WOODMEN OF WORLD LIFE INS. SOC. v. Kight

522 N.W.2d 155, 246 Neb. 619
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 30, 1994
DocketS-93-089
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 522 N.W.2d 155 (WOODMEN OF WORLD LIFE INS. SOC. v. Kight) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
WOODMEN OF WORLD LIFE INS. SOC. v. Kight, 522 N.W.2d 155, 246 Neb. 619 (Neb. 1994).

Opinion

522 N.W.2d 155 (1994)
246 Neb. 619

WOODMEN OF THE WORLD LIFE INSURANCE SOCIETY, Appellee,
v.
C. Frank KIGHT, also known as Clayton Frank Kight, Appellant.

No. S-93-089.

Supreme Court of Nebraska.

September 30, 1994.

*156 James B. McVay, of Stern, Swanson, Sleder & McVay, for appellant.

Kirk S. Blecha and Carol C. Knoepfler, of Baird, Holm, McEachen, Pedersen, Hamann & Strasheim, for appellee.

HASTINGS, C.J., and WHITE, FAHRNBRUCH, and LANPHIER, JJ., and BOSLAUGH, J., Retired.

BOSLAUGH, Justice, Retired.

This appeal arises from an action filed by the plaintiff, Woodmen of the World Life Insurance Society, for declaratory judgment on a contract between the plaintiff and the defendant, C. Frank Kight, also known as Clayton Frank Kight, an Alabama resident. The defendant filed a motion to dismiss pursuant to Neb.Rev.Stat. § 25-538 (Reissue 1989), which authorizes a court to stay or dismiss an action in whole or in part on any conditions that may be just when the court finds that in the interest of substantial justice the action should be heard in another forum. The trial court denied the defendant's motion, and on the date trial of the case was to begin, November 23, 1992, the parties agreed to settle their dispute. The defendant refused to sign the settlement agreement, and the plaintiff filed, on December 11, 1992, a motion to confirm the settlement. Following a hearing on the motion to confirm the settlement, the trial court found that a settlement agreement had been entered into by the parties, the terms of which were reflected in the settlement documents that the defendant refused to sign. The trial court sustained the plaintiff's motion to confirm the settlement.

The defendant has appealed and assigns as error the trial court's failure to grant his motion to dismiss, the trial court's finding that a binding settlement agreement existed between the parties, and the trial court's failure to apply Fourth Jud.Dist.R. of Prac. 4 (Jan. 1988).

The plaintiff is a fraternal benefit society incorporated in the State of Nebraska and licensed to do business in all 50 states. Its national headquarters are located in Omaha, Nebraska.

The defendant worked as an independent contractor for the plaintiff in the capacity of field representative. As a field representative, the defendant was responsible for increasing membership in and advancing the interests of the plaintiff by soliciting applications from individuals in the south Alabama area for benefit certificates, including life insurance, and by working with individuals to maintain their benefit certificates.

On July 1, 1986, the plaintiff and the defendant executed a full-time field representative/Woodmen advantage contract. After the plaintiff's area and state managers and the defendant signed the contract in Alabama, the contract was forwarded to the plaintiff's offices in Omaha for review, approval, and final execution. The original contract was retained by the plaintiff in its Omaha office.

The contract contained a choice of law and choice of venue provision. Pursuant to paragraph 12 of the contract, the parties "agree that this contract is to be construed according to the laws of the State of Nebraska and that the exclusive venue for the pursuit of any legal proceeding or remedy arising out of this contract shall be in Douglas County, Nebraska."

During his relationship with the plaintiff, the defendant had numerous contacts with Omaha, Nebraska. All of the defendant's commission payments and accounting functions concerning those commissions originated in the plaintiff's offices in Omaha. All Woodmen insurance products and benefit certificates the defendant sold were transmitted by the defendant either by mail or by computer transmission to the plaintiff's offices in Omaha, and when the insurance products and benefit certificates the defendant sold were issued by the plaintiff, they *157 were issued from the plaintiff's offices in Omaha. If the defendant changed or adjusted a member's Woodmen certificate, the defendant reported those changes to the plaintiff's office in Omaha, where the adjustments would be made.

The defendant's direct contacts with Omaha also included special telephone access to a data communications line in Omaha which the defendant, as a Woodmen field representative, could use to obtain information concerning Woodmen members. The defendant also attended three different training sessions offered and conducted by the plaintiff at its Omaha offices in July 1979, April 1982, and April 1984. The plaintiff paid for the defendant's travel expenses to and from Omaha, as well as expenses incurred during the defendant's attendance at the seminars.

On October 25, 1990, the plaintiff terminated its relationship with the defendant because he gave confidential member information to a competing life insurance company's agent. The defendant subsequently brought an action against the plaintiff and others in the circuit court for Montgomery County, Alabama, on July 8, 1991, alleging violations of the contract. On August 2, the plaintiff filed its application for declaratory judgment and petition against the defendant in the district court for Douglas County, Nebraska, seeking, in part, a declaratory judgment that the defendant had breached his obligations under the contract by selling replacement insurance policies of another company to Woodmen members, thereby causing those members to terminate their Woodmen policies.

The defendant filed his motion to dismiss on September 27, 1991, seeking the dismissal of the plaintiff's action on the theory of forum non conveniens. After a hearing on the motion, the trial court denied the motion.

Trial in this action was scheduled to begin on November 23, 1992. The parties, including the defendant, appeared for trial. Also present were witnesses that the plaintiff expected to call at trial who had traveled to Omaha from Alabama. Out-of-state counsel from Alabama for both sides, as well as local counsel, were present.

On the morning of the trial, the parties reached a settlement of all their differences. The defendant; his local counsel, William T. Ginsburg; and his Alabama counsel, D. Bruce Petway, personally negotiated settlement terms with the plaintiff's representatives. Later that day in the courtroom, counsel for the plaintiff, Kirk S. Blecha and Carol C. Knoepfler, and the defendant's counsel, Ginsburg and Petway, recited on the record the terms of the settlement agreement reached between the plaintiff and the defendant. The record of that proceeding shows the following:

[MR. PETWAY:] Mr. Ginsburg and I would like to enter a statement that we have read this agreement in full and that Mr. Kight agreed to these provisions both last night and this morning and has given us the authority to settle both the cases referenced in this agreement and have them dismissed without prejudice by—with prejudice and that we are in agreement with the provisions as read in the statement [by Blecha and Knoepfler].
MR. BLECHA: And also for—Continuing, I can represent that I was present this morning in the jury room when Mr. Kight verbally informed Mr. Petway and Mr. Ginsburg that they had authority to settle the case along the terms that we have read into the record.
MR. PETWAY: And you would—you'd concur on that. He was present.
MR.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
522 N.W.2d 155, 246 Neb. 619, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodmen-of-world-life-ins-soc-v-kight-neb-1994.