171 Iowa 429 | Iowa | 1915
— The force and effect of the rulings of which appellants complain will be more readily understood if we preface their discussion with the statement of certain facts alleged in the pleadings and conceded in the argument. In the year 1886, Johnson H. Needles became a member of the defendant life insurance association, receiving a certificate of membership by the terms of which, in the event of his death while still in good standing in the association, certain benefits were to be paid» to his beneficiaries. In the year 1903, the association, for reasons not necessary now to discuss, adopted the plan of taking up the outstanding certificates of membership and issuing others in lieu thereof, so far at least as the
We cannot properly prolong this opinion to recapitulate the allegations of the several pleadings, amendments and substitutes. They are exceedingly prolix and their more particular rehearsal at this time would be of no material aid to an understanding of the merits of the appeal. It is enough to say that we have with care compared the allegations of the last substituted petition with the pleadings which it was intended to supersede and find no material difference between them. So far at least as concerns the question whether there is any sufficient allegation of fraud on the part of the defendant and whether right of action thereon is not barred by the statute of limitations, the pleading stricken contains no new or additional statement of material facts of any kind. For this reason, if for no other, the ruling is correct.
The striking of the last pleading left the ease standing as if such pleading had never been filed. Bank v. Colton, 143 Iowa 359. In other words, the case then stood with demurrer to the original petition sustained, demurrer to amended petition sustained, and the first amendment and substituted petition stricken from the files, with no exceptions preserved to any of these rulings. It is obvious that upon such record, an appeal cannot be sustained.
Even constructive.notice by public record has often been held sufficient to set the statute in motion. How much stronger, then, the reason for the rule that one is presumed to have knowledge of the contents of a written contract into which he has entered and which he has held in his personal possession and control for a long series of years without objection or complaint! This is certainly true in the absence of any charge or showing that his failure to know the terms of the contract in his hands has been brought about or induced by the fraudulent act or device of another. There is no allegation in the petition or in the substitute of any fact which
We neéd not go into the other question discussed by counsel, — whether, even in the absence of such bar, the plaintiffs have charged facts constituting an actionable fraud, of which, to say the least,, there is room for very grave doubt. For reasons already stated, the appeal cannot be sustained and the ruling and judgment appealed from are — Affirmed.