Exchange Bank v. Illinois Life Insurance

187 Iowa 253
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 14, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 187 Iowa 253 (Exchange Bank v. Illinois 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
Exchange Bank v. Illinois Life Insurance, 187 Iowa 253 (iowa 1919).

Opinion

''Weaver, J.

Steckel & Son are partners, doing a banking business under the name “Exchange Bank of Bloomfield, Iowa,” and the defendant is a life insurance company, incorporated and having its principal place of business in Illinois.

Stated as briefly as practicable, the claim of the plain[255]*255tiff is that, in February, 1909, one Charles H. Fuller, who was carrying a policy of life insurance for $6,000 in the defendant company, being indebted to the Exchange Bank, secured payment of the same by pledge of said insurance as collateral; that thereafter, in August of the same year, Fuller being still indebted to 'the bank, and desiring fur-. ther credit and further advances to pay the accruing premiums on said policy and interest on a prior loan of $1,000 which had been made by the insurance company to him, the plaintiff, for the purpose of learning whether such credit could be safely extended to Fuller on the security afforded by said collateral, wrote the defendant, asking information as to the terms and conditions of the policy, and what indebtedness or charges thereon were held by the defendant; that, answering such inquiries, defendant wrote plaintiff, in substance and effect, that its claim or lien on said policy, in addition to current premium charges, was an indebtedness of $1,000, with interest at 6 per cent (said sum representing the loan above mentioned); that, relying upon such information, plaintiff did advance money to or for Fuller to a considerable amount, and refrained from enforcing collection of his existing indebtedness to the bank; and that, except for such information, the credit would not have been given, and the existing indebtedness could and would have been collected; that thereafter, in the year 1912, the defendant, claiming that the policy had been forfeited for nonpayment of premium, entered into a settlement with Fuller, by which the latter surrendered his policy or submitted to its cancellation, upou the considera tion that defendant discharge his indebtedness for the loan of $1,000, also discharge a further alleged lien upon said policy for $1,329.06, with accrued interest, and issue to him a paid-up policy of $70; and that such settlement was made without the knowledge or consent of the plaintiff.

The petition further alleges that, in answering plain[256]*256tiff’s inquiry hereinbefore referred to, concerning Fuller’s policy and defendant’s liens or claims thereon, defendant concealed or withheld the fact of its alleged prior demand of fl,329.06, and plaintiff was left in ignorance thereof until after the settlement between the company and Fuller; that, had plaintiff known the truth in that respect, it would have refused Fuller’s request for credit, and would have enforced the collection of its existing claims against him, but, by the time plaintiff had learned the truth, said settlement had been accomplished; and that, meantime, Fuller had become insolvent.

The petition is stated in three counts. In the first count, after stating its claim as aforesaid, plaintiff asks a money judgment for damages, substantially after the manner of a petition at law. In the other counts, plaintiff sets up two assignments, by which Fuller transfers to the bank all his claims against the company on .account of said policy, and for the reinstatement of the policy as a subsisting contract. It then avers that, by the terms of the insurance policy, the alleged prior lien of fl,329.06 was to be paid off by dividends and profits, accruing from time to time upon the policy, and that such indebtedness had, in fact, been largely, if not entirely, paid before the settlement between the company and Fuller was made, and that the-amount charged against the latter, in arriving at the settlement, was greatly exaggerated, or was entirely an overcharge, for which a recovery is demanded.

Plaintiff offers to do equity by paying to defendant all accrued and unpaid premiums and all the proper charges and liens on said policy, except the alleged prior lien of fl,329.06, and asks that the cancellation of the policy be vacated and set aside, and that the original contract between the insurer and insured be reinstated.

[257]*257acttouAonBpoiaCssi:gí¡ees.ts of [256]*256I. The merits of this ease depend quite entirely upon the meaning and effect to be given to the correspondence [257]*257which took place between the parties in the year 1909, and to which we have already made reference. It consists of two letters written by the plaintiff, and the answers thereto by the defendant, reading as follows:

“August 21, 1909.

“Illinois Life Insurance Co.,

“Ft. Dearborn Bldg.,

“Chicago, Ills.

“Gentlemen:

“Mr. Charles H. Puller, Unionville, Iowa, sends us your notice for premium, $302.91, and interest on policy loan, $60, under No. 22182, but your notice does not state when same will be due. Please forward us the date therefor, so we can look after the matter for Mr. Fuller, who is a customer of ours.

“We understand from him that you hold a loan of $1,000, with his policy as collateral. Is that correct, and when is the loan due, and up to what date has the interest been paid, and what rate of interest does it draw?

“Yours truly,

“W. J. Steckel, Cash.”

“Illinois Life Insurance Company, Chicago.

“Mr. W. S. Steckel, Cashier,

“The Exchange Bank,

“Bloomfield, Iowa.

“Dear Sir:

“We have your letter of August 21st, respecting the due date of the premium on policy No. 22182, Chas. H. Fuller.

“I note your statement that the notice we sent does not show the due date of the premium. I do not understand this, as all our premium notices show the date the premium falls due.

[258]*258“In Mr. Fuller’s case, premium on the policy and interest on the loan fall due on November 18th. The premium is $302.94, and interest on the loan, if he desires to renew it, is $60. The loan is for $1,000, and falls due, as above stated, on September 18th. We are willing, however, to renew the loan for another year upon the receipt of the interest.

“B. J. Stookey,

“B. J. S. ' Assistant Secretary.”

“Sept. 17, 1909.

“Illinois Life Ins. C.o.,

“Enclosed herewith please find check C. H. Fuller, $362.94, being for premium $302.94, and interest on policy loan, $60, due under No. 22182, 18th inst. Please send us receipt for Mr. Fuller for the premium and the interest. Also, if you will let us know how many payments have been made on his policy, when it matures, and approximately what he will receive. How many years was the policy taken out for, and are all the payments made up to date? We presume they are.

“You write us that you have no blanks to make duplicates of this policy on, and would you be willing to send the original to us for examination, after which it would be returned to you promptly.

“Enc. Yours truly,

“W. J. Steckel, Cash.'”

[259]*259“Illinois Life Insurance Company, Chicago.

“Sept. 22, 1909.

“P. A.

“No. 22182 — 1. L.

“Mr. W. J. Steckel,

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

National Life Co. v. Harvey
159 S.W.2d 920 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1942)
Aetna Life Insurance v. Morlan
264 N.W. 58 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1935)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
187 Iowa 253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/exchange-bank-v-illinois-life-insurance-iowa-1919.