174 Iowa 607 | Iowa | 1916
Defendant admitted the allegations of the petition and its liability thereunder, except for the facts set forth in its counterclaim. Appellant’s counterclaim was based on a promissory note executed by plaintiff to the Century Insurance Co. for a term policy, upon which there remained due the sum of $250,, which note was assigned to appellant.
Appellee replied, substantially, that the note was given for a six-year term policy; that the loss under said policy occurred after the payment of the first premium, and that no other premiums were due; that, in settlement and adjust
“And it is hereby agreed that in event of loss under this policy subsequent payments shall not be deducted from the loss.”
That the agent of defendant who procured said application and note from plaintiff was instructed and advised by the defendant insurance company’s assignor that said clause meant that, in case of loss, subsequent installments, as represented by said note, should not become due and payable, and that the same should be void; that the said agent so advised the plaintiff at the time the said note was given and application for insurance made; that the plaintiff relied on said representations made by defendant’s agent, and would not have made application for the said policy nor executed said note, but for such representations.
In May, 1911, J. C. Harty, the special agent of the Century Fire Insurance Company for northwestern Iowa, called on T. K. Peterson, a banker, who was the Century Fire Insurance Company’s local soliciting agent at Badger, the place where the note was executed, to' see if they could not procure some applications for fire insurance, and particularly term insurance. Mr. Peterson told Mr. Harty that he did not want to write term insurance, as he had sold some term insurance on which there had been a loss and that the payments provided for by the term note had been deducted from the loss,
After the policy was issued and the note taken, the Century Insurance Company reinsured in the defendant company, and the note was assigned to defendant. Defendant company held the note at the time of the first loss, in February, 1912. On February 22, 1912, a loss occurred under this first policy. This was the policy that was issued on the application signed by plaintiff and solicited by Peterson and Harty, and for which the promissory note in question was given. As before stated, there was a total loss under this policy, and plaintiff was paid $1,505; and, as a condition thereto, the defendant compelled the plaintiff to return his policy for cancellation,
After the first loss and the payment thereof, plaintiff took out a new policy in the defendant insurance company of $400 on his paints, etc. In June, 1912, and after the second payment on the note in question had become due, plaintiff suffered a second fire, which destroyed the property covered by his $400 policy. This second loss was adjusted, and the defendant admitted its liability in the sum of $400, and in its answer admits that it owes this amount, unless it is entitled to counterclaim for $250, the balance which it alleges is due on the promissory note given for the first policy of insurance. The defendant, after the $400 loss, and prior to this suit, sent $150 to plaintiff, who refused to accept the same and demanded $400, the amount of the adjustment, asserting that there was no liability on the balance of the $300 premium note. Before the second loss occurred, and on May 22, 1912, the second payment of $50 on the note in question became due, according to defendant’s theory. The note .provides that, if any payment was not made when due, the whole note became due and collectible. On May 27, 1912, the defendant company demanded payment of the balance alleged to be due on said note, $250, and payment was refused. In this suit, appellant renewed the tender of $150. The note referred to is as follows:
“For value received in policy No. 49255, dated on the 22d day of May, 1911, issued by the century fire insurance company, I promise to pay to said company at its office in Des Moines, Iowa, the following sums on the dates specified, viz.: $50 on the 22d day of May, 1911, and $50 on the 22d day of May, 1912, and $50 on the 22d day of May, 1913, and $50 on the 22d day of May, 1914, and $50 on the 22d day of May, 1915. and $50 on the 22d day of May, 1916. without interest*613 if paid when due; if not paid when due, then this note is to bear interest at the rate of six per cent per annum from its date, and it is hereby agreed that in the event of loss under this policy subsequent payments shall not be deducted from the loss, and further, if the amounts of this note are not paid at maturity, then this policy shall be suspended and the company shall not be liable for any loss or damage that may occur to the property insured while this note shall be overdue and unpaid, and that the whole amount of premiums shall be considered earned and payable.
“(Signed) c. k. houge.
“P. O. Address, Badger, Webster County, Iowa.”
The note is indorsed on the back to defendant by the payee, and a credit of $50 is indorsed thereon, the first payment due May 22, 1911. The trouble occurs over the italicized clause of the note.
The errors relied upon by appellant for reversal are in reference to the trial court’s admitting in evidence, over objection, parol testimony to the effect that Peterson and Harty represented to plaintiff before he signed the note that, in case of loss, plaintiff would not have to pay any of the annual installments of the original $300 premium which might become due after such loss, and, further, that such was the meaning of the italicized clause before referred to. The other errors •assigned are ruled by the determination of this question.
It is contended for appellant that a soliciting agent for an insurance company has no right or authority to place any construction upon the meaning of the principal’s contracts, and that an agent whose duties were merely to appoint soliciting agents, inspect property insured, and adjust some losses, has no authority to bind his principal by placing any construction upon the terms of its written contracts, citing Garretson v. Merchants’ & Bankers’ Ins. Co., 81 Iowa 727, 729; Elliot v. Farmers’ Ins. Co., 114 Iowa 153; Dryer v. Security Fire Ins. Co., 94 Iowa 471, 473, 475; Winchell v. Iowa State Ins. Co., 103 Iowa 189; Russell v. Cedar Rapids Ins. Co., 78 Iowa 216;
And, further, that such testimony was incompetent because it varies and contradicts the terms of the written instrument, and that all prior conversations became merged in the written contract, citing Cornelius v. Farmers’ Ins. Co., 113 Iowa 183; Hartford Fire Ins. Co. v. Davenport, 37 Mich. 609, 612; Fitchner v. Fidelity Mut. Fire Association, 103 Iowa 276.
On the other hand, it is contended for appellee that the representation made by Harty and Peterson touched matters upon which the contract is either silent or ambiguous; that they were made by Harty and Peterson to induce plaintiff to execute the application and the note. The evidence shows that plaintiff relied upon the representations; that he would not have executed the application and note if he had not .believed them to be true. Appellee knew, and so stated in his testimony, that it was quite a point not to have to pay subsequent payments after loss. It is contended by appellee that the appellant, by suing on this note, has branded these representations as false, and that they amounted to fraud.
In Nixon v. Carson, 38 Iowa 338, 339, this court said:
"False and fraudulent representations as to the subject-matter of a contract, relied upon by the other party, which operated as an inducement thereto, will defeat recovery by the guilty party. The fact that the fraud was perpetrated prior to the execution of the contract does not change the rule. Indeed, to bring a case within the rule, the fraud, of necessity, must have been perpetrated before the consummation of the contract, otherwise it could not have operated as an inducement thereto. It was entirely competent to establish the fraudulent and false representations by extrinsic parol evidence. These principles are elementary and do not demand for their support the citation of authorities. But see 2 Par*615 sons on Contracts, p. 66, and Chap. 3, Sec. 12, and notes; 1 Greenleaf’s Ev., Sec. 284; Rohrabacher v. Ware, Sept. Term, 1873. The fraudulent representations are sufficiently averred in the answer.”
The general rule is, of course, that parol evidence cannot be given to vary or contradict the terms of a written contract. There are many' exceptions to this rule, however. "We think that appellant fails to distinguish between false representations which operate as an inducement and a parol agreement contemporaneous with a written contract. There is some ambiguity in the language used in the note, and the note is- so. drawn and the italicized words are such as to readily deceive the ordinary layman, and we are of opinion that, under' all the circumstances of this ease, such representations would amount to fraud.
The cases citetfby appellant are cases either where a parol agreement was sought to be added to a written agreement, and where there was no fraud or false representations averred, or else it was an attempt to hold the insurance company liable in a suit against it because of the acts of its agent. The present ease is different. Here we have an action to recover $400, which the defendant insurance company admits is due plaintiff, unless it can counterclaim. The gist of the case, then, is a suit by the defendant insurance company to recover $250 from the plaintiff. It is not a case of plaintiff’s seeking to recover $250; for it is admitted that the defendant owes $400. .But the question is whether defendant has a debt or claim against plaintiff in the sum of $250, on which it can recover or offset against plaintiff’s recovery. "While it is true it was not sought to take the unpaid part of the note from the first loss, that is precisely what it is seeking to do in this case; that is, to deduct the $250, the balance alleged to be due on the note, from the $400 loss on the last policy.
Further, it has been held that, where defendant seeks to recover on a contract to which plaintiff pleads fraudulent representations by an agent of defendant, it is not necessary to show that such agent had authority from the defendant to make the representations. Bonewell v. Jacobson, 130 Iowa 170.
In Providence Jewelry Co. v. Fessler, 145 Iowa 74, 78, we said:
“If defendants were endeavoring to enforce any obligation against plaintiff based on the agreement which they say they made with "Waggoner, then the question as to the authority of the latter and the business customs of the plaintiff might possibly have some pertinence, and Smith v. Clark, 12 Iowa 32, and other authorities cited by appellant would perhaps be applicable. As it is they are not in point.
“Whatever may have been the authority or want of authority in Waggoner, there is no principle of law by which the company, as his principal or employer, may enforce for its own benefit a contract procured by his fraud, unless the party so imposed upon has in some way estopped himself from pleading or insisting upon the defense.”
Plaintiff’s testimony as to representations is corroborated by Mr. Peterson, the soliciting agent both of the defendant insurance company and of its predecessor. Mr. Harty, special agent of the Century Insurance Company and the defendant, who appointed Mr. Peterson, testified on this trial on another matter, but he was not called by the defendant to contradict any of this evidence of the plaintiff, so that there is no dispute as to the representations. We think the evidence is competent.
In the case of Bushnell v. Buck Bros., 161 Iowa 362, the court said:
“Counsel quotes only a part of Code Supplement, See.*618 3060-a55, evidently, overlooking the last part of the section. The section reads: ‘The title of a person who negotiates an instrument is defective within the meaning of this act when he obtained the instrument, or any signature thereto, by fraud, duress, or force and fear, or other unlawful means, or for an illegal consideration, or when he negotiates it in breach of faith, or under such circumstances as amount to a fraud.’ If the note was obtained from defendants by fraud, or if Trumans negotiated it in breach of faith or under such circumstances as to amount to a fraud, then their title was defective, and, if defective for any of these reasons, the burden was upon plaintiff to show that he acquired it innocently. Code Supplement Sec. 3060-a59; Cox v. Cline, 139 Iowa 128, 131; McNight v. Parsons, 136 Iowa 390.”
3. It is contended by plaintiff that there was a failure of consideration and that, therefore, parol evidence could be introduced to show it. Their claim is that, because the insurance company adjusted the loss in the sum of $1,505, but as a condition to payment demanded the return of the policy for cancellation, there was a failure of consideration as to the unpaid portion of the note, and that this may be shown by parol, testimony. They say, also, that, as the nóte does not show the agreement which plaintiff testified to,- — i. e., that in case of loss there should be no further payments on the note,— then it was competent to show the collateral agreement, and that the collateral agreement has been performed; and they cite some of the cases heretofore referred to. But, in view of our holding in the first paragraph of the opinion, we deem it unnecessary to further consider this point.
“When the terms of an agreement have been intended in a different sense by the parties to it, that sense is to prevail against either party in which he had reason to suppose the other understood it.”
Our conclusion is that the trial court rightly directed the verdict, and the judgment is therefore — Affirmed.