Northwestern Trading Co. v. Western Live Stock Insurance

180 Iowa 878
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 26, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 180 Iowa 878 (Northwestern Trading Co. v. Western Live Stock 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
Northwestern Trading Co. v. Western Live Stock Insurance, 180 Iowa 878 (iowa 1917).

Opinion

Salinger, J.

1‘ EREoiif decisions ovemSng mo-specific state-1. The petition alleges that, on December 28, 1915, the defendant issued to the plaintiff its policy of insuranee, whereunder it agreed to insure the plaintiff to the amount of $120 oil each and every animal described in certain 'schedules thereto attached ; that, by the terms of said policy, the insurance ivas to begin on December 28, 1915, and to cover the said animals until immediately previous to embarkation at sea-[879]*879board; that thereafter, and on various days between December 30, 1915, and January 30, 1916, in consideration of the required premium paid, defendant further issued to plaintiff certain riders or supplements to be attached to and form a part of the said policy theretofore issued, by which riders it undertook to insure the plaintiff against loss or damage to the certain animals described in these riders or supplements, in accordance with the terms of the original policy. True copies of the riders are said to be attached, marked Exhibits 2 to 59, inclusive. It suffices to say that finally an aggregate loss of $31,200 is sought to be recovered for and on account of losses said to be covered by the various instruments to which we have referred.

The defendant moved the court to enter an order requiring the plaintiff to divide this petition into divisions or counts. Defendant further moved the court for an order requiring plaintiff to make this petition more specific in ■some fourteen specified particulars. Both motions were denied. From these rulings defendant has perfected an appeal, and plaintiff is moving to strike the abstract of appellant and to dismiss said appeal. This last motion asserts that the orders appealed from do not constitute appealable orders.

2. appeal and error : review, scope of: challenge to of Poraerility II. We shall not pass upon whether the overruled motions were in truth well made. That must be reserved for the time when, if' ever, we determine the appeal. Many actions of trial courts from which we must entertain an appeal are affirmed. It follows that the right to appeal does-not depend upon whether the appeal is meritorious. It follows in turn that, in passing upon whether there is the right to appeal, we are not at liberty to take into consideration whether, though appeal be allowed, it should on final hearing be not sustained.

III. Cook & Wheeler v. Chicago, R. I. & P. R. Co., [880]*88075 Iowa 169, holds that no appeal will lie from the granting of a rule to produce books and papers. It grounds its decision upon consideration of specified parts of the statute which do not allow an appeal from such an order. It entirely overlooks Subdivision 3 of the statute, which permits appeal from an order that grants or refuses, continues or modifies a provisional remedy. Devier v. Economic Life Assn., 106 Iowa 682, merely follows the Cook case without discovering the error in the Cook case. We have held that no appeal will lie from granting or denying change of venue (Allerton v. Eldridge, 56 Iowa 709; Horack v. Horak, 68 Iowa 49); nor from an order denying default for want of pleading (Quinn v. Capital Ins. Co., 82 Iowa 550); nor from an order of continuance (Jaffray v. Thompson, 65 Iowa 323; Theis v. Chicago & N. W. R. Co., 107 Iowa 522); nor from one setting the case down for trial as an equitable action (First National Bank v. Dutcher, 128 Iowa 413, at 425); nor from one refusing to strike an application for permission to amend (Allen v. City of Davenport, 115 Iowa 20); nor from one refusing to strike a pleading (Walker v. Pumphrey, 82 Iowa 487); nor from an order sustaining a motion to set aside the overruling of a demurrer; nor from an order overruling a motion to strike that motion (Quinn v. Capital Ins. Co., 82 Iowa 550). Also held, appeal will lie from overruling a motion which assails material matter and is in .effect a demurrer (Seiffert & Wiese Lbr. Co. v. Hartwell, 94 Iowa 576, at 578; Bicklin v. Kendall, 72 Iowa 490). It will lie from the striking out of material matter (Mast v. Wells, 110 Iowa 128; Haworth v. Crosby, 120 Iowa 612). We have held that no appeal will lie from striking out immaterial matter or from overruling a motion to strike such matter (Allen v. Church, 101 Iowa 116; Specht v. Spangenberg, 70 Iowa 488). An appeal will not lie from the suppression of depositions on the ground that they were taken from the clerk’s office by plaintiff’s attorney contrary [881]*881to the provisions of the Code (Baldwin v. Mayne, 40 Iowa 687); nor from the admission or exclusion of evidence (Richards v. Burden, 31 Iowa 305, 306); nor from an order regulating time of filing answer to interrogatories (Free v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 135 Iowa 69, at 72); nor from one sustaining exceptions to interrogatories (State v. Arns, 72 Iowa 555, at 556); nor from admitting evidence after remand (Garmoc v. Sturgeon, 67 Iowa 700).

IV. In Schoenhofen Brewing Co. v. Giffey, 162 Iowa 204, the test of appealability is said to be whether the question is or will be inherent in the final judgment and may be presented on appeal from that judgment. If the ruling is of such a nature and affects rights in such a manner that they cannot be protected by appeal from the final judgment, then an appeal will lie. But if the question involved will inhere in the final judgment and can be presented in an appeal from that judgment, it will be treated as an interlocutory order, review of which can only be had upon the general appeal. We say, in State v. Des Moines City R. Co., 135 Iowa 694, at 717:

“Ordinarily every substantial right of the parties can be effectually protected by preserving a proper record, and presenting the questions thus saved, upon appeal from final judgment.”

It is in view of this that we declare that it is not the policy of the law to permit either party to a controversy to prolong litigation and embarrass the courts of justice by prosecuting an appeal from every interlocutory ruling of a trial court. We have, however, held in many cases that an error in overruling a motion to make more specific is waived by answering. See Hurd v. Ladner, 110 Iowa 263, 264; Kelly v. Incorporated Town of West Bend, 101 Iowa 669, 671; Manatt v. Shaver, 98 Iowa 353, 356, 357; Wattels v. Minchen, 93 Iowa 517; Ida County v. Woods, 79 Iowa [882]*882148; Mann v. Taylor, 78 Iowa 355; Randolf v. Town of Bloomfield, 77 Iowa 50; Kline v. Kansas City, St. J. & C. B. R. Co., 50 Iowa 656; Shugart & Lininger v. Pattee, 37 Iowa 422, 424; Coakley v. McCarty, 34 Iowa 105, 107; Rea v. Flathers, 31 Iowa 545.

In view of these, it gets nowhere merely to prove that many orders of court are not appealable. That this is so throAvs ño light upon the question whether, if proceeding Avith the trial or pleading further of necessity works a waiver, and so leaves the party without redress from such ruling, it can then be said that such ruling does not materially affect the final determination, although, by reason of the waiver, no appellate revieAv may be had on appeal from an adverse final judgment. Here, the defendant moves that the petition be made more specific. Assume a case where that is done in good faith.

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Bluebook (online)
180 Iowa 878, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northwestern-trading-co-v-western-live-stock-insurance-iowa-1917.