Crozier v. Lenox Mutual Insurance Association

110 N.W.2d 403, 252 Iowa 1176, 1961 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 577
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedAugust 15, 1961
Docket50276
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 110 N.W.2d 403 (Crozier v. Lenox Mutual Insurance Association) 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
Crozier v. Lenox Mutual Insurance Association, 110 N.W.2d 403, 252 Iowa 1176, 1961 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 577 (iowa 1961).

Opinion

Snell, J.

Plaintiff, a farmer and landowner, seeks to- recover against defendant, insurance company, under a windstorm insurance policy. Defendant, insurance company, issued to plaintiff a policy of insurance covering the buildings located on his farm, insuring plaintiff against loss by fire and windstorm. Plaintiff secured from defendant a “change in coverage endorsement” increasing the insurance on his barn from $6000 to $9500 -and an endorsement providing insurance on the. barn while under reconstruction. Defendant, insurance company, reinsured its windstorm risk with Farmers Mutual Reinsurance Company of Grinnell, Iowa, pursuant to a customary reinsurance practice between defendant and the reinsurance company.

Plaintiff’s bam was a pole barn 50 feet wide, north and south, and 60 feet long, east and west, with a lean-to on the north side and a lean-to on the east side.

Plaintiff -arranged with a. building contractor to raise the barn, replace such parts of -the supporting poles and siding as were deteriorated, and put in a new foundation and concrete floor. By use of j-acks-, some -interior cross bracing and vertically supporting timbers, the barn was raised several inches so that its entire weight was carried by the supporting jacks. Through appropriate -turns of the jacks the bam was brought to a straight and level position, determined through the use of a transit. The total weight of the barn, including the hay *1179 stored therein, was between 40 and 50 tons. While supported by the jacks, the decayed lower ends of the poles forming the framework of the barn were sawed off and a trench for the pouring of a new foundation was dug.

At about 7:30 on the morning of June 28, 1958, shortly after the workmen had arrived and were preparing to start work, the bam was blown or fell several feet to one side. A dispute as to the cause of the collapse has resulted in this litigation.

Plaintiff made claim against the insurance company for the insured value of the -bam. Defendant denied that the loss of the bam was due to windstorm or any other peril covered by its insurance policy.

Plaintiff offered testimony as to the methods used in raising the barn, the sufficiency thereof, and that the wind at the time of the loss was gusty with (estimated) varying intensities of from 20 to 50 miles an hour in gusts.

Defendant offered evidence of official weather reports from near-by weather observation stations, testimony of a meteorologist, testimony of plaintiff’s closest neighbors, pictures of other buildings of an unsubstantial construction showing no damage, and other evidence as to the weather at the time of the loss. All of defendant’s testimony indicated that there was no unusual wind at the time. The reports from weather reporting stations indicated that the wind speed at Cedar Rapids, Iowa City, Waterloo, Des Moines, Ottumwa and Moline, Illinois, varied from eight miles per hour to twenty-five and one-tenth miles per hour. Defendant also offered the testimony of a professor - of Agricultural Engineering at Iowa State College specializing in the field of agricultural buildings, their structure, strength, the effect of wind on the buildings, and building practices in building, remodeling and repairing farm buildings. The professor visited plaintiff’s farm and made an extensive investigation, took photographs and made calculations, and in response to a long hypothetical question propounded by defendant, gave as his opinion that the collapse of the bam was not due to windstorm but rather to the methods used in raising the barn.

*1180 The jury returned a verdict for the defendant. The factual issues as presented by the evidence and as- submitted by the court’s instructions have thus been answered by the jury. The jury has said that the loss was not the result of a windstorm as defined by the court’s instructions.

I. Prior to trial, plaintiff, by amendment, sought to bring in as a party defendant Farmers Mutual Reinsurance Company as the real party in interest. A motion -to dismiss as to the reinsurance company was sustained, and this ruling presents the first claimed error relied upon by plaintiff.

Plaintiff urges that under rule 2, Rules of Civil Procedure, every action must be prosecuted or defended by the real party in interest and that in this case Farmers Mutual Reinsurance Company, having reinsured the defendant-company to the extent of 100% of its risk, is the real party in interest and plaintiff has been prejudiced by the denial of his claimed right to name the reinsurance company as a party defendant.

The reinsurance contract was in evidence and the reinsurance arrangement between the two insurance companies was repeatedly brought out throughout all of the testimony and by the evidence. It was repeatedly brought out that the defendant, if found liable, would be reimbursed in full by the reinsurance company. In view of this record it is difficult to see how any prejudice to plaintiff with the jury could result from the failure to have the reinsurance. company named as a party defendant.

It is well settled in Iowa, as well as in most other jurisdictions, that no action can be maintained by the insured upon a mere reinsurance contract, for the reason that he is neither a party thereto nor in privity therewith. Globe National Fire Ins. Co. v. American B. & C. Co., 198 Iowa 1072, 195 N.W. 728, 200 N.W. 737, 35 A. L. R. 1341; Globe National Fire Ins. Co. v. American B. & C. Co., 205 Iowa 1085, 217 N.W. 268, 56 A. L. R. 463; 29A Am. Jur., Insurance, section 1757.

Plaintiff’s suit was based upon his insurance contract. He had no contract of any kind with the reinsurance company. There was no insolvency malting resort to the reinsurance *1181 necessary for plaintiff’s protection. He was not in privity with the contract between his insurance carrier and the reinsurance company. The ruling of the trial court was correct.

The factual situations disclosed by the cases relied upon by plaintiff are at variance with the case at bar and are not controlling.

The recent ease of Iowa Mutual Tornado Ins. Assn. v. Timmons, 252 Iowa 163, 105 N.W.2d 209, decided September 20, 1960, was an action in mandamus to require the Commissioner of Insurance to collect two per cent premium tax from Farmers Mutual Reinsurance Company, the same reinsurance company as here, based upon the allegation that the premiums collected by the company were for direct insurance and not within the exemption granted reinsurance premiums. The case was submitted on a motion to dismiss and was determined on the sufficiency of the pleadings and did not directly involve the question as to the reinsurance company being a necessary party to an action by 'an insured. This case states that when the reinsurer assumes direct liability to the original insured, there is a substitution of risks rather than reinsurance. The case of United States Fire Ins. Co. v. Smith, 231 Ala. 169, 164 So. 70, 103 A. L. R. 1468, is quoted with approval to the effect that the so-called reinsurer was not a reinsurer but was directly liable to the insured.

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Bluebook (online)
110 N.W.2d 403, 252 Iowa 1176, 1961 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 577, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crozier-v-lenox-mutual-insurance-association-iowa-1961.