59 N.J. Eq. 414 | New York Court of Chancery | 1900
This is an appeal from the determination of the receiver of the brewery company rejecting the claim of the receiver of the People’s Mutual Live Stock Insurance Company.
The receiver of the live stock company claims that a valid assessment against the brewery company, amounting to $2,235.34, has been made either by himself or by the court of common pleas of Dauphin county, Pennsylvania. The facts, so far as it is necessary to state them, are these:
The live stock company carried on the business of insuring horses and mules. On May 2d, 1898, it was adjudged by the common pleas of Dauphin county to be insolvent. On May 18th, 1898, Frank B. Stockley was appointed receiver. On September 13th, 1898, it was decreed
‘‘That Frank B. Stockley, receiver of the within named corporation, be and is hereby authorized to levy and collect an assessment and assessments upon the outstanding policies of the company, in force on the dates of the respective losses according to the following schedule ”
Then follows a schedule showing the date of each loss, the number of the policy in respect of which the loss occurred, the amount of insurance, the “ total insurance in force and policies liable to pay the said loss” and the “pro rata assessment, covering liabilities, allowance for insolvency of policyholders and expenses of collection and receivership.”
In his petition, praying the court to make an assessment, the receiver states the total- liabilities, exclusive of the expenses of the receivership, at $18,767.54, and he avers that in view of the possibility that some of the assessments may be uncollectible, it is necessary to levy an assessment of $76,000 on all its policies for the purpose of paying its debts. This levy the court authorized.
Although the decree in term; authorizes the receiver to make the assessment, he appears to have regarded this decree as in itself an assessment; for on November 5th, 1898, he sent the following notice to Hill’s Union Brewery Company, Limited:
*416 “ Sib — You are hereby notified that on September 18th, 1898, the court of common pleas of Dauphin Co. made an assessment against you amounting to $2,235.34 for your proportion of the unpaid liabilities of the People’s Mutual Live Stock Insurance Co., of Pennsylvania, incurred while you were.a member thereof and while your insurance was in force. In pursuance of that decree you are requested to pay said amount to the receiver within thirty days from this date.
“Pbakk B. Stogeley,
“Receiver.”
The' amount, $2,235.34, is the aggregate sum assessed or alleged to have been assessed upon forty-four policies held or alleged to have been held by the brewery company.
Many objections were urged against the collection of this assessment. I shall mention only two.
(1) Thirty of the policies now said to be included in the assessment were issued on August 10th, 1895. One of their conditions is “ (4) that the holder of this policy agrees to pay any assessment that may be levied upon him or her from time to time as provided in the by-laws of this company.”
Article 4, section 3, of the by-laws, which are endorsed upon the policy and made part of the contract, reads thus:
“ The losses of this Co. are paid by assessments levied upon the members or policyholders, which will be made in exact proportion to the losses sustained. A full statement of the losses assessed for will be sent with each assessment.”
It is conceded that the only notice sent by the receiver was the one whose contents I have stated. This did not contain any statement of the losses assessed for. In Northampton Mutual Live Stock Insurance Co. v. Stewart, 10 Vr. 486, the policy provided that the tax (i. e., assessment) levied should be published in two newspapers and paid within sixty days from the day of publication. It was held by the court of errors that although the personal notice given in that case would apprise the assured of the fact of the levy better than the public notice, yet he could not be held liable until such public notice was given, for the reason that “it could be no injustice to the plaintiff to hold it bound to the observance of rules which, of its own volition, it had enacted for its guidance in dealing with its members.” The
“7. This policy shall he in force only so long as the insured animal remains in the possession of the insured. The holder * * * must immediately notify the company of the sale of any animal insured, and surrender the policy for cancellation, and the party to whom this policy is issued shall be liable for all assessments levied prior to the sale of the animal.”
A part of condition 8 reads: “All assessments due at the time of cancellation may be collected by law.” It is quite plain that if the contract is to govern, the assured completely performed his part of it when he paid all assessments levied prior to the sale. This the brewery company did. The assessments had been regularly levied at stated intervals. I know of no principle on which the liability can or should be extended beyond the contract. The liability of the policyholders of this company is unusually great. It does not appear to have been limited by anything short of payment of all losses and expenses. No premium note was given, and there is no provision restricting it to the value of the thing insured.
The receiver stands in the shoes of the company. Meley v. Whilaker, 22 Vr. 602. If the company must have given notice in the manner prescribed, so must the receiver.
It is said, however, that the original by-laws provided for their amendment or repeal, and that after the contract was entered into, the by-laws were revised and the clause in question modified by section 1, of article 6, which provides that
“ Whenever an assessment is levied, a written or printed notice shall be mailed to each member, directed to his or her post-office address as it appears on the books of the company, stating the amount of the said assessment and giving thirty days in which to pay the same.”
Now, in the first place, the notice is not a compliance with this by-law. It does not correctly state the amount of the assessment, but, as I have shown, an amount considerably in excess of what the receiver could lawfully levy. In the second place, condition 15 of the policy reads thus:
“ This policy of insurance is delivered upon the condition and agreement that the by-laws appearing upon the bach of the same shall form a part of it and shall be binding upon the holder in the same manner and form as though they appeared upon the face of this policy.”
It is true that by article 11 it is provided that “ these bylaws may be amended, changed, altered or repealed at any time by the consent of a majority of the board of directors.” But it is one thing for a member to agree, generally, that the by-laws may be changed by his agents, the directors, and quite another for him to agree that the by-laws so changed shall, ipso facto, become part of his already-completed contract. The court leans against giving by-laws a retrospective effect. Roxbury Lodge v. Hocking, 38 Atl. Rep. 693. Otherwise the contract would be
(2) Hill’s Union Brewery Company, Limited, is an English corporation. Its directors meet in London. For the more convenient transaction of business they, by deed, on October 17th, 1893, appointed Hamilton Fish Kean, of 33 Wall street, New York, to be the attorney of the company. They vested him with every power necessary or convenient for the transaction of the company’s business, carried on at Newark. After his appointment he exercised a general supervision over it, but retained Arthur He Gruchy as local manager. Mr. He Gruchy, he says, attended to all the local business — to the direct workings of the brewery. He authorized him, he says further, to insure against loss by fire, but did not authorize him to insure live stock. He knew that the live stock had been insured by He Gruchy, but did not know that it had been insured in a mutual company. The question is whether He Gruchy had authority to insure in such a company, or if not. whether his action was afterwards ratified.
In White v. Madison, 26 N. Y. 122, it was held that while a deputy sheriff had general authority to insure on behalf of his principal, the sheriff, he was not authorized to insure in a mutual company, for he would thereby make his principal an insurer of others. This decision is cited with approval in the latest text-books (1 May Ins. § IS//.; 1 Bidd. Ins. § 613), and I do not find that it has been questioned. It seems to be sound in principle and directly applicable to the present case. ■ The liability was, in the case cited, limited to the amount of the premium note, but in the case at bar there is, as I have said, 'no limit to it except the amount of the company’s indebtedness. If the brewery company were the only solvent member, it might be assessed for the entire amount which the live stock company
The more difficult question is whether De Gruchy’s action in this respect was ratified. It is not pretended that it was ratified by the company itself, but it is said that it was by Mr. Kean. The acts relied on are (1) the knowledge of Mr. Kean that the horses were insured; (2) the fact that quarterly statements were made to him, which, it is said, must have included the premiums paid to the live stock company and money received for three losses; (3) the countersigning by Mr. Kean of fourteen checks made payable to the order of the “ People’s Mutual Live Stock Insurance Company, of Pennsylvania.” None of these circumstances appear to me to warrant the inference of a ratification. It is true that Mr. Kean knew that the horses had been insured, but he did not know (and this is the controlling fact) that they had been insured in a mutual company. He says further that he did not examine the books himself, and that the quarterly statements furnished to him by an expert accountant did not disclose the fact of insurance in this company. As to the checks, he says that he would sign them sometimes in blank and sometimes after they were filled in, but that he never remembers to have seen the name of the People’s Mutual Company on them. The burden of proving ratification is on the appellant, and the person ratifying must have full knowledge of his rights and of all the material facts. Owings v. Hull, 9 Pet. 607; Titus & Scudder v. Cairo and F. Railroad Co., 17 Vr. 393, 420. It would be difficult to affirm that the evidence brings Mr. Kean within the operation of this rule. Whether the receiver may not have the right to recover back the money paid for losses, is a different question. Titus & Scudder v. Cairo and F. Railroad Co., supra; Stokes v. New Jersey Pottery Co., 17 Vr. 238.
It is insisted, however, that if there was neither original authority to insure nor ratification, still authority in De Gruchy to represent the corporation might be implied from the manner .in which he had been permitted to transact the business. Usual employment is evidence of the powers of an agent, and the prin
In the case at bar it was not shown that the agent had ever before insured in a mutual company, and so the instances from which such apparent authority'is to be deduced are those which refer to the live stock company alone. Were these of such a character as to warrant the deduction? Thirty-four policies were taken out on August 10th, 1895; one on December 5th, 1895; one on June 12th, 1896; two on June 18th, 1896 ; three on July 1st, 1896; five on November 22d, 1897, these being substituted for five of the policies issued on August 10th, 1895, and two on March 21st, 1898. Considering that the company was an English corporation with English directors, and considering further, the nature of the supervision and control exercised by Mr. Kean, it seems to me unreasonable to presume, contrary to the sworn fact, that the directors assented to this kind of insurance.
Blake v. Domestic Insurance Co., 38 Atl. Rep. 242, was also relied upon. It was argued that if the directors or Mr. Kean did not know of the acts of De Gruchy they ought to have known of them, and by the exercise of a moderate degree of diligence might have known of them.
In that case the endorsements of the treasurer were very numerous and effected a considerable number of persons, and the directors were plainly negligent or inattentive to what was going on. Here the instances are few and concern only the appellant. It is difficult, in view of the situation, to impute negligence. I think, therefore, that the policies are not binding.
It was argued that the decree directing the assessment was conclusive. But this decree itself provides that it “ shall not be construed to prevent any individual member from setting up any defence he may have to the collection of the same.” It is evident, therefore, that the question, in its general form, does
It may be added that there is considerable ambiguity about the language of the decree. It is not, in terms at least, in itself au assessment, although the receiver in the notice which he gave, in the case in hand, says that it is. It is apparently a direction to the receiver to make an assessment upon all policies between certain members. It does indeed first adjudge that the receiver shall levy and collect an assessment upon the policies “ in force on the dates of the respective losses; ” but then, in the table, it uses the following language: “Total insurance in force and policies liable to pay said loss. Nos. 46,926 to 55,180 inch,” &c. The receiver himself in his evidence repudiates the view that all policies between the members indicated are to be assessed. The decree, therefore, if his construction of it be correct, leaves open to him the determination of the question what policies are subject to assessment, and there is no judicial determination on the subject.
I think the petition of appeal should be dismissed.