71 N.Y.S. 17 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1901
This case differs from that of L. D. Garrett v. McComb, N. Y. L. J., Nov. 30, 1900, only in the particular that there the complaint was dismissed at the end of the plaintiff’s case, while here judgment for the defendant is sought on demurrer to a complaint identical with that in the earlier suit. Garrett v. McComb was dismissed on two grounds. (1) The illegality of the agreement of which the purchase and sale of stock
Though some of the court’s statements are predicated on the facts proved by the plaintiff, an analysis of the complaint before me, which is to be taken as true, justifies every essential conclusion.
It appears from the pleading that the board of directors of the Traders’ Fire Insurance Company, of which the defendant was a stockholder, resolved to reinsure its fire risks and to liquidate the affairs of the' company or to sell the stock held by-the individual stockholders. Pursuant to such resolution the board requested the plaintiff to submit to it a proposition for the liquidation of the company and for the purchase by the plaintiff of its stock. A statement was submitted to the plaintiff purporting to set forth the assets and liabilities of the Traders’ Company. On its face this statement showed an impairment of the.capital amounting to almost forty per cent. Relying on the statement and the representation of the directors the plaintiff made a proposition for the purchase of the capital stock, provided, not less than sixty-five per cent, should be transferred, agreeing to pay either - twenty-five dollars cash per share, absolutely, or forty dollars, less such proportionate sum as it should be obliged to pay on account of outstanding fire losses, not included in the statement submitted and for some reason not even placed upon the books of the company, but which losses the plaintiff specifically agreed to pay in any event. In a circular letter addressed to the stockholders the directors notified them that all of the risks of the company had been reinsured, and, that taking measures for the “ winding up of the company, * * * and after careful consideration of the condition of the company ” negotiations had been had with the plaintiff resulting in the offer already stated. The defendant accepted the plaintiff’s offer of twenty-five dollars per share, and received two thousand dollars for his eighty shares of stock. The plaintiff now claims that the statement was false and untrue, that in place of there being only a forty per cent, impairment of the capital stock “ the funds repre; senting said capital stock were entirely exhausted and the assets were wholly insufficient to meet the liabilities of said Insurance Company to its creditors ”, and that the company as of a date anterior to the institution of any negotiations with the plaintiff was
The entire agreement between the plaintiff and the Traders’ Insurance Company or its stockholders is not in terms averred. Emphasis is merely laid on the item of the purchase and sale of the stock, and of the assumption by the plaintiff of that portion of the outstanding fire losses not stated on the books of the company. But the entire pleading with its permissible inference leaves little doubt as to its general nature. Reduced to its lowest terms the complaint resolves itself into a scheme to end, through the conscious instrumentality of the plaintiff, the political life of the Traders’ Insurance Company at a time when it was insolvent in law, which the plaintiff knew, and insolvent in fact, which it claims it did not know, and as to which it asserts the false representations.
The complaint discloses much more than an agreement for a mere purchase and sale of stock. The directors not only resolve to reinsure all the risks of the company in itself, the clearest indication of an intention to abandon business — but determine to “ liquidate ” its affairs. The plaintiff then alleges that it was. requested to submit a proposition for the “ liquidation of said Traders’ Insurance Company and for the purchase * * * of the stock.” In its general sense liquidation means “ the act or operation of winding up the affairs of a firm or company by getting in the assets, settling with its debtors and. creditors, and apportioning the amount of profit or loss.” 3 Cent. Dict. 3474. There can be no doubt, under the unmistakable inference of the pleader’s allegations, that it accepted the proposition to liquidate and to purchase the stock. It alleges the details concerning the stock transactions, and omits allegations of the liquidation agreement, except to the extent already stated. It is clear, however, that the offer to liquidate was- accepted, and that both the reinsurance —■ on its face, by the Traders’ Company itself — and the stock deal were incidents of the general scheme. Were there any doubt about this it would be set at rest by the circular letter to the stockholders in which the plaintiff’s alternative offer is submitted as one of the necessary measures for the “ winding up ” of the company.
Nor was the plaintiff an innocent party. It was apprised'
It is quite true that the Traders’ Company was not a public nor even a quasi-public corporation. It owed no duty to the public like a railroad or a telegraph company or similar concerns, nor did it exercise any peculiar and exceptional privileges, so that in the event of its refusal to carry on its business it might be compelled to fulfill its duty to the public by mandamus. Bath Gas Light Co. v. Claffy, 151 N. Y. 24, 34. It is, nevertheless, erroneous to say that its official acts and contracts have no relation to the public or may not affect that public prejudicially. The elaborate provisions on our statute books furnish the completest answer to such a proposition. In its relations to the public it stands on quite a different footing from an ordinary manufacturing corporation, which has relations ordinarily only with the limited portion of the public requiring its particular commodity. It is hardly too broad a proposition, however, to lay down that every property-owner is an insurer against fire. So large a proportion of the community has dealings with insurance companies that the Legislature has seen fit to enact laws governing this class of business as distinguished from others. The generality, magnitude and diversity of interest involved have led to the imposition of rigorous conditions in exchange for the privileges granted under the charter. The stringent State supervision and the many safeguards embodied in the Insurance Law, conditions precedent to corporate origin and continuance, have the one aim in view, the adequate protection of the insuring public. When an absolutely arbitrary test as to solvency is laid down as it is in section 41, the object in view can be but the single one, namely, that a company failing to meet it, independent of any question as to the actual relation between assets and liabilities,, shall not. be allowed to hold itself out to the public as a vital, going concern.
The policy of the law is that such a concern shall cease busi
Demurrer sustained.