187 Iowa 253 | Iowa | 1919
Steckel & Son are partners, doing a banking business under the name “Exchange Bank of Bloomfield, Iowa,” and the defendant is a life insurance company, incorporated and having its principal place of business in Illinois.
Stated as briefly as practicable, the claim of the plain
The petition further alleges that, in answering plain
The petition is stated in three counts. In the first count, after stating its claim as aforesaid, plaintiff asks a money judgment for damages, substantially after the manner of a petition at law. In the other counts, plaintiff sets up two assignments, by which Fuller transfers to the bank all his claims against the company on .account of said policy, and for the reinstatement of the policy as a subsisting contract. It then avers that, by the terms of the insurance policy, the alleged prior lien of fl,329.06 was to be paid off by dividends and profits, accruing from time to time upon the policy, and that such indebtedness had, in fact, been largely, if not entirely, paid before the settlement between the company and Fuller was made, and that the-amount charged against the latter, in arriving at the settlement, was greatly exaggerated, or was entirely an overcharge, for which a recovery is demanded.
Plaintiff offers to do equity by paying to defendant all accrued and unpaid premiums and all the proper charges and liens on said policy, except the alleged prior lien of fl,329.06, and asks that the cancellation of the policy be vacated and set aside, and that the original contract between the insurer and insured be reinstated.
“August 21, 1909.
“Illinois Life Insurance Co.,
“Ft. Dearborn Bldg.,
“Chicago, Ills.
“Gentlemen:
“Mr. Charles H. Puller, Unionville, Iowa, sends us your notice for premium, $302.91, and interest on policy loan, $60, under No. 22182, but your notice does not state when same will be due. Please forward us the date therefor, so we can look after the matter for Mr. Fuller, who is a customer of ours.
“We understand from him that you hold a loan of $1,000, with his policy as collateral. Is that correct, and when is the loan due, and up to what date has the interest been paid, and what rate of interest does it draw?
“Yours truly,
“W. J. Steckel, Cash.”
“Illinois Life Insurance Company, Chicago.
“August 21, 1909.
“Mr. W. S. Steckel, Cashier,
“The Exchange Bank,
“Bloomfield, Iowa.
“Dear Sir:
“We have your letter of August 21st, respecting the due date of the premium on policy No. 22182, Chas. H. Fuller.
“I note your statement that the notice we sent does not show the due date of the premium. I do not understand this, as all our premium notices show the date the premium falls due.
“Yours truly,
“B. J. Stookey,
“B. J. S. ' Assistant Secretary.”
“Sept. 17, 1909.
“Illinois Life Ins. C.o.,
“Ft. Dearborn Bldg.,
“Chicago, Ills.
“Gentlemen:
“Enclosed herewith please find check C. H. Fuller, $362.94, being for premium $302.94, and interest on policy loan, $60, due under No. 22182, 18th inst. Please send us receipt for Mr. Fuller for the premium and the interest. Also, if you will let us know how many payments have been made on his policy, when it matures, and approximately what he will receive. How many years was the policy taken out for, and are all the payments made up to date? We presume they are.
“You write us that you have no blanks to make duplicates of this policy on, and would you be willing to send the original to us for examination, after which it would be returned to you promptly.
“Enc. Yours truly,
“W. J. Steckel, Cash.'”
“Sept. 22, 1909.
“P. A.
“No. 22182 — 1. L.
“Mr. W. J. Steckel,
“Bloomfield, Iowa.
“Dear Sir:
“You will find herewith receipt covering the premium on policy held by Charles H. Fuller, No. 22182, which also includes interest on.renewal of his policy loan to September 18th, 1910.
“Mr. Fuller’s policy was issued on September 18th, 1901, in lieu of an assessment policy he formerly carried in the Bankers’ & Merchants’ Life Association. In issuing the 20-payment policy, the Illinois Life dated it back to .September 18th, 1895, thus giving him the benefit of the age 43 premium rate, and the 6 years he carried the assessment policy.
“All computations of time are made from September 18th, 1895, and no further payment of premiums will be required on the policy after the annual premium due September 18th, 1914. He is required, therefore, to make five more annual payments.
“The cash surrender value of the policy at the end of the 20 years is $4,272, plus the accumulations that will be apportioned if the policy is in force at that time, and all premiums paid, and less any indebtedness against the policy at that time.
“The policy is known as a 20-pavment guaranteed annual addition.
“The policy is held by the company as collateral security for a loan, and it is against the rules of the company to permit its collateral to go out of its hands. If you have a correspondent in this city, and desire that he make an extract of this policy, we will be glad to permit
“Yours very truly,
“B. J. Stookey,
“B. J. S. Assistant Secretary.”
To a correct understanding of plaintiff’s contention with reference thereto, an explanation should here be made of the nature of the insurance company’s claim to its alleged prior lien of $1,329.06 upon the policy. It appears without dispute that, in the year 1896, the Bankers’ and Merchants’ Life Association issued to Fuller a life policy for $6,000. Fuller had carried this policy about 6 years when said Life Association was consolidated with or absorbed by the defendant in this case. About the same time, defendant and Fuller entered into an arrangement by which Fuller gave up the old policy, and took another, issued by the defendant, for the same amount, but upon a different plan, the former having been a life payment contract, and the latter a 20-payment contract, subject to a credit for the 6 years in which the insurance had been carried in the old company, thus making the new contract mature in 14 years. By reason of the change in plan of premium payments, aij agreement was effected by which the excess of yearly premiums on the 20-year plan over premiums on the life plan for the 6 years before the exchange of policies was computed at $1,329.06, and for this sum Fuller gave to defendant a so-called “certificate of loan,” by the terms of which the debt should stand as a preferred charge or lien upon the insurance. As we understand its terms, this indebtedness was to draw interest; but, except as the same might be reduced by application thereto of dividends and profits, neither principal nor interest was subject to demand or to enforced payment until the policy should ma
It is this indebtedness which plaintiff alleges the defendant failed to disclose in answer to its inquiries in the year 1909, thereby deceiving and misleading the plaintiff as to the value of the policy, and causing the loss for which a recovery of damages is now claimed. This claim makes it necessary to consider first whether the insurance company to which the inquiry was addressed understood, or, as persons of ordinary experience and intelligence ought to have understood it, as calling for such information. If the company knew, or ought to have known or understood, from the matter and manner of such inquiry that its failure to mention the “certificate of loan” might reasonably lead the plaintiff to give Fuller more credit than would have been extended to him if the fact had been made known, and plaintiff, acting as a reasonably prudent person, was thereby misled into giving Fuller credit which would otherwise have been refused, and loss has resulted to the plaintiff therefrom, its right to a recovery has been sufficiently established. On the other hand, if the correspondence had between the parties is not fairly and reasonably susceptible of such interpretation, then plaintiff has no right of action, even though it would have acted otherwise had it known of the existence of defendant’s prior lien.
We have read and re-read the four letters constituting this correspondence, to ascertai.n, as nearly as may be, how they must have been understood by the parties writing them, and by those to whom they were sent. Experienced and intelligent business men, desiring to obtain accurate knowledge of matters affecting their own interests, realize that, if the information sought is to be of any real value, their inquiries therefor must be definite and specific. The person to whom such question is addressed is not expected to go beyond the scope of the inquiry, and volunteer infor
But we find nothing in the letters before us to which this rule of liability is applicable. The first letter from plaintiff furnishes the keynote to the entire correspondence. It contains no statement or suggestion that Fuller was plaintjjS’s debtor, or was asking for credit or seeking to use the policy as collateral. After an introductory paragraph, asking the date when the premium on the policy and interest on the loan would be due, in order that plaintiff might attend to it “for Mr. Fuller, who is a customer of ours,” the letter concludes with this statement:
“We understand from him that you hold a loan of $1,000 with this policy as collateral. Is that correct, and when is the loan due, and up to what date has the interest been paid, and what rate of interest does it draw?”
This shows that plaintiff had already been informed by Fuller of the “loan of $1,000 ” and the inquiry is' directed solely and specifically to this loan. To this the defendant promptly replied, with the. simple statement that the loan was for $1,000, falling due on November 18th of that year, and expressing a willingness to extend or renew it for another year, upon receipt of the interest.
Several weeks later, plaintiff again writes, enclosing remittance to cover premium and interest charges, and asking that a receipt for such payments be returned “for Mr.
“Also, if you will, let us know how many payments have been made on his policy, when it matures, and approximately what he will receive. How many years was the policy taken out for, and are all payments made up to date? We presume they are.”
This, with a request that the policy be sent to the plaintiff for examination, includes everything in the line of a request for information. Answering the request, the defendant declined to return the policy, while held as collateral security, but offered to permit anyone calling at its office, with authority from Mr. Fiiller, to examine the policy and make copy of the same, and offered to give “any additional information by mail.” Defendant also, in the same letter, explained that the policy was issued in lieu of a former policy held by Fuller in the Bankers’ and Merchants’ Life Association; that five more annual payments were required; and that the cash surrender value of the policy “at the end of 26 years is $4,272, plus the accumulations that will be apportioned if the policy is in force at that time and all premiums paid, and less any indebtedness against the policy at that time.”
This, .as will readily be seen, answers explicitly every inquiry made, — the premiums paid and the number still required, the date when the policy matures, and approximately what the insured will be entitled to receive at the end of the 26-year period, “if the policy is in force at that time * * less any indebtedness against the policy at that time ” — and the plaintiff is assured of any “additional information,” if it shall be desired. Ho further question appears to have been asked, and not until some 5 years later, and 2 years after the policy had been forfeited or surrendered, did plaintiff ever inform the company that it claimed any interest in the policy or in the insurance thereby afforded.
It seems to us very clear that the inquiries made by the plaintiff in this case were fairly and fully answered, and, the defendant’s offer to furnish any “additional information” desired not having been acted upon, there is nothing in the record upon which to charge it with liability for the plaintiff’s alleged losses.
The rule of law for which plaintiff contends, and in support of which its counsel cite many authorities, cannot be doubted; but the insurmountable obstacle to its right to a recovery is in the failure to disclose a case to which such rule is applicable. Only by a strained and unnatural construction of the language of the letters can there be found anything of a deceptive or misleading character. The ingenuity of counsel finds something sinister or crafty in the reference by the defendant in its last letter to the fact that it was holding the policy “as collateral for a loan.”
There is no evidence on which to sustain the finding for which counsel so earnestly argue, that defendant “purposely omitted and concealed from plaintiff” the matter of its claim on the certificate of loan, or that defendant had knowledge that the Exchange Bank was honoring Fuller’s checks, and because thereof it knew that plaintiff’s inquiries “related to the question of propriety of honoring and paying the checks, furnishing money therefor, and that the charges against the policy would determine whether the checks would be paid.” Surely, this is drawing the “long bow” of logic to its breaking point. What fact is to be found in the record which ought to have suggested to the defendant that, because Fuller’s checks were honored and paid by the bank on which they were drawn, they represented an overdraft or the extension of credit by the plaintiff, rather than payments from the credit side of a deposit account, or that anything contained in the defendant’s letters could reasonably have influenced plaintiff to pay checks which would otherwise have been dishonored? Plaintiff never notified the defendant that it was making payments
There is, in short, no merit in the plaintiff’s claim that it was deceived or misled to its injury by the information it received from the defendant. Indeed, it is hardly too much to say that, upon plaintiff’s own showing, it is fairly apparent that the indebtedness to it by Fuller has been paid and satisfied, and that it has never lost a dollar by reason of its alleged dependence on the letters written by defendant.
“We desire to dispose of your case one way or the other, and unless you see your way clear to make application for reinstatement within the next 10 days, we will issue a paid-up policy of $70, representing your equity in the policy at the time of lapse, and send it to you.”
Fuller still remaining inactive, the company, on September 14, 1912, did issue to him a paid-up policy of $70, and canceled his loan of $1,000, and his certificate of loan for $1,329.06 and accumulated interest. Thus the situation remained for the next two years, when this action was begun. It is claimed now that Fuller had been lulled into a feeling of security by the indulgence of the company on numerous occasions in the matter of premium payments, and that an inequitable advantage was then taken of him in insisting upon the lapse of the policy. It is further al
The bare statement of the foregoing facts is enough to demonstrate that the company did not hasten to take advantage of the lapse of payment’ by Fuller, but, on the contrary, it showed rather extraordinary indulgence and patience in carrying him for nearly an entire year upon his repeated promises to pay, promises which remained to the end unperformed. His failure may have been due to his misfortune, rather than his fault, but for this the defendant is not responsible. The situation so portrayed suggests the inquiry, Where during all this time was the plaintiff, if, as it now claims, it was, in effect, the actual or qualified owner of the policy, relying upon it as security for the credit it had extended to Mr. Fuller, and therefore vitally interested in seeing that the premiums and interest due to the defendant were duly paid? This question is somewhat aside from the discussion of the branch of the case now under discussion, but it is one of several sidelights which tend to illuminate the merits of plaintiff’s claims to equitable relief.-
Passing, then, from the allegation of inequitable advantage by the defendant in holding the policy forfeited as being wholly unproven, we have then to ask whether there is any proof of fraud or mistake in the settlement to which we have alluded. The plaintiff placed an officer of the defendant on the witness stand, and showed by him that, on the date of the lapse of Fuller’s policy, the reserve value of his policy was $3,379.62'. From this sum deductions were made as follows:
Unpaid premium ..............$ 166.44
Cash loan .................... 1,000.00
Certificate of loan and interest.. 2,162.06
$3,328.50
It is true, no doubt, that the company or its officers sought to encourage Fuller to keep up his policy, and pointed out that the accumulations would show or did show a yearly increase; but to enjoy or obtain the benefits of these accumulations, it was necessary for him to persevere to the end — and this he did not do. It is quite clear
The certificate of loan was, in effect, a collateral agreement whereby, the policy here in question having been substituted for the one issued by the Bankers’ and Merchants’ Association, it was arranged that the excess in cost of the insurance upon the new plan over its cost upon the old plan should be treated as a loan, and stand as a lien upon the insurance, and be deducted therefrom when the policy matured, but should not otherwise constitute a personal indebtedness against the insured.
If appellant’s theory be correct, and the policy holder, having obtained insurance by acknowledgment of a debt to be paid out of the proceeds of the policy when carried to its maturity, may let his policy lapse by failure to pay an annual premium, and then call the statute and the courts to his aid to reinstate his policy in full force, freed from the claim of the company for payment of his acknowledged debt, then the law intended for his just protection is perverted into a means of grave injustice to the other party. No precedent for the appellant’s proposition is cited by counsel which supports their proposition in this respect, and we are unwilling to establish one. Indeed, the very question seems to have been decided by this court adversely to the' appellant in the recent case of Long v. Northwestern Nat. Life Ins. Co., 186 Iowa 369, where the action was brought directly upon the policy against the insurer, and it was held that a loan agreement like the one in the instant case was no part of the application, and that Code Section 1819 has no application thereto.
The judgment below was right, and it is — Affirmed.