delivered the opinion of the court:
This is an appeal from a decree of the circuit court of Cook county forever restraining appellant, James H. Prentiss, from instituting suit against appellee, the Illinois Life Insurance Company, in the State of Missouri or in any other jurisdiction where the right of trial by jury is other or different from the right thereto existing in the State of Illinois, on a certain policy of insurance issued by appellee upon the life of Clinton S. Woolfolk, deceased. The amended bill filed by appellee charges that appellee is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of Illinois; that on February 7, 1912, it issued to Clinton S. Woolfolk a policy of insurance by which it undertook to pay the estate of the insured the sum of $50,000 upon his death, subject to the conditions set forth in the policy and the application therefor; that on February 16, 1912, Wool-folk assigned said policy of insurance to appellant, to which assignment the appellee conditionally consented; that on March 28, 1913, Woolfolk committed suicide at his home in Cook county, Illinois; that appellee has refused the demand to pay the amount of the said policy for the reason that in the application for the policy Woolfolk committed various breaches of warranty and made various fraudulent representations, and for the further reason that the insured having committed suicide within two years from the date of the policy, appellee’s liability is limited to an amount equal to the premiums paid, which amount has been tendered to appellant and refused by him; that on November 18, 1915, appellant filed his suit against appellee on said policy in the circuit court of Cook county and filed therein his declaration; that appellee has been duly served with process and has entered its appearance in said suit, and that the said circuit court has jurisdiction of the subject matter and of the parties and has full power to adjudicate all questions between them as to said policy of insurance; that Woolfolk up to the time of his death, and appellant and the administratrix of the estate of Woolfolk, have been at all times since the issuance of the policy, and are now, residents of Cook county, and the estate of Woolfolk is now in process of administration in Cook county; that the policy of insurance, and the premiums thereon, are by the terms of the policy payable in said county, and by the application, which is made a part of the policy, it was agreed that the contract contained in the policy, together with the application, should be construed according to the laws of Illinois; that appellant has threatened to start suit against appellee in the State of Missouri, with the purpose of depriving appellee of the right of trial by jury as guaranteed to the citizens of Illinois by section 5 of article 2 of the constitution; that the constitution of Missouri provides that in a trial by jury in all civil cases three-fourths of the members concurring can render a verdict, and a statute of Missouri provides that in all trials of civil actions in any court of record in that State a jury shall consist of twelve men, but three-fourths or more concurring can render a verdict, which shall have the same force and effect as though rendered by the entire panel; that it is the intention of appellant by the institution of a suit in the State of Missouri to harass and annoy appellee and obtain an unjust advantage to which appellant is not entitled under the laws of Illinois; that in order to adequately present its defense in a suit upon said policy of insurance it will be necessary for appellee to produce a large number of witnesses, some of them being public officials and employees, others being medical experts who performed an autopsy upon Woolfolk, and still others being business men and other persons not concerned in the litigation and strangers to appellee; that all of the witnesses who appellee knows would be necessary and procurable for its defense are residents of Illinois, and, with the possible exception of one or two, all reside in or do business in Cook county; that appellee does not know and has never heard of any witnesses residing in Missouri whose testimony is material on either side; that some persons whose testimony is necessary will be unwilling witnesses and others are wholly indifferent ; that it will be impossible to procure the attendance at the trial in Missouri of some of these witnesses, and that to procure the attendance of those who will be willing to go will put complainant to great and unnecessary expense and cause great inconvenience to the witnesses themselves; that it will be practically impossible to compel the attendance of unwilling witnesses before a commissioner should appellee endeavor to take the depositions of such persons for use in a suit to be tried in Missouri; that at such trial it will be necessary for appellee to show, as a motive for the suicide of Woolf oik, the bad financial condition of the Realty Realization Company, of which Wool folk was president, and the-main office of which was located in the city of Chicago, where the books and records of said corporation can now be found in the possession of the trustee in bankruptcy of the said Realty Realization Company, and that it would be impossible to transport said books and records to the State of Missouri for use on the trial there. It is further alleged that appellee is licensed to do business in the State of Missouri and has agents in that State. The cause was heard on demurrer to the bill, which was overruled, and appellant having elected to stand by his demurrer, a decree was entered in accordance with the prayer of the bill.
A court of equity has power to restrain a person within its jurisdiction from beginning a suit against the complainant in a foreign State which will result in a fraud or gross wrong or oppression. (Royal League v. Kavanagh,
A suit against appellee on a policy of insurance is a transitory action. Appellee is licensed to do business in the State of Missouri and has agents there upon whom service of process may be had. Appellant has the legal right .to bring his action against appellee on this policy of insurance in the State of Missouri, and this right will not be interfered with unless a clear equity is presented requiring the interposition of the court to prevent a manifest wrong and injury. The bare fact that a suit on this policy has been begun and is now pending in this State, in the absence of equitable considerations, furnishes no ground to enjoin appellant from suing his claim in a foreign jurisdiction, although the cause of action is the same and arises out of the contract of insurance involved in the litigation in the circuit court of Cook county. (Ambursen Hydraulic Construction Co. v. Northern Contracting Co.
Appellee relies upon and quotes from Freick v. Hinkly, supra, in support of its contention that the mere pendency of the suit at law in the circuit court of Cook county is sufficient to justify the decree entered. In that case Hinkly brought suit against Freick in the State of New Jersey upon four promissory notes which it was claimed had been executed by Freick. These notes were all executed in Luverne, Minnesota, and were made payable at that place. Both Freick and Hinkly were residents of Luverne. After the suit had been instituted in New Jersey and service had upon Freick he filed a bill in the State of Minnesota charging that the execution and delivery of the notes had been obtained through fraud, and prayed that the notes be surrendered for cancellation and that Hinkly be enjoined from further prosecuting his action in the New Jersey courts or elsewhere. The relief prayed for was denied. In passing upon the question involved the court said: “Had suit been brought in Minnesota in advance of the New Jersey suit it might, perhaps, furnish a basis for an injunction.” This was said in the light of the particular situation disclosed by the facts in that case. Freick sought by an equitable process in Minnesota to have the notes surrendered for cancellation, alleging fraud in their execution. Had that suit in equity been instituted prior to the bringing of any suit at law on the notes in another jurisdiction the court of equity would no doubt have enjoined Hinkly, a citizen of the State of Minnesota, from bringing any action at law in any jurisdiction upon the notes until it had been determined in the equitable proceeding whether they should be delivered up for cancellation because of the alleged fraud.
The principal contention made by appellee is, that the bringing of the suit against it in the State of Missouri, both parties being citizens of the State of Illinois, would be a violation of the right guaranteed to it by section 5 of article 2 of the constitution of 1870, which is, in part, as follows: “The right of trial by jury as heretofore enjoyed, shall remain inviolate.” Appellee treats and regards this as a right guaranteed to citizens of Illinois. It is a right guaranteed to litigants who may become involved in litigation in the courts of Illinois, whether such litigants be citizens of Illinois or elsewhere. It is not until a citizen of Illinois becomes a litigant in the courts of Illinois that this guaranty contained in the bill of rights applies to him, and should his adversary be a citizen of some other State or country the same guaranty applies to him as well. While this is a right that is guaranteed by the constitution and cannot be changed except by changing the constitution, it after all relates to a mere matter of procedure in our courts and may be changed by the people themselves, who have the power to make and unmake constitutions. It gives litigants in civil cases no vested rights which will remain in the event that the constitution is changed in this respect.
Prior to the' adoption of the constitutional amendment by the State of Missouri providing that in a trial by a jury of all civil cases in courts of record three-fourths of the members concurring may render a verdict, a civil action was begun and the issues joined. It was contended that the cause could be tried only under the mode of procedure existing when the suit was brought and the issues joined, and therefore the amendment authorizing nine members of the jury to render a verdict did not apply. In passing upon the point the Supreme Court of Missouri said: “No one has a vested right to have his cause tried by any particular mode of procedure. The State has the sovereign power to prescribe the mode of trying causes in its courts and to alter the same from time to time as it may see fit. If the mode is prescribed by an act of the General Assembly it may be changed by an act of the General Assembly; if it is prescribed by the constitution it may be changed by the power which makes the constitution.” Roenfeldt v. St. Louis and Suburban Railway Co.
In its capacity as a defendant to a suit upon a policy of insurance issued by it appellee is no more a citizen of the State of Illinois than it is of the State of Missouri. It is doing business in each of these States. It does not appear from the bill that any special inducement was made to Woolfolk because both he and appellee were residents of Illinois and entitled to invoke the guaranty contained in section 5 of the bill of rights. It does not appear that had Woolfolk and his beneficiary been residents of the State of Missouri the contract of insurance entered into between them would have contained any provisions other or different than those contained in the contract entered into, nor does it appear that the contract provided that'Should either Woolfolk or his beneficiary change his residence from the State of Illinois to the State of Missouri the conditions of the contract would thereupon become changed. Appellee relies upon the line of cases which hold that the bringing or prosecuting such suits will be enjoined where it appears the suits are brought or threatened to avoid or defeat the operation of the laws' of the State where both parties to the suit reside. These are cases where the prosecution of suits in a foreign jurisdiction were enjoined for the reason that they were brought for the purpose of evading local exemption laws or to secure under the laws of a foreign jurisdiction a preference over other creditors which could not be secured in the local jurisdiction, and the like. This case does not fall within that class. Appellee is simply complaining here that if it is compelled to defend in the State of Missouri it will not be entitled to the same procedure in the trial there which is followed in the courts of this State. This is not depriving it of any substantial right that would result in wrong or oppression.
It will not be necessary to distinguish all the cases relied upon by appellee in support of its contention that this constitutional right is a substantial one, not to be violated as a mere matter of procedure, and that the alleged denial of the right is a ground for injunction. Three of the cases relied upon are, American Publishing Co. v. Fisher,
Appellee has failed by its bill to' show any ground which would warrant a court of equity in restraining appellant from bringing suit in the State of Missouri or in any other foreign jurisdiction.
The decree of the circuit court is reversed and the cause is remanded, with directions to sustain the demurrer to the
Reversed and remanded, with directions.
