29 Ind. 557 | Ind. | 1868
Whitman, as receiver of the assets of the Sinnissippi Insurance Company, appointed by the Marion Civil Circuit Court, sued Howard on a premium note executed by him to said insurance company. A demurrer was filed to the complaint, which the court overruled, and the defendant refusing to answer over, judgment was rendered for the amount assessed on the note. Howard appeals.
The question of the sufficiency of the complaint as a cause of action is the only one in the case. It appears by the complaint that the defendant, Howard, on the 20th of December, 1865, in consideration of a policy of insurance issued to him' by said insurance company, executed to the company the note sued on, for one hundred dollars, payable in such portions and at such times as the directors of the company might, agreeably to their by-laws and the laws of the State, require, to pay their losses, &c.; that in December, 1866, Itoss and Gluggish recovered a judgment in the Marion Civil Circuit Court against said insurance company, on a policy of insurance issued to them by said company, for losses by fire of the property insured, for the sum- of $1,650, on which an execution was subsequently issued to the sherift'of Marion county, and was by him afterwards returned, “ no property found whereon to levy;” that afterwards, in July, 1867, said Ross Cluggish instituted an action in said Marion Civil Circuit Court, charging, among other things, that said company had no property subject to execution, and ■was wholly insolvent and without the means or the ability to procure them to carry on the business of insurance; that the officers of the company had fraudulently used and appropriated the funds of the company derived fx-om assessments oxr premium notes for the payment of losses, to the payment of their salaries and other incidental expenses of the company, in violation of their chai'ter; and wex-e other
It is claimed by the appellant that the court had no power to appoint a receiver under the facts presented in the case, or to oi’der an assessment on the premium notes of the company, and that the proceedings are, therefore, void. We cannot sustain that view of the case. Section 199 of the code, 2 G-. & H, 151, provides that “ a receiver may be apppointed by the court in the following cases: * * * 5. When a corporation has been dissolved, or is in imminent danger of insolvency, or has forfeited its corporate rights.” Hero, the complaint of Boss §• Glacjgish
It is also urged that the assessment made by the court was larger than was necessary to pay the liabilities of the company to which the premium notes were liable, and was not, therefore, justified by the facts of the case. A report of the receiver, made to the court, of the amount of liabiliities of the company for losses, and the condition of the premium notes held by the company, is in the record, from which it appears, that of $180,000 of premium notes found by the receiver, at least forty per cent, are deemed insolvent and worthless, and that the total assessment ordered by the court would not produce, from the solvent notes, more than $36,600. The unpaid losses were $30,830 97, all bearing interest from August, 1867. The expenses of the suit, and the pay and expenses of the receiver, together with all other incidental expenses in collecting the assessment, and settling up the affairs of the company, are necessarily chargeable to that fund, there being no other.. "We think the assessment was not unreasonable, and that the amount realized therefrom will not, probably, exceed the liabilities and expenses to which it is applicable; but, at all
The judgment is affirmed, with costs.