Vande Stouwe v. Bankers Life Co.

254 N.W. 790, 218 Iowa 1182
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 15, 1934
DocketNo. 42233.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 254 N.W. 790 (Vande Stouwe v. Bankers Life Co.) 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
Vande Stouwe v. Bankers Life Co., 254 N.W. 790, 218 Iowa 1182 (iowa 1934).

Opinions

Claussen, C. J.

On November 24, 1924, the Bankers Life Company issued to Jacob Vande Stouwe a life insurance policy upon his life. The policy contained provisions for the payment of benefits in case he became totally and permanently disabled. On the 13th day of the following January he entered a sanitarium in Denver, Colorado. During the following April he made a claim against the company for disability benefits. In the claim for disability benefits he stated that his disability began January 1, 1925, some five weeks after the policy was issued. His disability was described as “Lungs — Respiratory”. In the claim he states that he consulted a physician on December 20, 1924, “after my last breakdown whom advised me to come here or some san.” Attached to and made a part of the claim was a statement of a physician at the Denver sanitarium which contained the following question and answer:

“Give full history of the disease or accident from the beginning up to the present time.
“Probably began with a heavy cold in 1912 has coughed ever since. Had a breakdown in summer of 1924. Again in Sept., 1924 lost weight and suffered from extreme weakness. Has been in bed, running considerable temp, since coming to the Sanitarium in Jan., 1925.”

*1184 Vande Stouwe returned to Iowa and was taken to the state tuberculosis institution at Oakdale. He died of tuberculosis on or about December 26, 1925.

In July of 1925, while Vande Stouwe was at Oakdale, the company sent one of its representatives to see him. This agent took with him Vande Stouwe’s application for the policy, his claim for disability benefits, some reports, not in the record, relating to an investigation made by the company concerning the physical condition of Vande Stouwe, and a letter from Dr. Scarborough, who was in charge of the Oakdale institution, in which the doctor states that Vande Stouwe came to the hospital on May 11, 1925, with far advanced tuberculosis of the lungs. The agent interviewed Vande Stouwe in the sanitarium, and the documents above referred to were discussed and such as were not confidential were shown to Vande Stouwe. The agent advised Vande Stouwe that the company could not reconcile the answers of Vande Stouwe in his application for the policy with statements in his claim for disability benefits and the information obtained from the other sources above referred to; that unless a compromise could be made the company would employ counsel at Iowa City to secure the cancellation of the policy; that the expense to the company of so doing would be in the neighborhood of $250; and that the company would pay that amount for the cancellation of the policy. After some discussion, it was agreed that $275 should be paid to Vande Stouwe for the cancellation of the policy. Accordingly blank spaces left for names, dates, and policy numbers, in a typewritten compromise agreement, which had been prepared by the agent before he left the home office, were filled in, in pen and ink, and the agreement was signed by Vande Stouwe. It is sufficient to say that the agreement purported to discharge the company from liability on the policy. Simultaneously, a change of designation of beneficiary was signed by Vande Stouwe, changing the beneficiary from Jennie Vande Stouwe, wife of the insured, to the executor or administrator of the insured. The policy was not then in the possession of Vande Stouwe. It contained the usual provision that a change of beneficiary should not be effective unless properly indorsed on the policy by the company. The policy was not returned to the company and the change of beneficiary was not indorsed on the policy. At the same time, the agent drew a draft on the company in favor of Vande Stouwe for $275 and delivered it to Vande Stouwe. The draft was paid by the company. Vande *1185 Stouwe was taken to the home of his sister in Orange City on October 31, 1925. A photostat of the draft is in the record. The draft was indorsed by Jacob Vande Stouwe and by H. Vande Stouwe. The back of the draft bears the stamp of the First National Bank of Hull, Iowa, and the stamp of the First National Bank of Sioux City with the date November 18, 1925. The face of the draft is marked “Paid 11/19/25 D. M. Natl. Bank.” The draft thus indorsed and stamped is in evidence, without objection to any of its indorsements. The introduction of the draft was objected to but such general objection was properly overruled by the court.

As before noted, Jacob Vande Stouwe died on December 26, 1925. On January 16, 1926, Van Oosterhout & Kolyn, counsel for Mrs. Vande Stouwe, wrote to the company concerning the policy. On January 29, 1926, the company, in a letter to such attorneys, denied liability on the policy and sent them a photographic copy of the release above referred to. The matter seems to have remained in repose in this situation until March 5, 1929, when Raymond N. Klass appears to have written to the company concerning the policy and to have given the company notice of a claim of lien for attorney fees. In response to this letter the company denied liability on the policy. On November 15, 1929, in an effort to give jurisdiction over a suit on the policy to the Linn district court', Mrs .Vande Stouwe assigned a one-tenth interest in the policy to Anne T. Klass, the wife of Raymond N. Klass, as trustee, but subsequently such interest was reassigned to Mrs. Vande Stouwe as administrator of her husband’s estate. Mrs. Vande Stouwe was named in the policy as beneficiary. It has been noted that at the time the release agreement was signed, the beneficiary was changed to the executor or administrator of the estate of the insured. No doubt for the purpose of avoiding question concerning the right of the administratrix to sue, Mrs. Vande Stouwe joined with Mrs. Klass in executing the assignment of the policy to Mrs. Vande Stouwe as administratrix. On the 18th day of August, 1930, this action was brought by the administratrix to recover damages for the “malicious, wilful and wanton” breach of the contract. The amount of damages claimed was $2,200 and inLerest as actual damage and $8,000 punitive damage. By the time the issues were settled, however, the case had degenerated into an action to recover on the policy, and, in the main, the case was tried as such, and was so submitted by the court to the jury. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff, and from judg *1186 ment rendered on the verdict, and various rulings of the court, this appeal is prosecuted.

I. Many errors are assigned and argued. A number of the assignments of error have merit. But, as may be supposed, the case turns largely upon the effectiveness of the instrument alleged to have been executed by the insured at Oakdale, releasing the company.

In the first instance plaintiff claims that the signature on the instrument was a forgery. For the purpose of sustaining this allegation she introduced in evidence five checks of a former employer bearing the insured’s signature. No other evidence bearing on the question was introduced by her. In this situation she contends that a jury question was raised on the issue of the genuineness of the signature on the release. The original checks and release are before us. Our comparison of the signatures leads us to the conclusion that the signature on the release is the genuine signature of the insured. It is, of course, not our province to weigh the evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
254 N.W. 790, 218 Iowa 1182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vande-stouwe-v-bankers-life-co-iowa-1934.