Several
hundred
policyholders of the Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company brought this diversity suit against the company and several of its officers for common law fraud and related torts. The district judge dismissed the fraud claim for failure to comply with Rule 9(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, which requires that fraud claims be pleaded with particularity, and having done so he dismissed the entire suit with prejudice. The plaintiffs appeal from the dismissal of the suit, from an order entered at the same time refusing to allow them to file an amended complaint adding Northwestern’s insurance agents as additional defendants, and from an order entered two months later awarding the defendants $128,000 in court costs. We have no jurisdiction over the appeal from the last order, because the plaintiffs did not file a notice of appeal from it. The notice of appeal from the order dismissing their suit could not bring up an order entered later, Fed. R.App. P. 4(a)(1);
York Center
*469
Park District v. Krilich,
The plaintiffs allege that Northwestern’s insurance agents persuaded them to use the cash values of their existing policies to pay premiums for new, larger policies, without telling them that by doing this the policyholder would be reducing the value of his existing policy, that part of the cash value would actually go to the agent as a commission rather than pay the first-year premium of the new policy, and that the cash value would quickly be exhausted, after which the policyholder would find himself having to pay large premiums to keep the new policy in force. There is more to the alleged scheme, but this is the essence and is all that need be set forth to frame the issues for decision.
In order to make a complaint with hundreds of plaintiffs manageable, the plaintiffs’ lawyers grouped their clients according to the particular insurance agent with whom each dealt. The complaint does not, however, give the dates on which any of the fraudulent representations or omissions were made, although it does indicate that they were made around the time that the policies were issued to the specified plaintiffs. Neither does the complaint reveal what exactly each agent said to each plaintiff; it merely gives the gist of the agents’ spiel in approximately the terms in which we have summarized the alleged scheme. The lawyers admit that they did not talk to all their clients before drafting the complaint.
The purpose of requiring that fraud be pleaded with particularity is not, as it might seem and the eases still sometimes say, e.g.,
Vicom, Inc. v. Harbridge Merchant Services, Inc.,
Greater precomplaint investigation is warranted in fraud cases because public charges of fraud can do great harm to the reputation of a business firm or other enterprise (or individual),
Bankers Trust Co. v. Old Republic Ins. Co.,
Almost two years into this suit, when the district judge threw out the fraud claim on 9(b) grounds, the plaintiffs’ lawyers still had not completed the required investigation. They hadn’t even talked to all their clients. It cannot be assumed that the agents’ spiel was fraudulent in every instance in which it was given. The use of cash values to finance a new policy is not on its face a fraudulent practice. Suppose a person has a $100,000 life insurance policy from Northwestern Mutual and would like another $100,000 policy; and suppose the annual premium for the new policy is $300 and the cash value of the existing policy is $2,100. It is not obviously a mistake for the policyholder to apply the $2,100 to the payment of premiums for the new policy, thereby saving $300 a year for the first seven years of that policy. More than a description of such an offer is necessary to show that it is fraudulent, but that is all the complaint contains. See, e.g.,
Schiffels v. Kemper Financial Services, Inc.,
Of course with hundreds of clients, compliance with Rule 9(b) is burdensome. But you cannot get around the requirements of the rule just by joining a lot of separate cases into one.
Brown v. North Central F.S., Inc.,
The rale was violated for the further reason that the defendants are not the insurance agents; they are Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company and its officers. It is they who are charged with fraud. The plaintiffs were required to specify which
defendants
said what to whom and when, unless they could show, which they did not attempt to do, that the requisite information was “within the defendant’s exclusive knowledge.”
Jepson, Inc. v. Makita Corp., supra,
This problem is least severe with respect to the insurance company. When an agent who is authorized to make a contract on his principal’s behalf (and the principal needn’t be the agent’s employer and was not here) uses fraud to induce the contract, the principal is liable even if the agent is acting solely to feather his own nest. This is the doctrine of
Gleason v. Seaboard Air Line Ry.,
Had the plaintiffs’ lawyers known about
Gleason
or appreciated the scope of the doctrine of respondeat superior, they would not have argued, in their futile effort to join the insurance agents as additional defendants, that the agents were necessary or indispensable parties. They would have realized that they could get complete relief from the agents’ principal, Northwestern. In any event their effort to add parties came too late. The addition would have destroyed complete diversity, requiring the dismissal of the suit after two years and entitling the plaintiffs to start over in state court. The prolongation of the litigation that such a course would have entailed was a compelling reason for the judge to deny the motion to amend. See
Foman v. Davis,
Affirmed.
