10 Mo. App. 150 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1881
delivered the opinion of the court.
The Mound City Life Insurance Company, on February 19, 1874, chauged its name to the “ St. Louis Life Insurance Company,” and on January 28, 1876, again changed its name to the “Columbia Life Insurance Company.” The name by which it is called is unimportant; the company remained the same. For the purposes of this opinion the company will be spoken of throughout by the name which it last assumed, and which it now holds.
In the cause whose title is set out above, the Circuit Court is administering, through- its receiver, the assets of the Columbia Life Insurance Company. The assets of the Atlas, Missouri, and De Soto Life Insurance Companies are also being administered in the same court by its receiver, Theodore W. Heman. Heman was directed by the court to
The “Act for the Incorporation and Regulation of Life Assurance Companies” (Acts 1869, p. S3; Wag. Stats. 745, sects. 21, 22) provides (sects. 20', 21) that “ No company organized under this act, or reorganized under the sixteenth section thereof, shall commence or carry on business until such company has deposited with the superintendent of the insurance department, for the security of its policyholders, the sum of one hundred thousand dollars, in stocks, or in notes or bonds secured by mortgages or deeds of trust of the description mentioned in the nineteenth section of this act; such stocks to consist only of bonds or treasury notes of the United States, or bonds of the State of'Missouri, and in all cases to be, or to be made, equal to stock producing six per cent per annum, and not- to be received at a rate above
In compliance with this act the Atlas Mutual Life Insurance Company, on July 1, 1869, deposited $100,000. This deposit remained in the department, and was there on April 24, 1872, when the Atlas, having a large number of policies in force, entered into a contract of reinsurance with the Columbia Life Insurance Company, and sold all its business and assets to that company, the Columbia Life agreeing to assume and discharge all the liabilities of the Atlas. The Atlas at once ceased to do business, turned over to the Columbia Life all the assets under its control, and desired to transfer the deposit of $100,000, but the superintendent of insurance would not permit the transfer; the superintendent had at that date prepared blank forms for orders to withdraw from the department securities deposited under the act for the benefit of policy-holders, and also forms for proposals to deposit such securities, and had made a rule, which from that time was adhered to, that these forms should be signed and the formalities indicated complied with, in every case of withdrawing or depositing securities. In accordance with these rules and blank forms on the deposit of securities, the company desiring to deposit furnished a list in writing of the securities, and appointed in writing an agent to accomplish the deposit, who was obliged to certify in writing that, as agent, he was present at the vault of the Safe Deposit Company in St. Louis; that, with his assistance, at a date
Section 23 of the insurance law (Wag. Stats. 745) provides that.the superintendent of insurance shall require each company to keep up its deposits to full value ; that he shall, upon the receipt of the securities, at once make a special deposit of the same, and that they shall remain as security of the policy-holders so long as the company depositing shall remain solvent; but it further provides that, so long as such company is solvent, the superintendent shall permit it to collect the interest and dividends on its securities, and, from time to time, to withdraw any such securities, on depositing in lieu thereof securities of the same*value and kind mentioned in the section concerning these deposits; such withdrawal not to be made without written orders of the president and secretary of the company.
After the execution of the reinsurance contract between the Columbia and the Atlas, and the refusal of the department to permit the transfer of the deposits, the president and secretary of the Atlas signed and sealed the blank forms
On July 31, 1875, the Columbia owned and occupied a building on the northwest corner of Sixth and Locust Streets, St. Louis, called the Insurance Building. On that day, in pursuance of a resolution of the executive committee authorizing the vice-president of the Columbia to place a mortgage on this property for $400,000 for the purpose of covering deposits in the insurance department, a deed of trust in the nature of a mortgage was executed by the proper officer of the Columbia, conveying this property to a trustee to secure forty notes of $10,000 each, dated July 31, 1875, payable on demand to the order of the vice-president, and signed by the vice-president, A. M. Britton. The notes bear interest at six per cent, and were indorsed by Britton to the order of the superintendent of insurance.
On August 9, 1875, the superintendent of insurance permitted the Columbia, by the use of the blanks of the Atlas before referred to, to withdraw the securities of the Atlas on deposit according to law, for the purpose of using the same, and to deposit in place of them ten of these notes secured upon this building, which, as has been said, has been since sold under this mortgage for less than three-fourths of this encumbrance.
On January 19, 1878, the Atlas was dissolved and a receiver appointed by the Circuit Court. On October 17,
These notes have come into the hands of Heman, the receiver of the Atlas, since its dissolution, and the receiver insists in this proceeding that the deposit made by the reinsured company, the Atlas, became a trust-fund that should be applied, in the first instance, to the satisfaction of the claims of the policy-holders of the company making the original deposit, and that the contract of reinsurance has not changed the character of the trust. This is the contention of all the four reinsured companies represented in this proceeding by Heman and Bent, as receivers. And so the court held. The intervening receivers contend that the policy-holders have a special lien upon the deposit in the form which it has now assumed. The receiver of the Columbia holds, on the other hand, that, by virtue of the reinsurance contracts, the Columbia has become responsible for the debts of all the four companies, but that these debts are to be paid without priority out of the assets of the Columbia, and that these deposits are part of the assets of the Columbia.
The facts as to transfer of assets, agreement to discharge liabilities, deposit and change of securities, are, in the case of the Mound City and Missouri Mutual, substantially the same as in the case of.the Atlas. Both of these companies, also, at the date of their transfer of assets to the Columbia, had a large number of policies outstanding, and ceased to transact business from the date of transfer of assets to the Columbia. The De Soto Mutual Life Insurance Company complied with the law of the State, and deposited with the superintendent of insurance, on June 26, 1869, securities worth $100,000; it continued to transact business until July, 1871, when it had a large number of policies in force, at which date it agreed with the Republic Insurance Company to transfer to that company all its assets, not including the deposit of $100,000, in considera
No notice was given to their policy-holders of the intention to reinsure, by any of the four companies. Large numbers of the policy-holders of the Atlas, Missouri, De Soto, and St. Louis Mutual retained their policies, refused to surrender them, and presented them as claims before the referees appointed when their companies were dissolved.
Then, at the date of the contracts of reinsurance, each of the four reinsuring companies had deposited in the insurance department securities worth'$100,000, according to law ; these were all withdrawn about August 1,1875, by the Columbia Life, to which company the assets of the reinsuring companies had been transferred, and the notes secured by deed of trust on the Insurance Building were deposited in lieu of these securities — notes to the amount of $100,000 being deposited in the name of each reinsured company. These notes are in the hands of the receivers of the reinsured companies, and it became necessary in this proceeding to determine whether the proceeds realized from the sale ought to be distributed pro raía among the policyholders and general creditors of the Columbia Life, as being general assets of that company, all policy-holders of the five companies to share alike, or whether the policy-holders of the four reinsured companies who have established claims against the assets of their companies are entitled to priority out of the fund. The Columbia is confessedly responsible for all debts of the four companies which have sold out to that corporation; but the receivers of the four reinsured companies claim that the deposit, and the proceeds of the notes which replaced the deposit, so far as these proceeds will go, ought to be applied first to payment of policyholders who retained their policies in the original companies. It appeared that claims of policy-holders who had not surrendered to the reinsuring company had been established before the referees appointed to pass upon claims against
The Circuit Court held that the proceeds of these notes ought to be treated as a special fund for the benefit of the policy-holders of the companies by whom the deposits, for which the notes were substituted, were made; that the receiver of the Columbia ought to retain the share of these policy-holders who have retained their policies against the original companies and proved their demands against the Columbia, and distribute this to the parties in interest; that the portion belonging to the policy-holders of the re-insured companies who have proved their claims only against these companies, ought to be paid to the receivers of these companies respectively ; and that, as the deposits involved in the controversy were made for a special purpose only, when the claims of the policy-holders who have had their claims allowed are discharged, the surplus of each deposit will remain the property of the Columbia and be retained by the receiver of that company. If the deposit in behalf of either company is insufficient to pay policy-holders of that company, the fund to be divided pro rata, and a portion of the fund to be retained by the receiver of the Columbia to pay policy-holders proving against that company, :and a portion paid over to the receiver of the company anaking the deposit.
A decree was rendered accordingly, from which the receiver of the Columbia appeals.
That the $100,000 deposited by a life-insurance company with the superintendent of the insurance department, under the statutory provisions above cited, is a trust-fund for the benefit of the policy-holders of the company making such
If the original securities deposited were affected with a special trust, we do not see how it can be seriously contended that the notes which, by means that we need not characterize, were made to take the place of this fund, were, by the fact of this change, discharged of this trust and merged into the general assets of the company. These notes, after their deposit, were evidently held precisely as the funds that they were intended to replace were held, and upon the same trust.
It is said that it was ultra vires of the Columbia Life to make this deed of trust, and that there is no provision of law for the deposit by a company of its own obligations ; that this deed of trust recites that it was to secure the policy-holders of the Columbia, and that the statute recognizes no deposit with the department except that made for the security of the policy-holders depositing. The plea of ultra, vires ought not, in this case, to be allowed for the purpose of accomplishing a wrong. The notes and deed of trust were made that they might be substituted for the
If the securities deposited with the insurance department are by law a special deposit for the benefit of the policyholders ©f the company originally making the deposit, this is by virtue of a public act of which all parties dealing with these companies have notice. A transfer of all the assets of the reinsured companies to the Columbia Life could not therefore destroy the character of this fund, or transfer it to the Columbia Life discharged of any trust or lien impressed upon it by law to be held as part of its general assets, and for its general creditors. The companies could only pass such interest in their assets as they themselves had; and the Columbia Life took subject to all claims of third parties of which it had notice. It could not apply the deposit fund of the Atlas to the payment of creditors of the De Soto; nor can it apply the special deposit of any one of these companies to the general purposes of its own business without a manifest violation of law. There is nothing in the terms of any one of the contracts of reinsurance from which it can be gathered that either party to any one of these contracts contemplated a transfer of the special funds discharged of the trust impressed upon it by' law. The fund in each case was kept separate after the
There is nothing in the claim made by the receivers of the reinsured companies that is at all inconsistent with the transfer which these companies had made of their assets to the Columbia, or that involves a rescission of the contracts by which that transfer was made.
The policy-holders of each reinsured company could not, without their consent, be divested of their equitable right to have this fund held and kept up as a security for the payment of their policies. They were not consulted about the matter; and whilst some of them subsequently surrendered their policies and took out new policies in the reinsuring company, a large number of the original policyholders retained their existing policies. These paid premiums to the Columbia after the reinsurance, and some o£. them have proved claims against the Columbia, but we cannot see how such facts can be construed into a waiver of the claims of these policy-holders against the special deposit made and kept up as security for their policies. The policy-holder is entitled to the securities which the statute gives him, on the faith of which he took out his policy. He still holds the original insurer, and may sue on the original promise, and assert his claims to the fund that the original
The policy-holders in paying premiums to the reinsuring company might well rely upon the securities carefully set apart by law for their benefit, and on the faith of the existence of which they took out their policies, and in which they could not lose their interest without their consent. The policy-holder, if he wished to keep alive his policy, was bound to pay his premiums, and there was no one to whom he could pay them except the officer of the reinsuring company. He was not bound to tender his premium to the officers of the reinsured company, and to demand the surrender-value of his policy. He had a right to keep his policy alive, and the Columbia was bound by its contract of reinsurance to receive his premium, and to pay the policy, if it became due by death, out of its general assets, having received a valuable consideration for so doing. The policyholder could forfeit no right by paying his premium to the person designated to receive it by the company issuing his policy. The payment of premiums to the reinsuring company on a policy issued by the reinsured company could not constitute a novation. Strict proof will be required before it is held that a creditor of a company under a special contract has accepted the liability of another com
In England (In re Fam. End. Soc., L. R. 5 Ch. 118), company A., a life-insurance company, granted an annuity to the petitioner, charged upon the assets of the company. Afterwards the company was dissolved by resolution of the shareholders, and its assets transferred to company B. By the deed of transfer it was agreed that all the liabilities of company A. should be paid out of the assets of company B., and that company B. should indemnify company A. against them. It was also provided that both companies should use their best endeavors to induce the policy-holders and grantees of company A. to take in exchange policies and grants in company B. The petitioner received his annuity under his grant from company A. before the amalgamation, and afterwards from company B., and gave receipts in the name of company B. until that company stopped payment, but his grant was never exchanged for a grant of company B. It was held that he had not accepted company B. as his debtor in place of company A.
In America, also, it is held that the payment of premiums by policy-holders in a reinsured to a reinsuring company, does not work a novation, in the absence of any evidence of a plainly expressed intention to make a new contract. The' principles which govern the novations of other contracts apply to insurance. Smith v. St. Louis Mutual, 2 Tenn. Ch. 727, 742. Novatio non jpresumitur is a maxim of the civil law, from which we take the term. What substitution
The payment of premiums to the reinsuring company kept the policies in force against the reinsured company, and increased the value of the policy and its charge against the fund deposited with the superintendent of insurance. But this seems to be no reason why the Columbia should have a claim upon the special fund. No attempt is made to recover these premiums from the Columbia, which it received and retains. It received its consideration for the reinsurance from the reinsured companies. Nor does the fact that the reinsuring company paid large numbers of policies of the reinsured companies create an equitable claim in favor of the Columbia on the department fund. It had contracted to pay these policies, and, as consideration for doing so, it received all the assets of the companies which they were capable of transferring. Had it paid all the policies, the fund would be discharged of the trust — there being no policy-holder for whose benefit it could be held — and the Columbia would be entitled to those assets along with the rest. The policies paid by the Columbia reduced pro tanto the amount with which the deposit fund was charged, and it had a right to the residue of each deposit as soon as all policy-holders for whose benefit the deposit was made were paid. The policies when paid by the re-insuring company are paid, not purchased ; they are dead ; and there can be no right in the Columbia to be subrogated to rights of such policy-holders to that fund, for these rights no longer exist. And if there were such rights in the Columbia, they, no more than the rights acquired by the assignment of the fund itself, or of the equity of ré
It is, however, urged by defendant, that if the deposit made by an insurance company under the statute is a special trust, it is nevertheless merely provisional and temporary, that it can be reached only by motion after a return of nulla bona upon an execution, and is therefore limited to judgment liabilities ; that, as the law required the dissolution of insolvent companies, and no judgment could after this be rendered, there was no need of more than $100,000 deposit from any company, as this would pay all judgments that might be expected before a decree of dissolution could be reached; that, after dissolution; the deposit ceased, the securities composing it went into the receiver’s hands, and were no longer, a separate fund; and that, therefore, the deed of trust, being made to secure a merely temporary deposit, was functus officio when the deposit ceased.
The statute provides (sect. 24) —as it was expedient that it should, from the stringency of its provisions as to not delivering up any part of these securities except in ways specified — for the release of the superintendent and the bank from liability for surrendering such portion of the securities as may be needed to satisfy any judgments upon order of court; but it also provides that the deposit, after such surrender, shall be made good to the original amount by the company within three days. We see nothing in its provisions from which it appears that the securities are intended only for the security of such policy-holders as shall obtain judgment whilst the company was liable, or before the appointment of a receiver.
The argument that, because the assenting policy-holders — five hundred and seventy-six of the Atlas and two hundred
So far as the original deposit of the De Soto is concerned, it is true that the Columbia never got that deposit; but it was paid $20,000 to assume the liability of. the De Soto in fifty-four policies, and to procure the withdrawal of the original deposit and the substitution therefor of the notes of the Columbia of the face value of $100,000 secured by this deed of trust. Since the Columbia withdrew the original deposit according to its contract, we see no reason why, for the purposes of this proceeding, the notes that replaced that deposit should not be treated as would have been the securities that these notes replaced. It surely does not lie in the mouth of the Columbia to say that these notes are not the security‘required by the statute.
So far as the St. Louis Mutual is concerned, it is contended that, in Von Phul v. Alexander, the receiver of the Mutual brought suit against the receiver of the Columbia, to have the contract for the transfer of assets declared ultravires and void, and to recover all transferred property remaining in kind, including this property; that judgment in that case was for defendant, and that the question as
We think that the judgment of the lower court should be affirmed. It is so ordered.