Harris-Emery Co. v. Pitcairn

122 Iowa 595 | Iowa | 1904

Per Curiam.

The petition alleges that plaintiff is a corporation in the business of buying, selling, and. owning dry goods and other merchandise, and that defendants are officers and directors of a corporation known as the “Millers’ -& Manufacturers' Mutual Fire Insurance Association.” It *596is further alleged that on March 1, 1899, the defendants solicited the plaintiff to take out a policy of insurance in said association, and to induce such action on plaintiff's part defendants stated and represented that said association was a legally constituted fire insurance company with power to issue policies of insurance such as were ordinarily issued by what were known as “old-line companies,” and with power to issue what is known as the “ordinary stock policy” insurance ; that the company was in the habit of issuing such policies, affording thereby good and valid insurance; that, believing and relying upon said' representations, plaintiff did take a policy of insurance from said association, paying therefor the sum of $15; that during the term of said policy plaintiff suffered a loss by fire of the insured property, and then for the first time discovered that said association represented by defendants was a mutual company, organized with limited powers, and prohibited by statute from issuing a policy of the kind given to the plaintiff.; that said policy was null and void and worthless, affording plaintiff no insurance or right of action against the association, all of which was well known to the defendants when they issued said policy to him. It is also averred that said association refused to pay the loss under the policy, and has since become insolvent. On these allegations there is a general prayer for damages. The defendants, having first severally answered, obtained leave to withdraw their answers, and united in a demurrer to the petition on the following grounds: “First. Because the petition show's no personal liability against these defendants. Second. The petition show's that the defendants were directors of the insurance company therein referred to, and they are not liable on a policy of insurance issued without authority of law' and beyond the power of the corporation. Third. The plaintiffs are conclusively presumed to know that the policy of insurance referred to in the petition was issued without authority, and therefore cannot hold any officer liable because of the issuance of an illegal policy. Fourth. Those defendants- never entered into any contract with the *597plaintiffs, but, on tbe contrary, the contract was with the Millers’ & Manufacturers’ Mutual Fire Insurance Company, and therefore these defendants are not liable under the averments of the petition.” In sustaining this demurrer and entering judgment thereon for defendants, we think there was error.

I. The first ground stated in the demurrer is general, and presents no specific proposition for the consideration of the court. The second ground does not meet the case made 1. pleadings: demurrer. by the petition. Plaintiff does not seek to charge defendants with liability upon the policy. The action is not based upon the. policy, but is a demand for damages -on acount of alleged deceit and misrepresentations by the defendants as individuals, by which plaintiff claims to have been led to an act resulting in its loss and injury. The same statement applies to the fourth ground of demurrer. It is not charged or claimed that defendants entered into any contract with plaintiff. It is true that a contract was made or supposed to be made with the association, and not with the individual defendants, but plaintiff itself avers that the contract was and is utterly null and void, and it disclaims any right of action thereon. Its claim to recovery is founded not in contract, but in tort. It follows that the second and fourth assignments of the demurrer misapprehend the cause of action stated by the petition.

II. The remaining proposition of the demurrer, that plaintiff is presumed to know that the policy was issued without authority, and therefore cannot hold the officers or agents 2. deceit: pleading demurrer. to personal liability for issuing it, presents at first blush a more debatable ground, but' a little examination will demonstrate its unsoundness. The misrepresentation charged has primary reference not to the question of law defining the power of the corporation, but to the question of fact as to the kind of corporation which defendants represented, and the kind of insurance it was empowered to write. The statute (Code, title 9, chapter 4, section 1690) authorizes the organization of companies to issue policies of fire insurance upon the stock plan, and of other companies to *598issue policies upon the mutual plan. Whether the company represented by defendants was of that class or kind authorized to issue policies upon the stock plan, while it involves ultimately a question of law, is, as we have just observed, also and primarily a question of fact, a misrepresentation of which may be an actionable tort. When the defendants applied to the plaintiff, soliciting business, tendering a stock plan policy, and representing that it was authorized to furnish that kind of insurance, and thereby deceived and misled the plaintiff to its injury, we think there is bo principle of law which will permit defendants to say, “Admitting all this to be true, we were acting merely as the agents and officers of the corporation, and you believed our statements at your peril.” Plaintiff was not required to examine the records of the organization of the defendants’ company and obtain the advice of a lawyer thereon before taking them at their word. While plaintiff must be held to have known the statute authorizing and regulating the business of fire insurance, it is not presumed to have known the fact whether defendants’ company had complied with the conditions authorizing it to do a stock insurance business. The presumption of notice and the doctrine of ultra vires are applicable in an action upon the contract against the corporation, and are even thére in most cases applied with reluctance, but they are not available to the officers or agents whose fraud and deceit have led a party into a void contract to his injury. In the case of Smith v. Sherman, 113 Iowa, 601, upon which appellees rely, it was expressly found that there was no fraud on part of the company or of the individual defendants, while here the demurrer admits the fraud but denies the liability. Moreover, the action in that case was for recovery upon a contract obligation, and not for damages for a wrong done.

III. The appellees press upon our attention the point that the petition does not state the amount of the policy issued to it, nor the amount of the loss sustained thereunder, nor any other fact from which the extent of the alleged damage may be measured. Whatever may be the merits of this ob*599jection to tlie pleading, tlie demurrer does not raise it, and we cannot properly consider it.

For tlie reasons above given the judgment below is reversed, and cause remanded with direction to the trial court to overrule the demurrer to the petition. — Nevueskd.

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