Independent Order of Foresters v. Scott

272 N.W. 68, 223 Iowa 105
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 16, 1937
DocketNo. 43213.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 272 N.W. 68 (Independent Order of Foresters v. Scott) 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
Independent Order of Foresters v. Scott, 272 N.W. 68, 223 Iowa 105 (iowa 1937).

Opinion

Stiger, J.

The Independent Order of Foresters, one of the defendants in the main ease, is the petitioner in the certiorari action. The plaintiffs in the main case, Spencer G. Frick, Robert H. France and William G. Makeman, were at the time of the merger hereinafter referred to, certificate holders in the Modern Brotherhood of America, a fraternal beneficiary society organized under the laws of the State of Iowa with its principal place of business at Mason City, Iowa, which society had over $39,-000,000 of certificates of insurance in force.

The defendants in the main case were E. W. Clark, E. W. Clark, Commissioner of Insurance of the State of Iowa, Albert Hass, James A. Hanley, A. L. Sherin, E. A. Bell, W. Pingree Curtis, Frank C. Parnell, Willard A. Knight, P. A. Bedour, Oscar Floyd, who were the officers and directors of the Modern Brotherhood of America; Frank E. Hand, Victor Morin, John Laughton, John F. Lang, Alex Stewart, C. B. Dickson, W. H. Miller, Joseph Rossbottom, T. H. Saunders, who were officers and members of the Executive Council of the Independent Order of Foresters, who entered into the merger agreement on behalf of the Independent Order of Foresters with the Modern Brotherhood of America; O. R. Parks and C. R. Parks Service Co.

*108 The Independent Order of Foresters will be hereafter referred to as the Corporation.

The plaintiffs allege in their petition that they became certificate holders in the Corporation through a merger contract entered into between the said Corporation and the Modern Brotherhood of America on November 7, 1931, and brought the action for themselves and all other certificate holders of the Corporation and on behalf of the Corporation; that the plaintiffs made no demand upon the Corporation or its officers to commence the action because the executive officers of the Corporation are all parties to the conspiracy hereinafter alleged and it would be a useless ceremony to make a demand upon the said officers to bring the action; that on December 1, 1931, a pretended contract, identified as Exhibit B, was entered into by the Corporation through its above-named defendant officers and members of its Executive Council with the defendant C. R. Parks Service Company, which provided for the payment of $750,000 and other sums of money to the said company in consideration of the delivery by said company to the Corporation of re-insurance business in the approximate amount of $37,000,000; that said contract was one of the steps in the consummation of a conspiracy among all of the defendants to pay a secret bonus to certain officers and directors of the Modern Brotherhood of America and other parties unknown at this time to the plaintiffs for the purpose of defrauding the plaintiffs and all other certificate holders of the Corporation including those who became such by virtue of the merger agreement with the Modern Brotherhood of America and for the further purpose of depriving such certificate holders of money by diverting funds from the Corporation to the payment of the unlawful bonuses; that in furtherance of the unlawful conspiracy, secret contracts were entered into between the Corporation through its said defendant officers and the above named defendant officers and directors of the Modern Brotherhood of America, which contracts provided for the payment of large sums of money to said officers of the Modern Brotherhood of America without any consideration therefor and were entered into for the express purpose of defrauding all of said certificate holders; that under said Exhibit B, the sum of $300,000 was paid to the Parks Service Company, which was not for services to be performed by the company but was intended to be secretly distributed by the said service company to certain named defendants and other de *109 fendants not known to the plaintiffs, which secret payments were in furtherance of the said conspiracy.

Said petition further alleged that in accordance with the secret special service contracts, the Corporation paid to the service company over $28,000, which was secretly distributed by the company to the holders of the special contracts; that when the merger contract was submitted to the Supreme Lodge of the Modern Brotherhood of America for approval, the other contracts were withheld and concealed; that the plaintiffs are informed and believe and charge the facts to be that in the furtherance of the conspiracy other assets and payments have been made to defendants, the amount and times of the making of which payments can only be determined by a full and complete accounting with the defendants and each of them.

Plaintiffs prayed for an accounting and for judgment against the defendants.

The merger agreement provided that the Corporation would pay the defendant officers of the Modern Brotherhood of America their annual salaries for a period of four years from the date of the merger.

The contract Exhibit B, between the Corporation and Parks Service Company, Insurance Brokers, with its principal place of business in Chicago, provided that the company agreed to deliver re-insurance of business to the approximate amount of $37,000,-000 and the Corporation agreed to, pay for such re-insurance $750,000, $300,000 to be paid on delivery of the re-insurance and the balance in monthly installments.

The alleged secret employment contracts between the Corporation and W. Pingree Curtis provided that the company employ Curtis for a period of three years beginning December 10, 1931, and agreed to pay him $11,044.44 to be paid in monthly installments of $920.37 which contract stipulated that the compensation provided for was in addition to the salary to be paid Curtis under the merger contract. Curtis accepted the employment and agreed to give his best efforts, but no duties or obligations to be performed by Curtis were provided for by the contract. Attached to the contract is the following memorandum: In event of death of second party prior to expiration of agreement, payment to be made to Beulah Alden Curtis, wife of second party. Present address, 5841 Blackstone Avenue, Chicago, Illinois.

*110 All of the contracts of employment were substantially the same as the Curtis contract excepting the amounts of the compensation varied.

The plaintiffs amended their petition and made the Corporation, the Independent Order of Foresters, a party defendant alleging it was a Canadian Corporation with its principal place of business at Toronto and was authorized to transact business in the state of Iowa and held a certificate for such purpose from the Insurance Commissioner of the state of Iowa and at the present time was transacting business as a life insurance company in the state of Iowa. That the Corporation was made a party defendant, not for the purpose of asking a money judgment against it, but to the end that in case a judgment was recovered by the plaintiffs that the money so recovered could be turned over to the Corporation under order of court.

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272 N.W. 68, 223 Iowa 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/independent-order-of-foresters-v-scott-iowa-1937.