Court Opinion

ID: 7989460
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 01:29:18.991812+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:35:18.795638
License: Public Domain

Whitfield, O. J.,
delivered tbe opinion of tbe court.
Tbe case made by the amended bill is substantially this: That Enochs took out a life-insurance policy in the New York Life Insurance Company; that he had at the time a previous policy -in said company; that the defendant Mims negotiated this contract of insurance, and received a premium note of $903 for the same, and transmitted the same to the home office of the company at New York; that upon its reception it was discovered that there was a discrepancy between the application in this case and the previQus application as to the age of Enochs; that thereupon the company sent the policy to Mims, with instructions not to consummate the contract until this discrepancy should be explained; that there ensued a conference between Mims and Enochs touching this and other matters, and that thereupon a written agreement was entered into between Mims, as agent for the company, and Enochs, fixing and settling the liability of Enochs; that this written agreement reinstated the note as a valid note upon the execution of the written agreement' which is averred to be the real basis of the action; that thereafter the note was forwarded from the home office at New York to Mims for collection; that Mims was both agent for the New York Life Insurance Company and the president of the Mississippi Bank & Trust Company; that Mims as president of the bank bought from himself as agent of the insurance company the note; that the directors of the bank had no knowledge of any equities against the note that might arise out of the contents of said written agreement; that the note was made payable by Enochs to his own order, and indorsed by him in blank — all this being done, however, prior to the written'agreement; that the bank notified Enochs that it was the owner of the paper and demanded payment, whereupon Enochs denied all liability, plac*328ing his nonliability upon the alleged wrongful conduct of the other defendants subsequent to' said written agreement; that Mims’ action in buying the note for the bank as agent of the insurance company was unlawful, he having a personal interest in the commissions accruing from said note; that a discovery of the contents of said written instrument was essential to the ends of justice and necessary in the cause, to enable the complainant to fix the liability where it was placed by the terms of said written agreement; that by virtue of these dealings between the three parties — Enochs, and Mims as agent of the insurance company, on the one hand, and Mims as president of the bank, on the other —the whole uncertainty and confusion as to where the liability lawfully belonged had been directly created by the said conduct of the three defendants themselves, and that the remedy, if any, at law was thereby made wholly inadequate. "Wherefore the bill prayed primarily for discovery, and, upon discovery, for a decree for the amount of the note. The bill was demurred to on the ground of want of jurisdiction, the insistence being that the remedy was at law. The court below overruled the demurrer. Mims and the New York Life Insurance Company declined to appeal, but Enochs prosecuted this appeal alone.
The argument chiefly insisted upon for appellant is that, since the note was not within our anticommercial statute, no equities which Enochs had against the note could be set up, and hence that a discovery, the object of which was to disclose such equities, would be immaterial. This view fails to take in the full scope and breadth of the case made by the bill. It is to be observed, first, that this note is still in the hands of a bank of which Mims is president; that the averment is, not that the bank did not know of these equities, but that the directors did know that the purchase was unlawful, and the question as to whether notice to Mims, the president, would be notice to the "bank, was left open; and, finally, that the suit proceeds for its main basis, not upon the note originally given, as a piece of *329commercial paper, payable to bearer, practically, but upon the liability upon said note growing out of a subsequent written agreement, which was necessary to adjust the differences in dispute between the parties and reinstate the note as a binding obligation, and that the dealing with this note had been by Mims, agent both for the insurance company and the bank and the negotiator of the insurance, with Enochs. It is easily conceivable upon this state of case that Enochs might prevail in a suit at law and that the life-insurance company might prevail in a second suit at law. Learned counsel for appellant frankly admit that “the argument for appellee might have been sound under a different state of case, but not where the discovery sought is irrelevant and immaterial” — that is to say, counsel admit that the argument that both Enochs and the New York Life Insurance Company might successfully defeat actions at law might be sound argument but for the fact that the one piece of paper, the note, looked at by itself, is practically payable to bearer, and therefore would ordinarily cut off equities. But this view takes in only half of the case made by the bill. Looking at the whole case, as we have stated it, we think it a case peculiarly for equity jurisdiction, because of the manifest confusion and uncertainty which the defendants themselves by their conduct in the matter have created, and because, as a corollary of this, of the utter inadequacy of the remedy at law. The case falls within the principles announced in Mississippi Compress Co. v. Levy, 83 Miss., 774 (36 South. Rep., 281).

Therefore the decree is affirmed, and the cause remanded, with leave to answer within thirty days from the -filing of the mandate in the court below.