12 Pa. Super. 169 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1899
Opinion by
In the policies which the defendant secured from the plaintiff, he agreed, in the seventh clause indorsed' on them, to pay any assessment that might be levied upon them for the mortuary or expense funds. As this company was a mutual one, this clause must be held to mean that he agrees to incur the liability which the nature of the mutual company imposes on all its members. What that liability is will be found well stated
When the defendant wrote his affidavit of defense, he had before him the plaintiff’s statement in which it appeared that the suit was brought to recover certain assessments, levied by a court of competent jurisdiction after the appointment of the receiver, to pay losses which occurred while he was a member of the company. He must be presumed to have known that, as these assessments sued for were levied by the court after the appointment of the receiver, they were conclusive both as to their necessity and amount and could not be questioned in either respect in this collateral proceeding: Fire Ins. Co. v. Boggs, 172 Pa. 91. Under the construction which we have given to the policy, it was his duty to pay his proportionate share of the losses which had occurred to the company up to the time of his withdrawal. That proportionate share was fixed as to the exact amount, by these assessments levied by the court two months after the surrender of the policies. The averments in the statement to the effect that these assessments were levied upon the defendant’s policies to pay his share of the losses occurring while he was a member were vital and material to the plaintiff’s case, and ought to have been denied in the affidavit if defendant intended to defend on the ground that they were' not so levied. As he has not denied them, they must be taken as true. The only defense set up was that he has surrendered his policies on a certain date “ and at the same time paid all indebtedness to date.” It is not ne
We are not prepared to sustain the defendant’s contention that a member of a mutual insurance company who “ has duly withdrawn his membership may be free from liability for assessments made after his withdrawal to liquidate losses incurred during the life of his policy,” but even if we did, we do not think that the record in this case shows it to be one to which such a rule applies. The cases relied on to establish this rule are Akers, Rec’r, v. Hite, 94 Pa. 394, and Matten, Rec’r, v. Lichtenwalner, 6 Pa. Superior. Ct. 575. In Akers v. Hite, it was said that contracts of insurance were like others in that they could be rescinded by mutual consent, and that many mutual insurance companies inserted stipulations in their policies that they should be void for certain acts of omission or commission by the insured, but it was added at the same time that “ when avoided, the rights and liabilities of the member are ended, except his liability for debts already incurred.” Whilst in that case it was held that the agreement between the insured and the company relieved the defendant from further assessment, even though it appeared that when the withdrawal took place he did not pay his full proportionate share of losses incurred at that time, the effect of the decision was limited to the facts found in the special verdict. The Court say: “ This case must be disposed of on the facts in the verdict, not outside. Whether there are facts which make all who were once members liable to assessment for indebtedness created before the cancelation of their contracts, does not appear, they are not in the verdict.” That the result would be different where it does appear that members are liable to assessment for indebtedness created before cancelation is evident from the case of Susquehanna Mut. F. Ins. Co. v. Mardorf, 152 Pa. 22, where it appeared that a suit liad been brought, after the expiration of the
Judgment reversed, and record remitted to the court below, with direction to enter judgment against the defendant for such sum as to right and justice may belong, unless other legal or equitable cause be shown to the court below why such judgment should not be so entered.