Lehman v. National Benefit Insurance

53 N.W.2d 872, 243 Iowa 1348, 1952 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 525
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 10, 1952
Docket48101
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 53 N.W.2d 872 (Lehman v. National Benefit 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
Lehman v. National Benefit Insurance, 53 N.W.2d 872, 243 Iowa 1348, 1952 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 525 (iowa 1952).

Opinion

Oliver, J.

Plaintiff is and has been for some years a stockholder of defendant National Benefit Insurance Company, an Iowa corporation. Defendants Powell and Gunn are officers of the company. K. B. Merrill, also named as a defendant, entered a special -appearance which was sustained. That order is not questioned in this appeal. The petition recited plaintiff, August 11, 1951, served written demand for inspection, examination and copy of books, documents and records of defendant insurance company, consisting of the minute book; stock ledgers, records and transfer books; all ledgers, records and books of account; a detailed financial statement of the company as of January 1, 1951, and subsequent trial balances; also full and correct entries of all transactions of the Board of 'Directors since January 1, 1950, as provided for in the 1950 Code of Iowa. It is not contended this demand was refused.

The petition alleged another written demand October 8, 1951, for the inspection and examination and copy of: Sample *1351 of each policy approved by the company since- October 1948; claim register; claim files since October 1, 1948.

The petition alleged defendants had refused this demand; the instruments demanded dealt directly with and involved the financial condition of the insurance company; plaintiff was personally interested in obtaining said instruments for the purpose of inspection, examination and copy, and had been damaged by their refusal. Plaintiff prayed a writ of mandamus, commanding defendants to produce said_ instruments for his inspection and copy.

Defendants’ answer, filed November 5, 1951, was in several divisions. Division I admitted the refusal to produce but denied the records demanded dealt directly with and involved the financial condition of the insurance company and denied the allegations of damage, etc.

Division II asserted the petition failed to state a cause of action or make any claim upon which relief could be granted, for that: (1) Plaintiff as a stockholder had no right of inspection or examination of the books, records and documents 'of defendant company as demanded in plaintiff’s petition. “(2) The rights of inspection provided by the insurance statutes of Iowa with reference to stockholders in domestic insurance companies are exclusive and they do not include the right to inspect, examine and copy the books, records, and documents demanded in plaintiff’s petition.”

Division III alleged:

“Par. 1. The demand for inspection, examination and copy of the books, records and documents of defendant company as set out in plaintiff’s petition is not made with any proper purpose, but in fact is made for one or more of the following wrongful purposes: to harass and annoy the management of defendant company; to aid plaintiff in his work in connection with a competing company; to seek out technical defects for the purpose of instituting a nuisance suit against one or more of the defendants; to stir up policy-holder litigation with defendant company, or to otherwise impair harmonious relations of defendant company with its policy holders; to induce defendants to buy plaintiff’s stock.”

*1352 Other paragraphs of Division III state in substance: Plaintiff is continuously engaged in soliciting applications for insurance for a competitor insurance company. Plaintiff’s attorney has already inspected defendants’ books and records which were produced under the demand of August 11, 1951. Policy forms and annual statements and reports of defendant company are filed in the office of the Iowa Commissioner of Insurance and are available for inspection to the public and plaintiff.

November 5, the day their answer was filed, defendants filed also application for determination of law points under Rule of Civil Procedure 105, praying the court to fix a date for hearing and determination of the law point set out in Division II of the answer. Said hearing was ordered held November 10 and was held December 5. The parties stipulated defendant insurance company had been a mutual assessment company, in October 1948 was transformed into a stock company under chapter 508, Code of Iowa, 1946, has since been insuring the health of persons, etc., under Code section 508.29 and is subject to the provisions of chapter 515.

December 18, 1951, the court filed its conclusions of law on defendants’ application for determination of law points under Rule of Civil Procedure 105, holding Senate File 222, which is chapter 181, Acts of the Fifty-fourth General Assembly, was not applicable to defendant company; that section 515.33, Code of Iowa 1950, was applicable and plaintiff had the right thereunder to inspect all transactions of defendant company but not to make copies thereof or extracts therefrom.

December 20 the court rendered judgment which recited the determination of law points under Rule of Civil Procedure 105 found chapter 181, 54th G. A. (Senate File 222) was not applicable and that section 515.33, Code of Iowa 1950, was applicable.

The judgment commanded defendants to submit the books, records and documents in question for plaintiff’s inspection but denied plaintiff the right to make copies of or extracts from the same.

Defendants have appealed from the judgment in favor of plaintiff. Plaintiff has appealed from the parts of the judgment *1353 denying bim tbe right to make copies or extracts, and adjudicating that Senate File 222 was inapplicable.

I. Chapter 491, Code of Iowa 1950, governs corporations for pecuniary profit. Code section 515.1 provides insurance companies, other than life insurance, shall be governed by the provisions of chapter 491 except as modified by the provisions of chapter 515. Senate File 222 amended chapter 491 by striking sections 491.46, 491.47, 491.50 and part of 491.53 requiring corporations to furnish lists of stockholders, keep stock books for inspection, etc., and enacting substitutes therefor. Section 5 of Senate File 222 provides any stockholder of record shall have the right to examine, for any proper purpose, the stock records, minutes and records of stockholders’ meetings and the books and records of account and to make extracts therefrom. Section 6 provides sections 3, 4 and 5 “shall not apply to building and loan associations, savings and loan associations, deposit, loan and investment records of banks and trust companies, or insurance companies organized under the laws of the State of Iowa, and to whom the provisions of chapter four hundred ninety-one (491) of the Code of Iowa, 1950, would otherwise be applicable.”

Plaintiff would interpret section 6, not as making the prior sections inapplicable to insurance companies, but as making them inapplicable only to deposit, loan and investment records of insurance companies. Otherwise stated, plaintiff would read section 6 as though the comma after the words “trust companies” were omitted. In overruling this contention the trial court stated deposit, loan and investment records appear to apply peculiarly to banks and trust companies. Records of insurance companies are not usually so listed. The interpretation contended for by plaintiff would not only require a change in the punctuation of the section but would also tend to make the language used uncertain in meaning.

We hold section 6 of chapter 181, 54th G. A.

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Bluebook (online)
53 N.W.2d 872, 243 Iowa 1348, 1952 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 525, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lehman-v-national-benefit-insurance-iowa-1952.