Newman v. Covenant Mutual Insurance Ass'n

1 L.R.A. 659, 40 N.W. 87, 76 Iowa 56, 1888 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 137
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 26, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 1 L.R.A. 659 (Newman v. Covenant Mutual Insurance Ass'n) 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
Newman v. Covenant Mutual Insurance Ass'n, 1 L.R.A. 659, 40 N.W. 87, 76 Iowa 56, 1888 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 137 (iowa 1888).

Opinion

Rothrock, J. —

[59]*591. pleading ■ ' amendment^: law to equity: limitation of action: life [58]*58I. The opinion of this court on the former appeal of the cause will be' found in 72 Iowa, [59]*59242. It was held upon that appeal that an action at law for the amount named in the policy or certificate could not be maintained; -V J 5 that, by the terms or the contract, the defendant’s obligation was to make an assessment upon the members of the association, collect the assessment and pay it to the benefi ciary; and that no more than nominal damages could be recovered in an action at law. When the cause was remanded to the district court, and when the amended and substituted petition in equity was filed, the defendants moved to strike out the petition, and demurred thereto. The motion and demurrer were overruled. The. question arising upon these rulings of the court is elaborately argued by counsel. It is an important question in the case. If there was no right to amend the pleadings so as to present an action in equity, instead of one at law, and if the amendments set up an entirely new action, it could not be maintained, because the policy or certificate, which is the basis of the suit, expressly provides that no action can be maintained thereon which is not commenced within .one year after the death of the insured. The statute of this state, authorizing the amendment of pleadings, is very comprehensive. Code, sec. 2689. Under this and other sections of the Code it has become the rule to allow amendments, and to deny the right is the exception. When this cause was remanded to the district court there was the same right of amendment as there would have been if it had not been tried. It was one of those cases where an amendment to the petition was absolutely necessary. In the opinion of this court, the plaintiff should have demanded an assessment upon the membership of the association, instead of asking a judgment at law. It was no more than an amendment of the prayer of the petition. If the claim was an honest one, and the defendant refused to make an assessment to pay it, there was a breach of the contract for which it was liable. The plaintiff sought a recovery upon the policy. He set out in his petiti on and amendments thereto, before the first trial, every fact necessary to show that he was entitled to relief in some form. He [60]*60made the mistake of demanding a judgment for the amount, when he should have demanded that an assessment be made. If the objection to his petition had been made before the trial, it was his right to have his cause changed into the proper proceeding, and to amend the prayer of his petition accordingly. The error in claiming a judgment did not abate the action. Code, sec. 2514. By the amendments there was no change of the cause of action. If the plaintiff, when the cause was remanded, had sought to amend his petition by declaring upon the breach of a contract of insurance against loss by fire, that would have been a new cause of action. It would not have been -an amendment. The cause of action in this case was the breach of the contract of insurance, and the amendment was merely a change of the form of the remedy. The right to make these amendments, by which causes are changed from the law to the equity jurisdiction of the court, and vice versa, have been too long practiced in our courts to be now called in question. As sustaining the views above expressed, see Holmes v. Clark, 10 Iowa, 427; Weaver v. Kintzley, 58 Iowa, 193; Emmet County v. Griffin, 73 Iowa, 163; Case v. Blood, 71 Iowa, 632; Barke v. Early, 72 Iowa, 273; Barnes v. Hekla Fire Ins. Co., 75 Iowa, 11; and Cook v. Chicago, R. I. & P. Ry. Co., 75 Iowa, 169. We have not thought it necessary to review the authorities cited by counsel for appellant upon this question. It is a question of pleading, which we must regard as settled in this state. The original petition was filed within a year after the insured died, and neither the limitation in the policy, nor the limitation of the statute, can be invoked as defenses to the action.

2. r . ficiaries®ne' offpouoy°n errÓrless II. The certificate held by the deceased was made payable to the “devisees of Wm. H. Hewitt, as designated in his last will and testament.” When plaintiff filed fiis amended petition in eclnity, he pleaded that the designation of the beneficiaries in the certificate was a mistake, and it was prayed that the same be reformed so as to be made payable to A. E. Hewitt, his [61]*61wife, in conformity with the intention of the parties. The decree reformed the instrument as prayed. It appears that the deceased left no last will and testament, and there were therefore no devisees. It is claimed that there was not sufficient evidence to warrant the reformation of the contract. We need not determine this question. It appears that the widow of the deceased and all of his heirs assigned the policy to the plaintiff. Surely the defendant ought not to seek to avoid its obligation by the alleged failure of a beneficiary. In such case the’heirs of the deceased 'are the beneficiaries. If he made no last will and testament, the right to the avails of the life insurance would descend to his heirs the same as any other property or chose in action. Smith v. Cov. Mut. Ben. Ass’n, 24 Fed. Rep. 685; Cov. Mut. Ben. Ass’n v. Sears, 114 Ill. 113.

3. _. waiver t/onsTacts of agent. III. We come now to a consideration of the facts in the case. The defendant is a corporation, and its place of business is at Galesburg, in the state of Illinois. The deceased was a resident of Marion, in this state, where he kept, a hotel. The application for the insurance was taken in June, 1882, by one W. H. Wharry, an agent of the defendant. He ■ had been at Marion for several weeks before the application was made, engaged in taking applications for insurance for the defendant. It does not appear that he had any other business. He boarded at the hotel kept by the deceased. Fifteen dollars was necessary to be paid by the deceased to constitute him a member of the association. When the application was made by an arrangement between Wharry and the deceased, five dollars of this amount was paid by a credit upon the account against Wharry for his boarding, and the deceased gave Wharry his promissory note for ten dollars, dated June 15, 1882, and payable July 15, 1882. Wharry changed the scene of his operations to Sycamore, 111., and sent the note to a bank at Marion for collection, where it was paid July 15, 1882, and the amount, with the proceeds of two other notes taken for insurance, was sent to him. It appears that the [62]*62deceased was addicted to the excessive use of intoxicating liquors. He had acquired this habit years before he died. The testimony of a large number of witnesses was taken upon this feature of the case, from which it appears that his drunkenness was noticeable to every one who observed him. It is not disputed' that he was a confirmed' drunkard. Wharry knew this fact perfectly. He not only could not have failed to know it by observation, but the defendant had two medical examiners at Marion, and one of them told Wharry before he took the application that the deceased was not a proper subject for insurance, because of his habits. With this knowledge Wharry took the application after a medical examination by the other examiner. The defense upon the facts is based upon the intemperate use -of alcoholic beverages.

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Bluebook (online)
1 L.R.A. 659, 40 N.W. 87, 76 Iowa 56, 1888 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newman-v-covenant-mutual-insurance-assn-iowa-1888.