141 Misc. 231 | City of New York Municipal Court | 1931
The Motor Car Mutual Fire Insurance Company was a mutual insurance company, operating qnder article 10-A of the Insurance Law of this State. It was placed in liquidation by an
On February 19, 1929, a summons was served on defendants North Side Lumber Company, Incorporated, and Turbow, and on the defendant Lichtenstein on March 19, 1929. In each case the defense of the Statute of Limitations is interposed and relied on, the contention being that the tolling of the statute is to be reckoned from March 7, 1922, the date of liquidation, and not from April 2,1923, the date and entry of the order confirming the amount of the assessment previously fixed by the Superintendent of Insurance.
The sole question involved is when the cause of action accrued.
Section 48 of the Civil Practice Act, so far as relevant, provides that (1) An action upon a contract obligation or liability express or implied, except a judgment or sealed instrument, and (2) an action to recover upon a liability created by statute, except a penalty or forfeiture, must be commenced within six years after the cause of action has accrued. If the cause of action accrued on March 7, 1922, the date of liquidation, and not on April 2, 1923, the date and entry of the order of confirmation of the amount of the assessment previously fixed by the Superintendent of Insurance, clearly the Statute of Limitations is operative and bars the actions. But I am unable to concur in the contention of the defendants. I think it inconsequential, so far as the tolling of the
Section 63 of the Insurance Law (as amd.) authorizes the Superintendent of Insurance, under the supervision of the court, to liquidate insurance companies. (Matter of Casualty Company of America, 244 N. Y. 443.) This was formerly accomplished by receivers specially appointed, but is now delegated to the Superintendent of Insurance (Matter of Casualty Company of America, supra), subject, however, to the approval of the court. The cautious phrases employed are indicative enough that the Superintendent does not act entirely independently and without restriction, but, rather, that his acts must receive the approbation of the court before they become final, conclusive and binding. Thus, in subdivision 3 of section 63 (as amd. by Laws of 1918, chap. 119), while it provides that the liquidation may be made by and under the direction of the Superintendent, it is to be observed that he may only deal with the property and business of the corporation, “ as the court or the justice * * * may direct.” And by subdivision 6 thereof (as amd. by Laws of 1912, chap. 217) he may engage assistants, but their compensation and all expenses of conducting the liquidation are “ subject to the approval of the court.” Receivers, conservators or liquidating agents are of but one category, whatever the nomenclature employed, and the Superintendent of Insurance, as a liquidator, occupies but the status of a receiver; indeed, he is the substitute and successor of the receiver heretofore specially appointed in such liquidation 'proceedings. (Matter of Casualty Company of America, supra.) It is a general rule that the acts of receivers, or those occupying that position, are subject to the approval of the court (53 C. J. 139, 143, 144), and this power of supervision by the court is a necessary incident to its proper direction of the course of liquidation. (Matter of Casualty Company of America, supra.)
Section 63, subdivision 3, of the Insurance Law provides that the Superintendent “ shall be vested by operation of law with title to all of the property, contracts and rights of action of such corporation as of the date of the order so directing them to liquidate.”
It is this language of the statute which gives rise to the dispute as to when the tolling of the statute begins. But the phrases that the Superintendent becomes vested with “ rights of action,” “ as of the date of the order ” directing liquidation and that “ the rights and liabilities ” of “ policyholders, stockholders and members * * * shall * * * be fixed as of the date of the entry of the order directing the liquidation,” mean and refer, I think, to rights and liabilities on that date actually existing and matured, and not those which can only thereafter come into being, resulting from subsequent approval and confirmation by the court of acts previously asserted or done by the Superintendent.
Section 346 of the Insurance Law provides for a fund to pay losses, and that if the corporation is not possessed of admitted assets above its unearned premiums, sufficient for the payment of the incurred losses and expenses, as estimated or determined, it shall make an assessment for the amount needed to pay such losses and expenses upon the members liable to assessment therefor, in proportion to their several liability, and shall not be less than an amount equal to twice the amount of, and in addition to, the cash premium provided for in the policy. The only funds to pay insurance losses come from the premiums or assessments. (Beha v. Weinstock, supra.) This liability is secondary and contingent upon an insufficiency in the assets of the corporation to pay its debts.
The Superintendent, when he took over the company for liquidation, pursuant to the order of liquidation, became vested with all the rights the company had on that date, and such other and additional rights as inured to him by virtue of sections 63 and 346 of the Insurance Law. Pursuant thereto, he prepared a .report showing an assessment was necessary in the amount recommended for approval of the court. This proceeding in the Supreme Court for an assessment was, in effect, a proceeding to accomplish two purposes: First, to obtain approval of the report of the necessity for an assessment, and second, if found necessary, to definitely fix the amount which the policyholders would be required to pay. Until these things were done, which could only be evidenced by an order of approval or confirmation, the cause of action against the policy
Upon the fixing of the assessment by the Superintendent, as liquidator, the'defendants’ obligation was to pay this amount, but only provisionally, subject to approval by the court; but until then he was under no legal necessity to pay anything until his obligation to pay had become complete; and until then the legal effect of the assessment by the Superintendent was but a mere naked assertion. The obligation to pay did not become complete until the assessment was ratified by the court, and the cause of action did not accrue until the order of confirmation was made. “ The time when ‘ the cause of action has accrued,’ as that term is used in those provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure limiting the periods within which actions must be commenced, means the time when the plaintiff first became enabled to maintain the particular action in question.” (Cary v. Koerner, 200 N. Y. 253, 259.)
Under the provisions of the statute, the acts of the Superintendent being subject to the approval of the court, the fixing of the assessment by Turn required confirmation to be effective, and, hence, it did not ripen into an established fact and into a definite sum until that time. Therefore, the assessment “'became a legal claim against the defendant at the date of the confirmation of the report of the liquidator and of his assessments made therein.” (Conway v. Kaupp, 139 Misc. 154.) In Conway v. Plank (136 Misc. 403) the court employs the expression “ the right of action for the assessment did not accrue until the assessment was determined and levied,” and it is said this view is inconsistent with that in Conway v. Kaupp (supra), holding that the assessment becomes a legal claim against the defendant at the date of the confirmation of the report of the liquidator and of his assessments made therein. I think, however, that the court intended in Conway v. Plank (supra) that the determination and levy of the assessment was subject to the approval of the court, though not so expressed; this is seemingly so from the view so expressly stated in the later case of Conway v. Kaupp (supra), in which view I concur.
To my mind the conflict occurs from the omission to recognize that there is a broad distinction between the maturing of a liability as a prerequisite to the successful prosecution of an action for its enforcement, and the mere attaching of the liability itself. As to accrual of a cause of action, it is the general rule that it does not accrue within the Statute of Limitations until the plaintiff has a right of action. (Cary v. Hatch, 91 Misc. 269.) Here, the Superintendent’s act of fixation of the assessment merely attached a provisional liability, which did not mature into a liability until
The actions, therefore, are not barred by the Statute of Limitations, and plaintiff is, accordingly, entitled to judgment.