the claim of all and each of them against the
defendant in the present case, upon the policies now in suit. The
claim against the company is no longer open to litigation.
Upon the whole, therefore, we conclude that the first assignment
of error must be sustained, and what we have said renders it
unnecessary to remark upon the second.
The judgment of the circuit court must be reversed, and the
record remitted for a new trial, and it is
So ordered.