Crowell v. Northwestern National Life Insurance

118 N.W. 412, 140 Iowa 258
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 21, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 118 N.W. 412 (Crowell v. Northwestern National Life Insurance) 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.

Bluebook
Crowell v. Northwestern National Life Insurance, 118 N.W. 412, 140 Iowa 258 (iowa 1908).

Opinion

Evans, J.

— On or about May 1, 1902, Emmett J. Crowell took out a life insurance policy for $10,000 in the Northwestern Life & Savings Company of Des Moines. In August, 1903, the Northwestern Life & Savings Com[260]*260pany transferred all its business to tbe Northwestern National Life Insurance Company of Minneapolis, which latter company undertook to reinsure and assume and guarantee all the insurance contracts of the first-named company. After that date all premiums were paid by the insured to the Minneapolis company, and all business in relation to such policy was transacted with such company. The insured paid the successive annual premiums on the policy for three years, amounting to about $235 per year. Nor the fourth year he borrowed the annual premium from the Minneapolis Company, that is to say, he gave his note for the premium, in pursuance of certain provisions in the policy itself. In 1906 the fifth annual premium was about to become due, and the insured was financially unable to meet the same. Bertha Crowell, the wife of the insured and plaintiff herein, was the beneficiary named in the policy. The defendant C. C. Crowell was the father of the insured. Upon separate consultations between the father and the wife, and between the father and the insured, and between the insured and his wife, it was determined that the father would advance the premium then falling due, and would pay the premium note for the preceding year, and that the policy should be transferred to him by proper assignment and by substituting his name as beneficiary therein. Later in July, 1906, a. formal written assignment of the policy, signed by the insured and by the plaintiff, and a formal written application for change of beneficiary, signed in the same manner, were presented to the company at its home office. The assignment and application for change were both approved by the company and so entered upon its books. On September 6, 1906, the insured died.

It is contended by the plaintiff that the written assignment and application were not in the form agreed upon orally between the parties, and that she never signed these writings in the form in which they were presented [261]*261to the company. Her contention is, in substance, that she obtained at the home office of the insurance company two blank forms, both of which she signed in blank, and sent the same by mail to her husband, with instructions to him to fill them out properly and execute them himself, and return the same to her for delivery to the company. The husband did fill out the blanks, and made certain changes therein over the plaintiff’s signature, and executed the same himself, in the formal manner required, and sent the same by mail to the company’s office at Minneapolis. All of which was done without wrongful intent. The plaintiff contends that she never saw the writings in the form in which they were sent to the company, and never assented thereto, and that the agreement therefore between her husband and herself, on the one hand, and her father-in-law, on the other, still rested in parol. She claims such parol agreement to be that the father-in-law was to advance the two premiums before referred to, and that the policy was to he transferred to him, and he was to be made the beneficiary thereof for the purpose of securing his advancements with interest thereon, and for nothing more. The trial court found this issue of fact.with the plaintiff. This fact is of controlling importance in the case, and we direct our attention first as to the correctness of the court’s finding thereon.

I Evidence: tion”withaa decedent. I. We are first confronted with the question of the admissibility of the testimony of the plaintiff as to the conversation between herself and the insured on the sub- • ject tbe transfer to his father. Objections were urged on the trial by the defendarLt to this testimony as incompetent, as being a personal transaction or communication with the deceased. The objection is renewed in this court, and the further objection that the testimony was inadmissible as being a communication between husband and wife and prohibited under section 4607'of the Code. The latter ob[262]*262jeetion was not urged" in the lower court, and can not be considered here. The first objection urged is not available to the defendant. As a substituted beneficiary in an insurance policy, he does not come within any of the classes sought to be protected by the provisions of section 4604 of the Code. This point was ruled in Shuman v. Supreme Lodge, 110 Iowa, 480. His right, as an assignee of the policy, to recover the amount advanced by him in payment of premiums with interest thereon, is not questioned by the plaintiff. His rights in that respect are fully protected by the decree. We hold therefore that the plaintiff’s evidence at this point is admissible..

II. We have read the evidence with much care, and are satisfied with the finding of fact by the district court as to the agreement between the parties. Without any reasonable doubt, the oral understanding was that the father-in-law was to advance the two premiums, and was to be secured for such advancement by an assignment of the policy and by having himself substituted as beneficiary therein, and that' this arrangement was to be temporary and to be determined as soon as the father-in-law should be paid the amount advanced by him. Ordinarily this fact would seem to be quite conclusive of the rights of the parties, but we are confronted here with an ■ argument that raises a number of interesting and close questions of "law, and in which counsel contend that, notwithstanding the fact referred to, the right of the defendant C. O. Crowell to the full amount of the .policy is absolute. The argument of -defendant’s counsel, in brief, is:That the insurance policy sued on was an Iowa contract, and the contract of reinsurance between the first company and the second was also an Iowa contract; that by the terms of the policy itself, and by the permission of the law of Iowa, the insured had the absolute right to change the beneficiary in his policy without her consent; and that it was therefore immaterial whether she [263]*263consented or not to the written instruments executed by her husband in pursuance of which the assignment of' the policy and the change of beneficiary were made and were approved by the insurance company. The argument of plaintiff is: That the defendant insurance company is ‘a Minnesota corporation, with its home office in that State, and bound by the laws of that State; that the insured by his own voluntary acts became a member of the company and became bound by its by-laws and the laws of the State of Minnesota; that under such bylaws and the laws of the State of Minnesota the proposed change of beneficiary from the wife to the father could not be made without the wi’itten consent of the wife; and that the insured recognized the rights of the wife in this respect, and it was on that theory that he undertook to change the beneficiary. To this argument the defendant replies by quoting Section 1692 of the Revised Laws of Minnesota which have been in force since 1905, as follows: “Sec. 1692,. Exemption in Favor of Family — Change of Beneficiary.

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Bluebook (online)
118 N.W. 412, 140 Iowa 258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crowell-v-northwestern-national-life-insurance-iowa-1908.