207 A.D. 249 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1923
The City Equitable Fire Insurance Company was incorporated under English law and domiciled in England. Pursuant to section 27 of the Insurance Law (as added by Laws of 1919, chap. 382),' it obtained the right to do business in this State by depositing securities with the Superintendent of Insurance of New York as a trust fund and also made a deposit with the Superintendent of Insurance of Ohio and a further deposit in trust of other funds and securities with the Central Union Trust Company as trustee to pay all lawful claims of policyholders and creditors in the United States. The company becoming insolvent, proceedings were started in England to wind it up under the English Companies (Consolidation) Act of 1908 (8 Edw. 7, chap. 69, pt. 4). The Superintendent of Insurance of New York State took possession of the assets, including all these funds so deposited, as ancillary receiver, upon a petition which recited that “it is doubtful whether said United States branch will have assets and funds sufficient to pay all policyholders and creditors in the United States.” (See Ins. Law, § 63, subd. 5, added by Laws of 1912, chap. 217, as amd. by Laws of 1918, chap. 119.) For the purposes of this appeal, it may be assumed that all the creditors in the United States have been paid in full and that there remains a surplus in the hands of the Superintendent of Insurance. The City Equitable Fire Insurance Company had, previous to its insolvency, entered into certain reinsurance agreements with two Canadian corporations and the claims upon which the action is brought are based upon these contracts. These two Canadian creditors having assigned to a New York corporation, after the order of liquidation, the latter .now desires permission to attach this fund and apply it on account of these claims. The question which arises is whether this surplus should be forwarded by the Superintendent of Insurance to the English liquidator. Said assignee of the Canadian creditors claims, first, that these creditors have an absolute right to sue the debtor (whose corporate existence
While it is true that under the English winding-up act the title remains in the company, the courts of England have construed the provisions of the winding-up act as making the property of the company in the process of being wound up, trust property. In Matter of Oriental Inland Steam Co. (L. R. [1873-74] 9 Ch. App. Cas. 557, 560) the court said: “It is property affected by the Act of Parliament with an obligation to be dealt with by the proper officer in a particular way. Then it has ceased to be beneficially the property of the company; and, being so, it has ceased to be liable to be seized by the execution creditors of the company. * * * There were assets fixed by the Act of Parliament with a trust for equal distribution amongst the creditors. One creditor has, by means of an execution abroad, been able to obtain possession of part of those assets. The Vice-Chancellor was of opinion that this was the same as that of one cestui que trust getting possession of the trust property after the property had been affected with notice of the trust. If so, that cestui que trust must bring it in for distribution among the other cestuis que trust. So I, too, am of opinion, that these creditors cannot get any priority over their fellow-creditors by reason of their having got possession of the assets in this way. The assets must be distributed in England upon the footing of equality.”
The City Equitable Fire Insurance Company, Ltd., was organized under the Companies Act of the Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, which provides for the method of liquidation in case of insolvency, and, therefore, its provisions are presumed to be a part of the charter of said company, and hence have extra-territorial
“ The consequence necessarily follows, that in this Court these creditors cannot be allowed to obtain priority; and that they must give up, for the benefit of the creditors, what they have so obtained.”
It follows that the order appealed from should be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the motion denied, with ten dollars costs.
Clarke, P. J., Dowling, McAvoy and Martin, JJ., concur.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion denied, with ten dollars costs.