Source: http://masscases.com/cases/sjc/299/299mass185.html
Timestamp: 2019-04-18 18:56:48+00:00

Document:
YVONNE RATTE, administratrix, vs. YVONNE FORAND & another.
The administrator of the estate of one whose life was insured without his knowledge and without his furnishing premiums therefor could not maintain a suit in equity for the proceeds of the insurance against one who through fraud had procured its issuance and had received its proceeds. The administrator of the estate of one who had insured his life without naming a beneficiary had an adequate remedy at law against one who through fraud had obtained payment of the proceeds of the insurance. If a demurrer to a bill in equity on several grounds ought to be sustained on any ground, a decree sustaining it will be affirmed on appeal whatever ground is stated in the decree.
BILL IN EQUITY, filed in the Superior Court on April 28, 1936, against Yvonne Forand and Leon A. Forand.
A demurrer was sustained by Brown, J., and a final decree entered dismissing the bill. The plaintiff appealed.
F. J. McOsker, for the plaintiff.
G. L. Sisson, for the defendants.
her knowledge, through false representations that the female defendant was a niece of Marie Ratt, and by concealment of the fact that she had an incurable cancer. After her death the defendants collected the proceeds of the policy. In 1933 the same thing happened with respect to another policy issued by the Prudential Insurance Company of America. At some later time a similar thing happened with respect to the last named company, but no beneficiary was named in the policy and the collection of the proceeds awaits the determination of this suit.
So far as the plaintiff's case depends upon the policies already mentioned, she states no case for relief. Her intestate did not take out the policies, furnish the premiums for them, or know anything about them. If the defendants had no insurable interest in the life of Marie Ratt, and obtained the policies from the insurers by fraud, that was a matter between the defendants and the insurers, which gave no rights to Marie Ratt or her estate.
insurer discharged its obligation in paying her. See Cataldo v. Woodside, 295 Mass. 586, 588, and cases cited. The case is not within Buzzell v. Schulz, 273 Mass. 372, or the cases therein cited.
The adequacy of the remedy at law was the first ground stated in the demurrer. Although the judge sustained the demurrer on other grounds, a demurrer is a unit; it cannot be sustained on one ground and overruled on another, but must be sustained or overruled as a unit, no matter how many grounds are stated. It is true that a statement of the grounds upon which the judge sustains a demurrer may be useful. Mezoff v. United Kosher Butchers Association, Inc. 274 Mass. 174. Montgomery v. Richards, 275 Mass. 553. Abbott v. Bean, 295 Mass. 268. But on appeal it is immaterial which of the several grounds was relied on by the judge in sustaining the demurrer. On appeal all grounds stated are open. Derby v. Derby, 248 Mass. 310, 314. Mulcahy v. Huddell, 272 Mass. 539, 543, 544. Gillis v. Bonelli-Adams Co. 284 Mass. 176, 180. J. C. Penney Co. Inc. v. Schulte Real Estate Co. Inc. 292 Mass. 42. McCarter v. United New Jersey Railroad & Canal Co. 6 Buch. 323. Canton Cotton Warehouse Co. v. Potts, 68 Miss. 637. Kinney v. Reeves & Co. 139 Ala. 386. Hammons v. Hammons, 228 Ala. 264. Compare Cosmopolitan Trust Co. v. Cohen, 244 Mass. 128, 130, 131.

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