58 N.J. Eq. 319 | New York Court of Chancery | 1899
The complainant is the holder of a policy of insurance in the-German Mutual Fire Insurance Company of Newark, N. J., a corporation organized on April 27th, 1893, as a mutual fire insurance company under the general laws of this state, and files-this bill against the defendant company and its individual-directors, to enjoin them from changing the company from a mutual to a joint stock company. The General Insurance law requires companies organizing under it to designate in their certificate whether they propose to organize a mutual fire insurance-company or a stock insurance company. There is also a provision (section 39) in the General Insurance laws which were in-force at the time of the incorporation of the defendant company that mutual companies might unite a cash capital to any extent as an additional security to the members over and above their premium and stock insurance, and that the company might allow interest on such capital and a participation in its profits, and prescribe the liability of the owner or owners thereof to share the-losses of the company. The defendant company, under this section,.has provided for a cash capital of $48,000, and it has accumulated a surplus, which in the bill is charged to be-$20,000, and in the answering affidavits is admitted to be $6,000. Where persons become members of a mutual insurance company by reason of holding the policies, it has been-
“the liability of the members of the company for losses and expenses incurred during the term of their policies, shall be limited to an amount not exceeding twenty-five per cent, of the amount of the assessment premium written in their policy and in addition thereto.”
The complainant in the present case became a member of the company on April 12th, 1898, by receiving a policy for $2,000 and paying a cash premium of $20, and it was also expressed on the face of the policy that there was a liability to the extent of twenty-five per cent, in addition. There is no objection to this method of becoming a member of a mutual insurance company by the payment of a cash premium down instead of the giving of premium notes assessable, and this has been the view of several courts of high authority where the question has been raised. Mygatt v. Insurance Co., 21 N. Y. 52 (1860). (The New York statutes seem to have been statutes on which our first General Mutual Insurance Company act of 1852 was based.) Union Insurance Co. v. Hoge, 21 How. 35.
The charter of defendant company further provides, in reference to the rights of those members who are such by reason of the holding of a policy, by article 2, section 1, of its charter, that all persons who shall insure in or with said company shall be deemed and taken for members of said corporation, and
In reference to the distribution of profits between the members of the company who are such by reason of holding policies, and those who are holders of its capital stock, it is provided (By-laws, art. 13). that the board of directors may divide the profits between the capital stockholders and persons insured in the company holding policies of one year’s standing, or for a less period, as they shall determine; provided, such dividends shall not be less than $2. There are no other express provisions in the charter or by-laws regulating the respective rights of the policyholder members and the capital stock members. No dividends have yet been declared under this section, nor have the directors established any rule of division between the two classes. The question in the present case arises under a proceeding which has been taken to change the company from a mutual company to a joint stock company purely, and the effect of which will be to terminate the right of the policyholders who are not capital stockholders to have a voice in the management of the company. All of the directors and three-fourths of the cash stockholders have consented to the change, and the proceedings for a change have been commenced on this consent, and without (so far as appears) the consent of any of the policyholders who are not stockholders. The entire number of policies issued is about three thousand, insuring over $2,000,000, but the number and amount of the policies held by stockholders does not appear. The complainant, whose policy is still outstanding, bases her ■claim to enjoin this change upon several grounds, the two principal ones being — -first, that this action cannot be taken without her consent, and is one which requires the unanimous consent of the policyholders and stockholders; and second, that if it can be effected without such unanimous consent of the members, it can only be effected by the vote of a majority of the members
“And any of the mutual insurance companies already chartered by the legislature of this state, or already organized under the general laws of this state, may, after giving 90 'days’ notice in three of the public papers in this state, change to joint stock companies, by proceeding in accordance with and confirming their charter to the provisions of this act.”
This was a supplement to the General Insurance Company act.
By the terms of this law the right to change from a mutual -to a joint stock company was given to mutual insurance companies already chartered or already organized, and the first ■ question which arises is whether, by the use of the word “ already,” ■ under the act, it was meant to fix the time and ■ description as applying to the date of the passage of the act or to the date when the companies applied to make the change. If “ already ” is to be construed as equivalent to “ now ” the act would be confined to companies which were in existence at the date of the passage of the act. After considering the arguments of counsel upon this point, I reach the conclusion that ■the use of this term “already” is fairly susceptible of two interpretations, one as applying to the date of the passage of the act and the other to the date of the application for change, ■and inasmuch as the first construction would make the act unconstitutional, I must adopt that construction of the act which would give it legal effect and hold that the act of 1888, -in giving to companies “already organized under the general laws ” the privilege of changing, meant already organized at the •time when the change was desirable to be made. If this be the proper construction of the act, then this right to change having 'been in existence at the time of the organization of the defend
The acts both of 1888 and 1889 leave the method of effecting-this change absolutely without statutory direction, and the company having the power, the method in which the change is to-be carried out must be settled upon the principles regulating; the rights of corporations and the individual rights of its members in proceedings of this character. In the first place, no-special authority being given' to the directors or any other officers of the company to make this change, the change is one-which can be made only by the corporation itself, and it must be by corporate action taken at a meeting of the corporation..
• This provision for the action of a corporate meeting does not •reach, in my judgment, to the present case. The amending, mitering or changing of the articles which are referred to in ■that section cannot be considered to extend ió a change-without notice of the relation of the policyholders to the stockholders £n the management of the company under the charter. Each
In the present case no notice of this kind was given and few policyholders attended the meeting. The change was directed by a vote of the stockholders. I therefore reach the conclusion-that while the company has the right to make this change under the laws as they stand, that change cannot be made under the-present proceedings, because it has been taken without proper' notice to the policyholders who have been by the action deprived of their right to participate in the future management of the-company. It was objected that the policy which has been issued in this case contained a provision of -such a character as to dis-entitle the complainant to an injunction, this clause being one-which allowed the cancellation of the policy at any time by the-complainant herself without previous notice, and by the company upon giving five days’ previous notice without assigning-any reason. It is provided by this clause that on such cancellation there shall be a return of a proportion of the premium-which has been paid, and it was urged that the right of the-complainant being of this uncertain and precarious nature, she-was not entitled to the protection of her right under the policy by injunction. But while this might perhaps be true, if the-only right of the complainant during the proceedings which are-here attacked was a pecuniary right, yet the complainant, so long-as her policy exists, has more than a pecuniary right, and has aright of an entirely different character. She has a right as a policyholder to be regarded as a member of the corporation and has all the privileges of such member, including the right to
There being in the case a question which, in the interest of both parties, should be put in the course of decision by the court of appeals, I will make a direction that preliminary injunction issue upon the condition that if the defendants desire to appeal and file a notice of appeal within ten days, the complainant shall consent to so speed the hearing of the appeal by stipulations as to filing of answer or otherwise as shall enable the defendants to bring on the hearing of the appeal'at the next term of that court.