Garretson v. Western Life Indemnity Co.

175 Iowa 172
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 4, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 175 Iowa 172 (Garretson v. Western Life Indemnity 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.

Bluebook
Garretson v. Western Life Indemnity Co., 175 Iowa 172 (iowa 1916).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

I. The record is long, and the facts complicated by reason of the number of reinsurance contracts intervening between the issuance of the original policies to the insured and the final contracts entered into by the defendant with its immediate reinsurers; and we shall have some difficulty in making a clear and accurate statement of even the undisputed facts.

Garretson took out his original policies in the year 1893, in what was known as the Old Wayne Mutual Life Association, of Indianapolis, Indiana. They were each for a sum of not to exceed $4,000, and the premium was $25.00 in cash upon the issuance of the policies, and assessments were at the rate of $4.00 each, limited to not exceeding one for any one month. The policies differ somewhat in their phraseology and in the amount and number of assessments to be paid; but they are each what is known in the law as assessment policies.

As we understand it, the Old Wayne Company became financially involved and, in the year 1904, it reinsured all its business in the Indiana Mutual Life Insurance Company. [175]*175This latter company in turn, in the year 1907, reinsured in the Marquette Insurance Company, and the latter company, in the same year, reinsured with the Federal Mutual Endowment Company. The Federal Mutual Company reinsured in the United States Life Endowment Company, and the latter company, in the year 1910, reinsured in the defendant company. This, as we understand it, is the history of one of the policies upon which this action is based. The other policy issued by the Old Wayne Company was, in the year 1901, reinsured by the Western Life Insurance Company of Chicago, Illinois; and in the same year, the Western Company reinsured in the Life Insurance Company of Pennsylvania. In the year 1905, the Knights Templar and Masons Life Indemnity Company, of Chicago, which is the defendant in this case, at that time doing business under the name just stated, took over the entire membership of the Pennsylvania Company under a written contract between the two' companies, whereby it is claimed that defendant undertook to carry out all the terms of the original policy issued by the Old Wayne Company under the same terms and conditions. Riders to be attached to the policies were issued from time to time and sent to Garretson by the several reinsuring. companies, and some controversy arises at this point as to his acceptance of some of them. For the purpose of the case, it is admitted that Garretson paid to the proper companies the assessments and premiums called for by the original policies, down until the time of his death. Defendant insists that it is bound only by the terms of its reinsurance contracts, and that it never at any time agreed to perform the original contracts unconditionally. As to the first policy, it pleaded that, while the United States Life Endowment Company was responsible under its contract of reinsurance, it became insolvent, and, with the approval of the state insurance superintendent of the state of Illinois, and a circuit court of that state, the affairs of the United States Company being then in the hands of a receiver, defendant company entered into a contract whereby it undertook [176]*176to reinsure the policy holders of the United States Company, upon certain terms and conditions which limited its liability to the amount found due by the district court in this case. As to the second policy, the defendant claims that it simply undertook to perform an agreement made by the Pennsylvania Company under its No., 47821, whereby it (the Pennsylvania Company) issued to Garretson its policy to replace the one issued by the Old Wayne Company, its number being 7442, and that, by the terms of the Pennsylvania policy, that company agreed, upon the death of Garretson, to pay to his beneficiary:

“Such sum (not to exceed the principal amount named in said policy hereby replaced) as the said advance premium hereinabove provided will purchase for the present attained age of the insured, computed upon the company’s Schedule of Premium Rates, printed on the back hereof, and which is hereby made a part of this contract.”

This policy also provides:

‘ ‘ That the provisions and conditions written or printed by the Company on the following page or pages of this contract, are a part of this contract as fully as if they were recited at length over the signature hereto affixed. ’ ’

The defendant company, under the name of the Knights Templar Company, agreed in its contract with -the Pennsylvania Company as follows':

‘ ‘ This certifies that the amount which may be payable at the death of the insured under and by virtue of a certain Policy No. 47821 upon the life of W. C. Garretson, issued or assumed by the Life Insurance Company of Pennsylvania, will be assumed by the Knights Templar and Masons Life Indemnity Company.”

This is the only contract it made with the Pennsylvania Company. According to the record, if there were nothing [177]*177more than these two contracts of the Pennsylvania Company and.the defendant, under the name of the Knights Templar Company, the trial court was right in fixing defendant’s liability under these contracts at $128.90.

1. Insurance: life insurance: reinsurance: reciprocal rights and liability. The general rule as to reinsurance contracts is that the reinsurer is to be held liable either under its reinsurance contract or upon a subsequent agreement made between it and the assured, and the assured has the right to accept the reinsurance offered him, or to sue the original company for damages. If he accepts the reinsurance contract, and pays premiums to the reinsurance company, he is bound by the terms of the reinsurance contract, and cannot recover of the reinsuring company on the old policy unless the reinsurance contract, in terms, or by necessary implication, contains an agreement to assume, or be responsible on, the policy reinsured. Spande v. Western Life Indemnity Co. (Ore.), 117 Pac. 973 (122 Pac. 38, 39); Epworth League v. Olney (Mich.), 98 N. W. 860; Northwestern National Life v. Gray, 161 Fed. 488, and cases cited; Glen v. Hope Mutual Ins. Co., 56 N. Y. 379; Fischer v. Hope Mutual Ins. Co., 69 N. Y. 161; Lovell v. St. Louis Mutual Life Ins. Co., 111 U. S. 264 (4 Sup. Ct. Rep. 390; 28 L. Ed. 423.)

2. Insurance: life insurance: insurance and reinsurance: state laws governing. Conscious of this general rule, appellant seeks to avoid it on several grounds. In the first place, it is claimed that, as the original policies were Indiana contracts, they and all subsequent contracts of reinsurance are governed by the laws of that state; and that as, by a statute of that state, it is provided that every reinsurance contract shall be as binding .upon the company making the same, and its liability to the person injured shall be the same, as if the original policies had been issued by such company, defendant is bound to the same extent as if it had issued the Old Wayne policies.

■ The difficulty with this contention as to the second of the policies is that, as we have already pointed, out, the defendant [178]*178never did either directly or indirectly reinsure the Old Wayne policy.

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Bluebook (online)
175 Iowa 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garretson-v-western-life-indemnity-co-iowa-1916.