152 Iowa 110 | Iowa | 1911
The record presented is very voluminous, and any attempt to treat it in detail within the permissible limits of an opinion would prove confusing rather than helpful. We may, however, outline certain leading facts from which the essential nature of the controversy and the situation of the parties with respect thereto can be developed with reasonable clearness. The Capital Insurance Company was organized and began business in Des Moines at some time prior to the year 1888. During that year the plaintiff C. E. Campbell, then a practicing lawyer in that city, became connected with the company as its -assistant secretary, and continued in that relation for a period of about ten years, During that time the chief sec
Soon thereafter Campbell entered upon an examination (the extent of which is a matter of dispute) into the books ■and financial condition of the company. On August 23, 1906, the contract of sale was executed by both parties on terms already sufficiently stated. At the same time Campbell made and executed a written report or certificate concerning his examination into the condition of the company, as follows:
Des Moines, Iowa, August 23d, 1906. This is to certify that I was duly authorized and appointed by J. S. Dewell, W. J. Burke, E. E. Gfirton, O. E. Campbell and others, to examine into the conditions of the Capital Insurance Company of Des Moines, Iowa, and duly authorized by the above parties, after careful examination as above, and if satisfactory to me, to close the contract with S. T. Berry for the purchase of five hundred and ten and one-half shares of the capital stock of said company for the •sum of $51,050.00, payable as follows: $25,000.00 cash and two joint promissory notes for $13,025.00 each with six percent interest from date of January 1st, 190Y, payable $13,025.00 January 1st, 1908, and $13,025.00 January 1st, 1909. I further certify that I have made a careful, full and independent examination of the condition of said company’s affairs, and as the result of said examination, as made by me for the above named J. S. Dewell,
The contract of purchase, which was signed by all the plaintiffs, also concludes with the following clause:
This contract is made and signed after the parties of the second part have satisfied themselves as to the condition of the company by a full and independent investigation by C. E. Campbell of Des Moines, Iowa, duly authorized by us to make and complete said examination.
It is the claim of the plaintiff that at the close of the year 1905 (the year last preceding their purchase of the stock) the defendants, as officers and managers of the Capital Insurance Company, made a statement or report to the Auditor of State, setting forth in various schedules and with considerable detail its assets and liabilities, and they allege that defendants to induce the sale of their stock pointed out said report as •& correct representation of the company’s condition, and assured plaintiffs that each and all of the items therein contained could be relied upon as true. They aver, however, that said representations were false and untrue, and were known by the defendant to be false and untrue, in the following respects: (1) That among the policies so reported outstanding and issued for terms of five years each was a considerable number
Plaintiffs are charging fraud and deceit, and the burden is upon them to establish it. Campbell insists that knowledge of this fact did not come to him until some months after the purchase of the stock, but the assistant secretary of the company swears that he called his atten
Concerning the item of cash on hand, the fact that something more than $100 of this sum represented bank credit obtained by drafts drawn for balances due from agents is admitted, but we are unable to discover from the evidence how or to what extent, if any, this fact has worked any injury to the plaintiffs. Indeed, it appears that all these balances were subsequently collected except a matter of about $130, a loss (if it be a loss) to the company which of itself could not have affected the market value of its shares of stock.
The further claim that the report to the Auditor did not disclose an item of $5,000 indebtedness to agents arises from the fact that instead of stating in separate items the aggregate sum due from agents and the aggregate indebtedness to agents, the company’s officers in making the report deducted the latter from the former and reported the balance so found. There may be some doubt whether this report is as specific as it should have been made, but the statutory regulation in this respect is not clear, and the instructions given to insurers by the state insurance department concerning reports of' this character may fairly be construed as permitting it. There is nothing to indicate any purpose on part of the officers to deceive the Auditor or any other person concerning the true condition of this account. But again we have to say there seems to he no showing that plaintiffs have suffered injury or damage by the irregularity, if such it be.
The same may be said concerning the alleged discovery
Perhaps the most important item of the claim in suit is the one based on what counsel denominate “bad underwriting” — the alleged hazardous and undesirable character of the risks insured, and the resulting excess of losses suffered, conditions, which, if proved, might well affect unfavorably the value of the shares of stock. The representations relied upon were to the general effect that the company was doing a good or excellent business; that its business was of as good quality as that of any other insurance company in the state; that it was a clean first-class insurance business, and other expressions to the same general effect. Defendants admit that these or statements of substantially similar import were made by them, aid insist they were made in truth and good faith and in the sincere belief, which they still entertain, that such was the real character and quality of the business. It will be observed that these expressions are all of a general and indefinite kind. No false or fraudulent representation is alleged or shown as to any particular risk or policy, or even as to any specific class or kind of policies or risks. Generally speaking, mere words of puffing or praise by the seller concerning the subject of sale are treated as expressions of opinion, and, no matter how extravagant, -the buyer relies thereon at his peril. But we do not wish to'be understood as holding that in the sale of corporate stock there may not be representations of the general quality and character of the corporate business, the falsity of which would constitute actionable fraud. Where, however, the facts are such that the statements made are fairly consistent with truth and good faith, they should be so treated
Plaintiffs were no inexperienced tyros. Two of them were educated lawyers, and all experienced insurance men. Campbell had been intimately associated in the actual conduct of the company’s business for ten years, and from that time he continued as -an active member of its board of directors and (most of the time at least) one of its executive commitee. The knowledge thus derived he supplemented by a personal examination which he then described as “full and independent” — an examination expressly made in view of the purchase of the stock, and, while he may not have been familiar with all its details, it is difficult to believe that he was not well informed as to the general character and quality of the business. Under the circumstances, his knowledge was the knowledge of all the plaintiffs. We
Appellees raised some points of pleading and practice on which they object to the maintenance of plaintiff’s action, but, in view of our finding that the case may properly be affirmed on the merits of the controversy, we shall not stop to consider them.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.