NATIONAL FOUNDATION LIFE INSURANCE CO. v. Loftis

1966 OK 237, 425 P.2d 946, 1966 Okla. LEXIS 570
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 22, 1966
Docket41321
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1966 OK 237 (NATIONAL FOUNDATION LIFE INSURANCE CO. v. Loftis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
NATIONAL FOUNDATION LIFE INSURANCE CO. v. Loftis, 1966 OK 237, 425 P.2d 946, 1966 Okla. LEXIS 570 (Okla. 1966).

Opinion

HALLEY, Chief Justice.

This action was commenced in the District Court of Pontotoc County by the filing of a petition by Ellon M. Loftis as plaintiff, defendant in error here, against the National Foundation Life Insurance Company, defendant, plaintiff in error here. From a jury verdict awarding a money judgment to the plaintiff, defendant appeals. The parties will be referred to herein by their trial court designations.

Plaintiff’s petition contained two causes of action. The first contains an allegation of fraud based on a transaction wherein one Melvin Ahart, an agent of defendant, sold plaintiff seven “founders contracts” ■in December of 1962. These “founders contracts” were represented by Ahart to be a single payment investment plan. For these “founders contracts” plaintiff paid to the defendant the total sum of $14,726.30. Subsequent developments indicated that plaintiff had, in fact, purchased twenty-year pay insurance policies that would require an annual premium of $14,726.30 to maintain.

The second cause of action contained a count and a prayer for exemplary damages in the sum of $15,000.00 by reason of the fraud alleged in the first cause of action.

Defendant filed an answer containing a general denial to the petition. Plaintiff then amended her petition to include an allegation that the fraudulent and misleading representations that had been made to plaintiff were a part of a system or general plan or scheme practiced by defendant to defraud plaintiff and others. The second canse of action was amended to increase the prayer for exemplary damages from $15,000.00 to $50,000.00.

To this amended petition, defendant filed its amended answer, wherein it alleged that because of the training that it gave its agents, no false, fraudulent or misleading representations could be made by its agents. That if its agent Ahart did make such false and misleading statements, they were unauthorized and unknown to the defendant and were not within the scope of his employment. For further defense, defendant alleged that if such misrepresentations were made, plaintiff, being a person of ordinary intelligence, and in the exercise of ordinary care, knew or should have known that such representations could not have been true. Defendant also complained of plaintiff’s failure to return the policies to it, asserting that it remained bound by the policies until they were returned.

After sustaining a motion to strike filed by the plaintiff to a part of the amended answer, plaintiff filed a reply denying all of the allegations of the amended answer except that part relating to the residence of the parties.

*949 With the issues so joined, the case was tried to a jury and a verdict was returned in favor of the plaintiff in the amount of the premiums paid by plaintiff. Since exemplary damages were not awarded by the jury, any question of exemplary damages will not be considered herein.

Defendant casts its appeal on five propo■sitions, which we will discuss in their numerical order.

For its first proposition, defendant asserts that the amended petition of plaintiff did not allege facts sufficient to state a cause of action, and that it was error for the court to overrule its demurrer thereto. This proposition is based on the theory that plaintiff, by her amended petition, does not ■allege that she restored or offered to restore the policies to the defendant. That .she did not bring an equitable action to rescind, but attempted to bring an action . at law for damages, and that she does not .allege that she affirmed the contract and sued for partial failure of consideration, .•and that therefore her petition is fatally ■ defective.

As authority for the above argument, defendant cites the case of Herron v. Harbour, 57 Okl. 71, 155 P. 506, and the follow'ing holding set out therein:

“It is a universal rule that when a party seeks to recover back money paid on a contract on the ground that such contract is void for fraud, or that it has "been rescinded, such party must restore -or offer to restore whatever he has re- . ceived under the contract, so as to put the other contracting party in statu quo, ■ whatever-may be valuable to the defend- : ant must be restored to him, though it be i of no value to the plaintiff.”

Defendant also cites the more recent case of Young et al. v. Garrett, 187 Okl. 595, 105 P.2d 257, to the same effect.

Defendant also advances the idea that ■since plaintiff .sought to recover exemplary ''damages in' her second cause of action, that .this .indicates .that her suit was not in equity, but was in law, and that this also renders plaintiff’s petition fatally defective.

It is important to determine as a preliminary matter whether this is an action at law or in equity. A careful analysis of the petition filed by plaintiff, as amended, convinces us that the action is at law. Plaintiff, in her amended petition, did not ask the court to rescind the contract that she had made with defendant with respect to the so-called “founders contracts”, but relied solely upon her own conduct to effect rescission, so that actually her cause of action was one for money .had and received.

15 O.S.1961, Section 233, provides that a party may rescind a contract if his consent to such contract was obtained by fraud. If a contract is rescinded by the act of the party it follows that in a suit for the recovery of money paid, no preliminary action of the court is necessary in order for the plaintiff to establish her right to recover the money paid. Therefore, in such case, the action is one in law rather than in equity. Viking Refrigerators, Inc. v. McMeachin, 145 Okl. 76, 291 P. 521; Jeter v. DeGraff, 93 Okl. 76, 219 P. 345.

Plaintiff’s attempted rescission could not be effective unless sufficient grounds existed therefor nor unless the plaintiff complied with the statutory procedure for effecting a rescission. The alleged grounds for rescission was the fraud of the agent of the defendant in inducing plaintiff to purchase the so-called “founders contracts”.

15 O.S.1961, Section 235, prescribes the duty of one attempting rescission as follows :

“1. He must rescind promptly, upon discovering the facts which entitle him to rescind, if he is free from duress, menace, undue influence, or disability, and is aware of his right to rescind; and,
“2. He must restore to the other party everything of value which he has re *950 ceived from him under the contract ; or must offer to restore the same, upon condition that such party shall do likewise, unless the latter is unable or positively refuses to do so.”

A review of the evidence with respect to the value of the policies of insurance indicates that there was no direct evidence offered in this connection, although a witness for the defendant did testify that if any of the individuals named as insureds in the policies had died prior to the trial, that the defendant would have been obligated to pay to the designated beneficiary the face amount of ’the particular policy concerned. Since such a death did not occur, we do not place much weight on this aspect of defendant’s argument with respect to value.

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1966 OK 237, 425 P.2d 946, 1966 Okla. LEXIS 570, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-foundation-life-insurance-co-v-loftis-okla-1966.