The opinion of the court was delivered by
These appeals bring up for review parts of the decree made in pursuance of the opinion reported in 16 Stew. Eq. 522.
The question to be first considered relates to the obligation resting upon the members of the corporation to contribute to the fund for the payment of its debts.
The charter (P. L. of 1859 p. 144) enacts that all persons who shall insure with the corporation shall thereby become members thereof, and, before receiving their policies, shall pay such sum of money and deposit their promissory note or notes for such sum of money as shall be determined upon by the directors; that the corporation shall have a lien on the property insured to the amount of the deposit note or notes given for the insurance ; that the notes shall be paid at such times and in such manner as the by-laws may determine, and that the corporation may maintain suits at law or in equity for the collection of the notes or any part thereof. There are no other provisions looking toward individual liability, and although the corporation is styled a mutual insurance company, it is plain that the mutual responsibility of the members was designed to extend no' further than their deposit notes should require.
It is therefore evident, that each member is to contribute such a proportion of his deposit note as will be necessary to make up the amount of the losses in that class of insurance to which his note belongs, and a just share of the expenses of the company, and that his responsibility then ends. This accords with the-principle upon which the business of insurance is ordinarily conducted. The property to be insured is classified with reference to the risk of loss to which each species is subjected, and the premiums charged for insuring the property in each class are such as will, in the aggregate, meet the losses in that class, a fair share of all the expenses and a profit to the insurer. When, as in the present company, there is mutual insurance, a profit is not to be sought for, but if nevertheless realized, it must, according to the charter, be returned to the members.
There are reported cases in which it has been held that the amount of the deposit- notes given to mutual insurance companies was absolutely recoverable by the companies without any formal assessment, and that, besides, each member was liable to-an assessment for such sum as was necessary to pay losses upon the policies issued. These decisions turn upon peculiar provisions, either in the statutes or in the by-laws to which the deposit notes refer. Long Pond Mutual Fire Ins. Co. v. Houghton,
It appears that on July 28th, 1885, the directors of the company resolved to cease writing policies, on account of the unpromising outlook for future business, and decided that two and •one-half per cent, on their premium notes would pay all existing fire obligations and necessary expenses, and therefore instructed the secretary to require a payment of two and one-half per cent, •on all premium notes on policies offered for cancellation. In alleged pursuance of this resolution, the secretary surrendered many premium notes on receipt of two and one-half per cent. It now appears that two and one-half per cent, of the fire notes will not equal the fire losses and expenses, and the question was raised in the court below whether the surrendered notes are subject to further assessment. It having been decreed that they ■are, John M. Moore and D. Wilson Moore appeal therefrom. We think the decree is right.
The resolution above quoted did not direct the secretary to surrender the notes, but only to require a certain payment upon them as a preliminary to the cancellation of the policies. Section 14 of the by-laws then became applicable, which provides •that:
“When a policy is surrendered to be canceled or renewed, the secretary shall endorse the date of such surrender thereon and on the premium note. But he shall not deliver the premium note until the expiration of twenty days •thereafter, and until a proportionate part of all. prior assessments and losses are .paid.”
The purport of this is, that while the surrender of the policy will terminate the membership of the holder and fix the period after which losses will not affect him, yet his premium note must be retained to secure a due proportion, not only of prior assessments, but also of prior losses. The payment of the due proportion of the prior assessment of two and one-half per cent, did
The next question involves a consideration of the rights of those policy-holders who have sustained losses on the property insured. When the corporate assets shall have been collected in the method above indicated, are all these policy-holders, whether they were insured against loss by sea or loss by fire, to divide the whole fund ratably, or are those who have suffered loss by fire to be confined to the fund raised from the notes given for fire insurance, and those who have suffered marine loss to be confined to the fund raised from notes given for marine insurance ? This question must be answered by the contract.
According to the corporate charter, the contract of insurance-is to be made by the company itself with each person insured, and not mutually among the members of the company, and is to be ascertained by the policy which the company shall issue. This is explicitly declared by the sixth section of the charter, which enacts: ,
“ That all policies or contracts founded thereon * * * shall be binding and obligatory upon said company, and the company shall be liable for all loss or damage sustained, agreeably to and on such terms and conditions as shall be contained in the policy.”
Nothing in the charter refers to any other evidence than the policy, touching the indemnity which the assured is to obtain. Under this charter policies in various forms have been issued, but they all indicate that the corporation alone is the insurer, and that it is to be held generally and as an entirety, without
It is, however, contended, that, inasmuch as the by-laws have always provided that the revenues derived from marine insurance should be appropriated exclusively to the payment of marine losses, and those from fire insurance exclusively to the payment of fire losses (except that each class should bear a fair share of the expenses), therefore the rights of the policy-holders must be thus restricted. This contention is maintained on two grounds: first, that the policy-holders, being members of the corporation, are, ipso facto, bound by its by-laws; second, that having been informed of the existence of the by-law when they received their policies, they are estopped from denying to it the effect claimed.
The general proposition, that the members of a mutual insurance company are bound by its lawful by-laws, is not applicable to the case in hand. The facts, with which we have now to do> are these: That the company is empowered to make contracts of insurance, which, according to its charter, shall be binding upon it agreeably to the terms contained in the policy; that it' tenders such a contract, set out in a policy, to an individual not a member, and asks his concurrence in the contract, stating to him (as the charter does) that if he accepts he will become a member of the company; and thereupon he does accept. If, under these circumstances, it were held that the company was bound as an insurer, not according to the policy, but only according to an inconsistent by-law, then it would be evident that the by-law had overridden the charter, for the charter directs that the company be bound agreeably to the policy. It would also be evident that the company might impose ad libitum on those seeking insurance from it, for however desirable the thing accepted had been, the thing received would be what the company had chosen to make it. But it may be said that the applicant for insurance
But, in the next place, it is a feature of the case stated, “that it was the general practice and custom of the officers and agents of the company to inform applicants for mutual policies that the fire department and the marine department were kept separate and independent,” and therefore it is insisted, that the losses in these several departments are payable only out of their respective funds.
If the exclusion from the contract of the by-law now in question depended solely on the estoppel against the company, then the practice thus stated would, for every case in which it was followed, prevent such exclusion. But I think it does not de
It also appears that after the first five years of the company’s •existence, the actual management of the company in the payment of its losses indicated, what its policies declared, that this provision of the by-laws was in effect abrogated, for since that period the revenues of the marine department have been constantly used, to an amount now reaching $42,000, to pay losses in the fire department. This practice makes it reasonable to believe that the actual understanding of the parties corresponded with the legal import of their written contract, to the effect that, while the individual responsibility of the members on their deposit notes was measured by the losses in the respective departments, the responsibility of the company- on its policies was general and unrestricted.
“ In payment of the creditors and distribution of the funds of any such [insolvent] company, the creditors shall be paid proportionally to the amount of their respective debts, excepting mortgage and judgment creditors, when the judgment has not been by confession for the purpose of preferring creditors.”
■ In considering this statute, it must be noted that no rule is expressly laid down for the payment of mortgage and judgment creditors; they are simply excepted from the rule prescribed for creditors generally. What rule should be applied to them is therefore left to implication. With regard to mortgage creditors, the only defensible implication seems to be, that they are entitled to preference merely to the extent of their liens; that so far as their debts are left unsatisfied after their liens are exhausted, they are but general creditors. No rational basis for any greater preference than this can be found, either in the general principles of the law or in the legislation of this State. When in this statute the words “mortgage creditors” were employed, there was no misuse of terms, if the idea to be conveyed was limited to so much of the debt as the pledge represented. But with regard to judgment creditors, the case is somewhat different. The entire debt is as truly a judgment debt as is any portion of it. At the common law, and in certain circumstances under our statutes, judgment debts as such are preferred, without reference to any specific lien under them. These considerations might warrant the implication that, in the section now under review, they are reserved from the class of general creditors in order that this complete preference may be accorded to them. But, in the opinion of the majority of this court, it is more consonant with the terms of this section, which place mortgage and judgment creditors so closely together, and more in accord with judicial views now prevalent, to hold that judgment creditors likewise shall be preferred only so far as they have acquired liens; that
The decree appealed from should be reversed, and a decree entered in accordance with this opinion.
Deoree unanimously reversed.
