The plaintiff alleges that she, a widow with little education and scant means, had been induced to take out fifteen policies on the lives of herself, her children and grandchildren, by means of certain false and fraudulent representations made to her by the defendant’s agents that they were ten year tontine policies; that after paying, faithfully, her weekly assessments for ten years out of her scanty earnings, when she demanded performance it was refused, and she discovered that the policies did not mean what the defendant’s agents had represented to her, and she brings this action to recover the damages she has sustained.
“All the causes of actions arose out of transactions connected with the same subject of action,” Revisal, sec. 469, and hence were properly joined. Solomon v. Bates, 118 N. C., at p. 316. There, the same “subject of action” was the plaintiff’s loss of his deposits. Here, it is the plaintiff’s loss of her premiums, procured from her by a series of false representations, of the same purport and for the same end, made from time to time by the defendant’s agents. The same process of reasoning which would divide this action into fifteen actions, one upon each policy, would further subdivide each of those into an action on each monthly payment on each policy.
The same matter has been recently discussed and the authorities reviewed. Fisher v. Trust Co., 138 N. C., 224. Even if the false- representations as to each policy constituted a separate cause of action, and were not part of the same connected series of dealings, on page 239 of that case it is said, quoting from Judge Asile in King v. Farmer, 88 N. C., 22: “Where the different eauses of action are of the same
The order sustaining the demurrer must be
Reversed.