Reversing.
In 1921, the Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States delivered to the Standard Oil Company, Incorporated, in Kentucky, a group insurance policy by which it insured certain employees of the company against loss of life or total and permanent disability occurring during the employment. At that time the insurance was all on the noncontributory plan; that is, the Standard Oil Company paid all the premiums. In the year 1926 the Insurance Company and the Standard Oil Company amended the policy by adding to it a contributory plan under which the employees could, if they desired, secure additional insurance and have the Standard Oil Company deduct the premiums from their earnings.
On October 29, 1928, Terry McDonald became an employee of the Standard Oil Company, and one year later he became entitled under the policy to $2,000 insurance, $1,000 noncontributory and $1,000 contributory. McDonald wanted only the free insurance, and on October 29, 1929, the Insurance Company issued to him an individual certificate for $1,000 under the noncontributory plan, which, after two years, would be increased to $1,200. On May 1, 1930, the Insurance Company and the Oil Company amended the plan so that employees of McDonald's class would be entitled to take out $2,000 *Page 551 contributory insurance instead of $1,000. McDonald took advantage of the increase and was issued a certificate for $2,000.
On June 2, 1933, McDonald, alleging that he was totally and permanently disabled, brought suit against the Insurance Company to recover $2,000 on the noncontributory plan. The Insurance Company prepared to remove the action to the federal court. Whereupon, McDonald, in order to avoid the removal, filed an amended petition, dismissing "without prejudice so much of his petition as sought to recover the $1200.00 under the non-contributory plan." The trial of that action resulted in a judgment against the Insurance Company for $2,000, and on appeal the judgment was affirmed. The Equitable Life Assurance Society v. McDonald,
On March 8, 1935, McDonald brought this action to recover on the $1,200 noncontributory certificate. The Insurance Company pleaded that, by virtue of the foregoing facts, McDonald's right to proceed was barred. To that plea the court overruled a demurrer, and McDonald having declined to plead further the action was dismissed. McDonald appeals.
In support of the judgment below appellee relies on the well-established rule that the entire claim arising out of a civil transaction, whether in the nature of a contract or tort, cannot be divided into separate and distinct claims and each form the basis of an action. The rule may be conceded, Cincinnati, N. O. T. P. R. Co. v. McGuire,
"Test of Separate Rights of Action. A complaint *Page 552 should contain a separate cause for each right of action disclosed by the facts therein stated. Whatever facts, if stated by themselves, would entitle one to relief by action, constitute a right of action, and should be separately stated as one cause of action. In determining whether a given statement of operative facts, investitive and culpatory, discloses but, one right of action or more than one, it is necessary only to determine whether more than one primary right has been invaded, or whether there has been more than one invasion of a single primary right. Leaving out of consideration the nature or kinds of relief sought, if but one right, however comprehensive, is asserted, and if but delict, however complex, is complained of, but one right of action is disclosed. If the facts disclose more than one distinct primary right of the plaintiff and invasion thereof by the defendant, whether by one delict or by several, or if there are so disclosed two or more distinct invasions by the defendant of a single primary right of the plaintiff, more than one right of action is disclosed, and these should be separately stated. This is a plain and simple test for the differentiation of causes of action.
"Whatever facts, if stated by themselves, would entitle one to relief by action, should be stated as separate cause of action. In actions for legal relief, the cause of action rests so completely upon the operative issuable facts, that if any one of them be denied, or not sustained by proof, recovery is thereby defeated. In such actions a cause of action is double if the denial of any one material operative fact in it will not controvert the whole claim asserted.
"Sometimes the same facts may be a requisite part of each of several causes of action; and sometimes one entire cause of action may be a necessary part of another. Such cases are to be distinguished from those in which a given state of facts will authorize more than one relief. In the latter class of cases, there should be but one cause of action; in the former, more than one."
Counsel for appellee insist that the group policy is the sole contract between the parties, and that under *Page 553
that policy McDonald has but one cause of action. Even though it be conceded that the group policy is controlling, and is the measure of the Insurance Company's liability, it does not necessarily follow that McDonald had only one cause of action. One policy may give rise to separate and distinct claims. Thus it was held in Rosso v. New York Life Insurance Company,
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial consistent with this opinion.
Whole court sitting.