36 Barb. 210 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1862
By the Court,
The plaintiff is the receiver of the Poughkeepsie Insurance Company, a corporation organized August 16, 1850, under the provisions of the act of the 10th of April, 1849, for the purpose of carrying on the business of insurance. The company was dissolved by an order
Two questions were made upon the argument: 1st. Whether the Poughkeepsie Insurance Company is subject to the act of the 25th June, 1853, to provide for the incorporation of insurance companies, and is to be governed by its provisions; and 2d. Whether the notes upon which this action is brought are within the prohibition of the 13th section of the act, and upon that account illegal and void.
The 5th section of the act of the 10th April, 1849, under which the plaintiff’s insurance company was organized, after putting a limitation upon the capital of companies organized in the counties of Hew York and Kings, and declaring of what such capital shall consist, declared that no mutual insurance company in any other county in the state should commence business until agreements had been entered into for insurance, the premiums on which shall amount to one hundred thousand dollars, and the notes received therefor payable within twelve months from the date thereof, which were to be considered as its capital, and negotiable and collectible for the purposes of paying losses which might accrue. The act did not require the payment of any cash capital, nor the payment of any part of the premiums upon insurance effected in cash, but the business might have been prosecuted upon a capital composed exclusively of the notes of those insuring their property with the company. The 15th section declared the duration of the charters formed or extended under the act, but the legislature therein reserved the right at any time to alter, amend or repeal the act, or dissolve and provide for closing up the business and affairs of any company formed under it. The business of insurance upon such a basis was an untried experiment in this state, and experi
That the four notes in controversy are within the prohibition of the statute, is too plain for argument. They were given upon contracts of insurance made after the act of the 25th of June, 1853, took effect. They are therefore illegal and void, and cannot be enforced against the defendant. This is not a case where a corporation has exceeded its powers in making a contract not authorized by its act of incorporation, or .in the purchase of property in which it was not authorized to deal. When a corporation has gone beyond its powers in the acquisition of property, or by entering into executory contracts beyond the scope of its corporate powers,
Emott, Brown and Scrugham, Justices.]
The counsel for the plaintiff refers to the act of the 9 th April, 1859,- to' amend the charter of the Poughkeepsie Fire Insurance Company, as’a ratification-of the act of the company in regard to the notes in controversy. The first section provides -for changing the name of the company; the second for the election of the directors ; the third authorizes the company, under its new name, to transact the business of insurance specified in certain sections of the act of April 10, 1849; and the fourth is designed to preserve the rights and continue" the liabilities of the company under its new designation. The act does not affect the question of the validity of the notes on which the plaintiff seeks to recover.
"Judgment of nonsuit should be entered against the plaintiff.