Cameron v. Mutual Life & Trust Co.
This text of 96 N.W. 961 (Cameron v. Mutual Life & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
From the allegations of plaintiff’s petition it appears that the defendant is a life insurance company, with its principal place of business in the city of Des Moines, and that in October, 1900, the plaintiff, who was then, and now is, a resident of Linn county, had negotiations in that county with one W. W. Ames, acting as agent of the defendant company, with reference to transfer by plaintiff to the defendant company of certain shares of stock in a company known as the Home Sayings & Trust Company, in consideration for the issuance by the defendant company of a policy of insurance on the life of plaintiff, which policy, after its issue, was to be sold by-said Ames as agent of the defendant company, and the proceeds thereof accounted for to plaintiff. It is further alleged that the agreed value of the shares of stock thus to be transferred to the defendant company in consideration for the policy of insurance, and to be realized by the defendant company out of , said policy and paid over to plaintiff was $184.80, which was to be realized and paid over within sixty days from the date of the contract. In the first count of the petition' the statement of these facts is coupled with allegations of false and fraudulent representations as to the ability of the defendant company to dispose of the policy on plaintiff’s life and realize the agreed amount therefrom, and it is alleged that no policy was ever issued by or delivered to the plaintiff, and that he has been damaged to the extent of [479]*479the agreed price of the stock transferred. In the second •count of the petition it is alleged that defendant has wholly failed to perform its part of the contract, and damages are claimed in the same amount.
Counsel for appellant argues that this section relates -only to actions for loss under policies of insurance. But it is to be noticed that the section contains no such restriction. Such a company may be sued in' any county “in which the contract of insurance was made,” and it would •seem clear that, in the absence of any language in the statute indicating a contrary intent, any action for breach of a contract relating to insurance may be brought in the •county in which the contract was made. It may be that [480]*480actions having no reference to a contract of insurance — ■ such as an action for libel, or in connection with the loan* ing of money, or the like — would not come within the pro* visions of this section. But the plaintiff, in his petition, states an indivisible contract, involving the taking out of a policy of insurance on the plaintiff’s life, and a sale thereof by the defendant company, on the one hand, and the payment,to the defendant company of certain shares of stock on the other. This was certainly a contract of with reference to which plaintiff now seeks to maintain an action. We see no reason for giving to the section-such a limited construction that a right of action growing • out of the contract of insurance cannot be made the basis of a cause of action in a suit brought in the county where the contract was made. The first count of iilaintiff’s petition practically sets out a cause of action to recover damages for false and fraudulent representations made in the contract of insurance. Certainly, if a fraudulent con* tract of insurance be made, an action for damages result* ing from the fraud may well be prosecuted, under the language of the statute, in the county where the contract is entered'into. Appellant’s assignment in this respect is, in our judgment, not well taken.
Without further elaboration, we are satisfied to say that the verdict was supported by the evidence, and that, as no error appears in the record, the judgment of the lower court is affirmed.
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96 N.W. 961, 121 Iowa 477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cameron-v-mutual-life-trust-co-iowa-1903.