Crowell v. Northwestern National Life Insurance

108 N.W. 962, 99 Minn. 214, 1906 Minn. LEXIS 404
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedSeptember 7, 1906
DocketNos. 14,714—(105)
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 108 N.W. 962 (Crowell v. Northwestern National Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota 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, 108 N.W. 962, 99 Minn. 214, 1906 Minn. LEXIS 404 (Mich. 1906).

Opinion

ELLIOTT, J.

Appeal from an order overruling a general demurrer to each of two causes of action stated in the complaint. The pleading, with the exhibits which are made a part thereof, is quite long; but a brief summary will enable us to understand the issues presented by the demurrer:

For a first cause of action it is alleged: That on or about February 14, 1901, the respondents, as copartners, entered into a written agreement with the Northwestern Fife & Savings Company, an Iowa corporation, hereinafter called the “Iowa Company,” under which they became its general agents in certain territory in the state of Minnesota, for the purpose of carrying on the business of said company in respect to the solicitation and procuring of contracts of life insurance. This contract secured to the respondents, as commission, a percentage of the first annual premium or part thereof when paid to the company in cash on each and every policy procured through their agency. On August 23, 1901, a new contract was made between the parties, which embodied the terms of the original contract, and in addition contained a stipulation by which the company agreed to pay the respondents a commission during the continuance of the agency, based upon a percentage of each and every renewal premium paid the company on certain designated policies, and a further stipulation extending the exclusive territory of respondents so as to cover and embrace the entire states of Minnesota and North Dakota. On the execution of the original .contract, the respondents forthwith entered upon the performance of their duties thereunder, and continued under the original and subsequent contracts to act as the general agents of the Iowa Company until the unlawful termination of said employment by the Iowa Company on August 23, 1903. On the last-mentioned date, while the contracts were in full force and effect, and respondents were engaged in the performance of their duties thereunder, the Iowa Company wholly ceased and abandoned [216]*216.the, transaction of its corporate business, and sold and transferred all of its corporate properties, assets, and business to appellant herein, the Northwestern National Life Insurance Company, a Minnesota corporation. That by the terms of the agreement between the said Iowa and Minnesota corporations the Iowa Company agreed to cease the further conduct of its .corporate business’ and the further writing or issuance of policies of insurance of any class or character whatever. That in and by the terms of the agreement between the two insurance companies the Minnesota Company, the appellant herein, agreed to assume, and did assume, the payment of all valid, legal outstanding contractual liabilities of the Iowa Company. That the said contract between the two companies was carried out and consummated, and the assignment and transfer alleged duly accepted by the defendant, and from and since the date of said transfer, the said Iowa Company has conducted no business whatsoever. That at the time of the transfer and assignment last hereinbefore alleged, the agreements hereinbefore stated between the plaintiffs and the said Northwestern Life & Savings Company were in full force and effect. That these plaintiffs had fully complied with, and performed, all and several the terms and conditions of said agreements and each of them. That by, and as a result of, the transfer and assignment hereinbefore alleged, and the cessation of business by the said Northwestern Ifife & Savings Company the plaintiffs were prevented from proceeding with the carrying on of the business of the said agency, or with the performance of the terms of the contracts in that behalf provided, and the business of said agency was by, and as a result thereof, and without any fault on the part of these plaintiffs, wholly destroyed. That during the term of their employment, the respondents, in reliance on the terms of their agreement, had expended upwards of $10,000 in building up and extending their agency, and in placing solicitors in the field for the purpose of enlarging the business of the agency, and, as a result thereof, had at the time of the unlawful termination of their employment, built up and established in the states of Minnesota and North Dakota a large and profitable business, and had secured for the Iowa Company a large amount of insurance. At the time of the. termination of their employment as aforesaid a large number of policy contracts were outstanding, procured by respondents’ solicitation, [217]*217for which the company had received and accepted from the várious policy holders premium notes to the amount of $91,828.14, all of which were transferred to appellant as part of the assets of the Iowa Company, and none of which had matured at the date of that transfer. That all of these notes were given and received, for first-year premiums on said policies, and respondents were entitled to receive as their commissions thereon under the terms of said contracts, the sum of $64,279.70. That all of said notes were invalidated and the -policy contracts in consideration of which they were executed, rescinded by, and as a result of, such transfer. That as a result of the cessation and abandonment of its business by the Iowa Company the respondents were prevented from proceeding with the business of their agency; that the business of the agency was in consequence wholly destroyed, and respondents were wholly deprived of their commissions on original and renewal premiums during the life of the policies procured for the company through their agency to their damage in the sum of $80,000.

For a second cause of action it is alleged: That on March 1, 1902, a third contract was entered into between the plaintiffs and the Iowa Company by the terms of which respondents’ agency was employed to solicit applications for a so-called “weekly investment contract” within the state of Minnesota, and that under said contract the plaintiffs were to receive as compensation a commission of seventy per cent, on each and every first annual premium or part thereof when paid the company in cash. That on or about March 1, 1903, the company, through the instrumentality of plaintiffs, made a contract with the firm of Armstrong & Mohr under which the latter assumed the agency of the Iowa Company in connection with the development of its “weekly instalment contract” business, and in consideration, among other things, of the services of the respondents in procuring this contract, the Iowa Company agreed to pay plaintiffs as commissions on any and all business secured on the solicitation of said Armstrong & Mohr a commission of ten per cent, on each and every weekly instalment paid on each and all of said contracts beginning with the nineteenth week, and continuing for thirty three weeks on all first-year premiums and said premiums should be actually paid to the Iowa Company in cash. That immediately upon entering into the contract [218]*218of March 1, 1902, the plaintiffs entered actively upon the work of soliciting for the weekly investment contracts, and secured a large number thereof, in response to which the Iowa Company executed and delivered its “investment contracts.” That, as a result thereof, and of the contracts subsequently issued by the Iowa Company through the applications procured by the firm of Armstrong & Mohr, plaintiffs were entitled to receive as commissions in accordance with the terms of the several agreements, the sum of $5,000, no part of which has ever been paid. The allegations contained in the first cause of action are incorporated and made a part of the second cause of action.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
108 N.W. 962, 99 Minn. 214, 1906 Minn. LEXIS 404, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crowell-v-northwestern-national-life-insurance-minn-1906.