THEODORE G. RECHOW V. BANKERS LIFE COMPANY, a Corporation, Appellant.
Division Two
July 9, 1934
73 S. W. (2d) 794 | 335 Mo. 668
We believe the trial court properly overruled the appellant‘s demurrer to the evidence, and was justified in submitting the case to the jury.
The judgment of the trial court is, therefore, affirmed. All concur.
Theodore G. Rechow and Herman Pufahl for respondent.
Defendant is an Iowa corporation licensed to do business in this State. Its home office is at Des Moines, Iowa: It was organized about 1879 pursuant to the laws of Iowa under the name “Bankers Life Association,” as an assessment insurance association or company and until October, 1911, was authorized to and did issue contracts of insurance only on the assessment plan. The certificates issued by the association admitting the recipients to membership in the association and evidencing the contracts of insurance were each for the sum of $2000 and were all alike, all certificate holders or members belonging to one class. By the terms of the certificate the application therefor
The articles of incorporation and by-laws provided for a fourth fund, called the benefit fund, out of which death losses should be paid and which should consist of “all moneys collected for the payment of losses occasioned by the death of members of the association and shall be collected by pro rata assessments levied by the board of directors upon the guarantee fund of the association,” that is, by assessments upon the members made in proportion to the amounts contributed by them to the guarantee fund, based upon age at entrance. The certificate on its face provided that “the amount due under this contract to be provided for by assessment on the membership levied pro rata upon the guarantee fund of the association, unless otherwise supplied.” We understand “otherwise supplied” meant supplied from the emergency fund as above indicated in certain contingencies. The association had no means of paying death losses except by assessments levied upon the membership. Assessments were not fixed in amount by the contract but depended upon the amount necessary to meet
In 1907 the Iowa Legislature enacted statutes forbidding the writing of assessment insurance except by fraternal beneficiary associations and by companies or associations previously authorized to write such insurance (as was the Bankers Life Association) and authorizing such latter companies or associations, by proceeding as therein provided, to transform themselves into “legal reserve or level premium” companies and thereafter to transact business as such legal reserve or level premium companies. As construed by the Supreme Court of Iowa in Wall et al. v. Bankers Life Company, 208 Iowa, 1053; 223 N. W. 257, those statutes authorized such companies or associations when they so transformed themselves into legal reserve or level premium companies to cease writing assessment insurance. They were required, however, to carry out existing contracts: Acting under that statutory authority and in accordance therewith the Bankers Life Association, in October, 1911, did transform itself into a legal reserve or level premium mutual life insurance company and changed its corporate name to Bankers Life Company. It thereupon ceased writing assessment insurance and thereafter issued only level premium or “old line” policies. When it made the change all certificate holders were notified thereof and given opportunity, even solicited, to exchange their certificates in the old assessment association for insurance on the level premium plan and many did so. Others, including plaintiff, declined because, especially for the older members, the rates under the level premium plan were higher than their assessments had amounted to up to that time under the assessment plan. By reason of such transfers and the fact that no new members were coming into that class the number of assessment members naturally dwindled. After the change of October, 1911, in the kind of insurance written the reserve or emergency fund was gradually and increasingly drawn upon to meet death losses in excess of one per cent per annum among the assessment members until by the early part of 1927 that fund was exhausted. It then became necessary to make a sharp increase in mortuary assessments in order to pay death losses among the assessment members. Until the Wall case was decided in January, 1929, the company had been crediting to the emergency fund for the benefit of assessment members a portion of the money paid in as premiums by level premium policyholders, a practice held illegal in the Wall case and, as we understand the record, thereafter discontinued. The level premium policyholders were, however, never assessed for mortuary losses occurring among the assessment members
In his petition plaintiff pleads the incorporation of the Bankers Life Association and its authority to do business as “a life insurance company on the assessment plan;” the issuance of his certificate; the by-laws establishing the four funds above mentioned and that the articles of incorporation and by-laws of the association formed part of his contract; the payment by him of all dues and assessments to and including 182 and the amounts thereof; that in October, 1911, defendant changed its name to the Bankers Life Company and ceased writing insurance on the assessment plan and thereafter wrote insurance on the level rate plan only; that as soon as he learned that defendant had so ceased to write assessment insurance and would write only level rate premium insurance he realized that if persons then holding assessment insurance certificates were to be placed or left in a class by themselves for assessment purposes it would destroy the value of their insurance because of the necessarily resulting increase in assessments to meet death losses and that, desiring to know whether or not persons thereafter insuring would be assessed or their premium used to help pay death losses among the “persons who were already members” (the assessment members), he wrote the company to learn his status and to learn whether the assessment members were to be put in a class by themselves for assessment purposes; that in response to such inquiry he received a letter from defendant, dated December 8, 1911, informing him that contracts previously made would be carried out according to their terms and that the then present members would not be put in a class by themselves for assessment purposes. The petition then alleges that said letter “construed said certificate and said contract of insurance to mean and did mean that death losses would be apportioned throughout the entire membership of those who held certificates on the assessment plan and those who became members and who would hold certificates under the level rate plan,” and to mean also that the emergency fund could
The petition then pleads that until assessment 176 was levied in March, 1927, plaintiff did not know that any assessments had been made otherwise than upon the entire membership, including holders of level premium policies; that the death rate had never been one per cent of such entire membership in any one year, wherefore no part of the emergency fund could properly have been used to pay death losses; that he paid assessments 176 to 182 inclusive, aggregating $169.05, under protest; that he refused to pay assessment 183, due in January, 1929, because of which refusal defendant had declared his membership and certificate forfeited. The petition then states the claimed breach of contract and the grounds on which plaintiff seeks recovery thus:
“The plaintiff states that all the assessments from 176 to 183 were grossly excessive and void because they were based on the death rate of the assessment (members) and were made in violation of the contractual rights between the plaintiff and defendant under the certificate of insurance.
“The plaintiff states that the defendant company breached and violated its contract with the plaintiff in this:
“That it placed all of the assessment members and persons who held certificates or contracts under the assessment plan in a class by themselves for assessment purposes and did not apportion the death losses throughout the entire body of the persons insured in the defendant company whether they were insured on the assessment plan or basis or legal reserve plan or basis, but levied the assessments only on those members of the company carrying insurance on the assessment plan in violation of its contract of insurance and said certificate and agreement with plaintiff.
“That the defendant did not proportion the total death losses throughout the entire membership of the members holding certificates on the assessment plan and members holding certificates under the level rate plan.
“The plaintiff states that on account of the breaches of said con-
tract of insurance as contained in said certificate as hereinbefore alleged and on account of misrepresentations in inducing the plaintiff to pay the assessments since 1911 and in placing the assessment members of the company in a class to themselves for assessment purposes the defendant company is indebted to plaintiff for all sums of money that he has paid to the defendant since the issuance of his certificate which in the aggregate amounts to Fifteen Hundred Dollars.”
Defendant‘s answer need not be epitomized. It sufficiently meets the issues presented by the petition. It pleads at some length among other things the history of defendant and its transformation from an assessment association to a legal reserve level premium mutual insurance company and the Iowa statutes and decisions authorizing such transformation; and further pleads the judgment of the District Court of Polk County, Iowa, and the decision of the Iowa Supreme Court affirming it in Wall et al. v. Bankers Life Company, supra, as res adjudicata of the matters relied upon by plaintiff and that under the full faith and credit provision of the Federal Constitution, such judgment and decision must be given the same force and effect by the courts of this State as they have in Iowa.
As we view this case there are, under the pleadings, but two legal questions presented: First, was assessment No. 183; which plaintiff refused to pay and because of which refusal his insurance lapsed, excessive and illegal for the reason asserted in his petition; if not, then, second, was defendant nevertheless estopped from demanding it and treating the insurance as forfeited for plaintiff‘s refusal to pay it because of the letter written to plaintiff December 8, 1911.
On the first question it is apparent from plaintiff‘s petition that he therein challenges assessment 183 as excessive and illegal on only one ground, viz., that it was not levied proportionately upon what he terms the entire membership of the company, including holders of level premium policies, but only upon those holding certificates, such as his, issued for insurance on the assessment plan. For that reason alone he asserts the assessment was excessive and void. Plaintiff having thus defined and limited his complaint on this point we shall confine our consideration of the question to the ground so relied upon.
The case of Wall et al. v. Bankers Life Company, supra, urged by appellant as decisive of this question, was a suit in equity. It was instituted in the District Court of Polk County, Iowa, a court of general jurisdiction, about March, 1927, by Joseph Wall and a number of others, suing on behalf of themselves and “all other persons similarly situated willing to join herein and help bear the expense thereof,” against this defendant, the Bankers Life Company. Soon after suit was filed the petition therein was amended by striking out the words “willing to join herein and help bear the expense thereof,” thus leaving it declaring that plaintiffs sued for themselves and “all
The record herein shows that assessment 183 was made in the same manner and upon the same basis as assessments 176 and 177 assailed in the Wall case. Plaintiff in his petition asserts that assessments 176 and 177 and all others up to and including 183 were excessive and illegal for the same reason, viz., because they were “based upon the death rate of the assessment members alone.” If assessments 176 and 177 were valid as against that objection, necessarily so also is assessment 183. Respondent insists that the determination of that question in the Wall case, if it was there determined contrary to his contention herein, should not be given effect against him because: He was not a party to that suit and did not appear therein; it was a different form of action, being an action in equity while his case is one at law for breach of contract; and it did not involve assessment 183 here in question but assessments 176 and 177 which he paid and which therefore are not now in issue. We think those contentions are determined adversely to respondent in Hartford Life Ins. Co. v. Ibs, 237 U. S. 662.
The Ibs case originated in Minnesota. It was a suit at law brought by the beneficiary, widow of the insured, to recover the amount claimed to be due on an assessment insurance certificate or policy upon the death of the insured certificate holder, against the Hartford Life Insurance Company, a Connecticut corporation, which had issued the certificate. The company defended on the ground that the policy had been forfeited by the failure of the insured to pay a certain assessment levied to meet 145 claims which had matured during the preceding quarter, to which the plaintiff replied that most of the claims had been paid during the quarter and that at the end thereof there was sufficient money in the mortuary fund to pay the remaining claims, for which reason the assessment in question was unnecessary and void. In answer to that contention the company asserted that the fund was maintained as a source from which to make prompt
In Hartford Life Ins. Co. v. Ibs, supra, the United States Supreme Court held that in refusing to admit and give effect to the Connecticut court‘s decree in the Dresser case the Minnesota court had failed to obey the mandate of the Constitution requiring full faith and credit to be given the judicial proceedings of a sister state and for that error reversed the judgment. The court discussed at length the contention that the plaintiff below, Mrs. Ibs, had not been a party to the Connecticut proceedings nor had her husband, the insured. It pointed out reasons why members of a large and widely scattered class of persons having a common interest in the mortuary fund should be permitted to represent the class in an action involving a right common to all; that “it was for the court of the State where the company was chartered and where the fund was maintained to say what was the character of the members’ interest;” that it was impossible for
Answering the contention made in the Ibs case that the Connecticut decree determining the status and use to be made of the mortuary fund could not be offered in evidence in a suit on the policy of insurance because the action and the thing adjudged in the two cases were different, the court said, 237 U. S. l. c. 673:
“But the defendant‘s contention that the policy had lapsed, because of the failure of Ibs to pay the assessment, and the plaintiff‘s reply that the assessment was void because the Mortuary Fund was sufficient to meet Call 127, raised an issue as to the right of the Insurance Company to levy the assessment. On that issue the Connecticut decree was admissible, since it adjudged that the Company had the right to make advances to pay claims and could subsequently collect the amount of such claims by an assessment levied as in the present case. Its right so to do having been determined by a court of competent jurisdiction, the decree was binding between the parties or their privies in any subsequent case in which the same right was directly or collaterally involved. For ‘even if the second suit is for a different cause of action, the right, question, or fact once so determined must, as between the same parties or their privies, be taken as conclusively established, so long as the judgment in the first suit remains unmodified.’ [Southern Pacific Co. v. United States, 168 U. S. 48-49.] So also it was held in Forsyth v. Hammond (166 U. S. 518), that ‘though the form and causes of action be different, a decision by a court of competent jurisdiction in respect to any essential fact or question in the one action is conclusive between the parties in all subsequent actions.‘”
Barber v. Hartford Life Ins. Co., supra, was an action at law on an assessment insurance certificate or policy similar to that in the Ibs case. The suit was brought by the beneficiary after the death of the certificate holder. The company defended, as in the Ibs case, on
“A judgment rendered by a court of the State of incorporation holding an amendment to the constitution and by-laws of a fraternal and beneficiary corporation to be legal, amounted to a construction of the charter by the courts of the State which the courts of another State were bound to recognize under the full faith and credit clause of the Federal Constitution.”
The Royal Arcanum was a Massachusetts corporation. It issued certain benefit certificates payable out of a fund provided by assessments upon the members. Green had received such a certificate, issued by a subordinate lodge in New York where he resided. The corporation had amended its by-laws and raised the assessment rates. Some sixteen members of the association, holding certificates similar to Green‘s, had sued the corporation in Massachusetts in their own behalf and in behalf of all other certificate holders to vacate and set aside the by-laws by which the rates had been increased on the ground that the increase was ultra vires of the corporation and violative of contract rights. The Massachusetts court, upon review of the nature of the corporation, the character of the fund, the rights of the members as evidenced by the certificates, the constitution and by-laws of the corporation and the laws of the state applicable thereto, decided that the increase complained of was valid, impaired no contract right of the certificate holder and was entitled to be enforced: [Reynolds v. Supreme Council, Royal Arcanum, 192 Mass. 150.] Later Green, who evidently had not been a party to the Massachusetts suit, sued in a New York court assailing the validity of the increase in assessments on the ground that it was void as exceeding the powers of the corporation and conflicting with his rights as a member of the corporation and a certificate holder. He ultimately prevailed in the
In view of the decisions of the United States Supreme Court referred to above, the conclusion appears to us inescapable that the decision in the Wall case, to which we are bound to give effect under the full faith and credit clause of the Federal Constitution, determines adversely to respondent his contention that the assessment he refused to pay was illegal or violative of his contract rights because levied upon the assessment members alone.
If the question were not thus concluded we think the same result would have to be declared. We do not understand respondent to deny the validity of the Iowa statutes pursuant to which defendant transformed itself from an assessment company into a level premium company or the validity of the proceedings by which the change was effected, or that, after the change, the defendant had the right to issue level premium policies and cease writing assessment insurance. In any event those questions were all fully considered and decided in the Wall case. It was there held that said statutes were constitutional and valid, that the reorganization had been legally accomplished, that the company had the right thereafter to cease writing assessment insurance and to issue level premium policies, and that such change in its organization and business did not violate any contract rights of assessment members. The holders of level premium policies are entitled to have their contracts carried out as made. Under those contracts the holders pay certain fixed premiums in consideration for which they are to receive the benefits provided in the policies. Those contracts and the law governing them do not provide that other or further payments may be demanded of the holders or that part of the consideration such holders pay for their insurance may be diverted by the company to the benefit of holders of assessment certificates. The level premium policies and the assessment certificates represent separate and distinct kinds of insurance. We think it clear that the company could not assess level premium policyholders or use money paid as premiums by them to pay death losses occurring among the assessment members without violating the obligation of its contracts with such level premium policyholders. But we shall not further extend the discussion of this point. We consider the question concluded by the decision in the Wall case. The point is ruled against respondent.
Of the question of estoppel.
Plaintiff contends that by the letter written to him December 8, 1911, defendant construed his contract to mean and in effect as-
“Your letter of Dec. 2nd, is at hand. The recent change in plan relates more especially to business to be written in the future rather than to the business now on the books. All contracts heretofore issued will be carried to maturity in accordance with their terms.
“The present members are not to be put in a class by themselves, but will remain part of a large and growing company and will share in the benefit derived from the admission of new business.
“Death losses occurring throughout the entire body of the lives insured will be equitably apportioned, so that each person, whether insured on the assessment or legal reserve basis, will bear his just share of the total death losses of the Company.
“The Bankers Life will have two classes of members, one carrying insurance on the assessment or natural premium plan, with the cost not fixed, and the other carrying insurance on the legal reserve basis with fixed premium. This will in no way prevent the equitable apportioning of the total death losses throughout the entire membership of the two classes combined.”
Except as it may be construed as an expression of opinion as to the legal effect of the reorganization upon the previously existing assessment contracts the letter consists mainly, if not entirely, of statements in the nature of promises or predictions for the future rather than statements of existing or past facts. In its statements relative to assessments it is rather vague. It promises that death losses throughout the entire body will be “equitably apportioned,” so that each person will bear “his just share” of the total losses, but without specifying what is meant by equitable apportionment and a just share of the total losses. The company attempted to and did, at least until the decision of the Wall case, make what its evidence indicates it considered an equitable apportionment by crediting to the emergency fund a portion of the money properly belonging to the level premium policyholders but, as above stated, the sums so used did not amount to assessments such as were levied upon the assessment members and were not levied as assessments. But treating the letter as calculated to be and being understood by plaintiff as a statement that level premium policyholders would be assessed or would pay proportionately with assessment members to meet death
“The doctrine of estoppel by representation is ordinarily applicable only to representations as to facts either past or present, and not to promises concerning the future which, if binding at all, must be binding as contracts.”
Section 145 states the exception to the rule to be where the statement “relates to an intended abandonment of an existing right, and is made to influence others who have in fact been influenced by it.” [See, also, 2 Herman on Estoppel, sec. 778.] The exception does not apply here. To refrain from assessing the level premium policyholders was not merely a right which the company could abandon. The obligation of the level premium contracts forbade such assessment.
In 21 Corpus Juris, page 1147, we read:
“While there is some authority to the contrary, it is very generally held that an admission, in order to constitute an estoppel, must relate to a matter of fact, and a person will not be estopped by an admission as to the law.”
The principles quoted above were applied in Thomas v. Modern Woodmen of America, 218 Mo. App. 10, 260 S. W. 552, in which a representative of the defendant had told the plaintiff that it would be all right for him to engage in a certain prohibited occupation and that if he did so and was not expelled from the order and was killed while so engaged the benefit certificate would be paid. The representation was held insufficient to show estoppel against the defendant. The certificate holder knew that by the terms of his certificate the defendant association was exempt from liability for death occurring as a result of engaging in such prohibited occupation. On certiorari this court refused to quash the opinion of the Court of Appeals, holding that it did not conflict with prior decisions of this court. [State ex rel. Thomas v. Trimble, 303 Mo. 266, 259 S. W. 1052.] In the latter case this court said; 303 Mo. l. c. 283:
“We certainly have never held that a statement made by a general agent of an insurance company, to one of its policyholders, expressing an opinion as to the legal effect of the provisions of the latter‘s policy, was, absent fraud, binding on the company, either as an admission or on the ground of estoppel.”
Respondent, however, does not seem to treat the statements contained in the letter as merely representations of what the company expected to do in the future or as merely an expression of opinion as to the meaning and effect of his original contract, but rather to ascribe to said statements, when taken in connection with his accept-
“In determining the obligation of a private corporation for acts commonly termed ultra vires, an important distinction, noted in every well reasoned case, is sometimes overlooked. No corporation can bind itself or its stockholders by a contract expressly prohibited by its charter, by a statute, or by the general law. Such contracts are strictly ultra vires and create no obligation as far as they are executory, although the consideration therefor may have been received and enjoyed by the corporation. On the other hand, an act or contract merely in excess of the power granted to corporations, but which is not expressly forbidden either by its charter or the general law of the State, although lacking affirmative authority for its performance on account of the silence, on that subject, of its charter or the general law, may yet, if the contract has been executed by the other party and its consideration received by the corporation, bind the latter on the principle of estoppel so that it could not be annulled by the corporation without a return of the consideration received by it. Contracts of this kind are not in the strict sense of the term ultra vires. They are only unauthorized acts of corporations, and not being void, but only voidable, the option to avoid them is lost if they have been wholly executed or executed by the adverse party. [Thompson Con., sec. 6016 et seq.] The reason a contract strictly ultra vires as above defined, can never be enforced while anything remains to be done thereunder, is that a corporation deriving all its power to act from its constraining articles and the general law can make no lawful contract in violation of the positive edicts of either. On the other hand, the estoppel of a corporation to annul an executed agreement or one whose consideration it has received (which though unauthorized, is
not prohibited by law or its charter), is grounded on the idea of preventing fraud by the corporation on the party whom it had misled into the performance of the agreement. A careful view of the controlling decisions will fully sustain this distinction between the enforcible and the nonenforcible acts of private corporations.”
Manifestly there is no contract requiring the level premium policyholders to pay an assessment or any part of the death losses for those holding assessment certificates under the old plan. There is no evidence suggesting that any of them have agreed or consented to be thus assessed or to contribute to such death losses. The company is bound by its charter and the law to carry out the level premium contracts. As said in the Wall case, discussing this question: “There is the prohibition against the impairment of the obligation created by the agreement giving rise to the level premium or legal reserve policy, the same as that protecting any other contractual undertaking. This is self-evident.” The agreement or undertaking, call it what you will, which plaintiff contends the defendant assumed by said letter and his acceptance was one not merely in excess of its charter powers but prohibited by its amended charter and the law, because it could not carry out that undertaking without violating the obligation of its contracts with the level premium policyholders.
This subject received full consideration in the Wall case, in which the petitioners and interveners urged a similar contention based on a circular letter written by the company October 28, 1911, to all certificate holders, including respondent. That letter contained representations similar to those in the letter of December 8, 1911, to respondent here. The question of estoppel was ruled against the petitioners and interveners in the Wall case. Without considering whether or not that part of the Wall decision is binding upon us, we regard it as persuasive because we think it is based on sound reason. In our opinion, upon the record presented, this point also must be ruled against respondent. We think this conclusion finds support in State ex rel. Thomas v. Trimble, supra. [See, also, Delaney v. Grand Lodge A. O. U. W. (Mass.), 138 N. E. 918; Illinois Life Ins. Co. v. Tully (C. C. A.), 174 Fed. 355, 365.]
Respondent filed herein a motion to dismiss the appeal on the ground that appellant‘s abstract of the record contained so much matter unnecessary to a proper understanding of the issues as to constitute a violation of our rules. The abstract is voluminous. So was the record below. While the abstract might well enough have been somewhat abbreviated we do not think it violates our rules to such extent as to justify dismissal of the appeal. We have in effect overruled the motion to dismiss by considering the case on the merits. Let it be formally overruled.
PER CURIAM:—The foregoing opinion by COOLEY, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All the judges concur, except Ellison, P. J., absent.
