31 Barb. 172 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1857
No evidence was given under the first count of the complaint, but the evidence was given and the recovery had under the second count, which avers the giving of the note in suit, payable in such portions and at such time or times as the directors of the said company should require; that on or about the 17th day of July, 1854, one John Brown was by an order of the court duly appointed receiver of said company; that said Brown, while possessed of the said notes and all other property of the company, as receiver, on the 13th day of June, 1855, on application duly made, procured an order of this court directing the receiver to make an assessment on the premium notes of the company, sufficient to pay off tfie losses therein referred to, and directing the times at which |he assessjnepts should be payable j that the said Brown "went forward in appordance with the order and the charter and bylaws of the company, and made in due form and manner the assessment set out in the complaint, in which the notes are
The answer admits the giving of the note, but denies the residue of the complaint. The evidence given was entirely documentary, and consisted of the order of the court referring it to N. 0. White, Esquire, to appoint a receiver of the company and take from him the proper security. 2d. The report of the referee that he had appointed Mr. Brown the receiver, and had taken from him the security designated in the tirder. 3d. The order discharging Brown from the receivership and referring it to W. A. Spencer, Esquire, to appoint a receiver in his place, 4th. The report of the referee that the plaintiff had been appointed receiver, and had given the requisite security. 5th. The order of the court, dated June 13,1855, reciting the presentation of the petition of the receiver, “praying for the advice and direction of this court touching the matters therein mentioned,” directing “the receiver” to make such assessment upon the premium notes belonging to said company, and mentioned in the said petition, as shall be necessary to pay the debts and liabilities of said company set forth in the 10th and 11th folios of said petition, with ten percent on said amount to cover the costs and expenses of collecting said assessment, and as shall be in accordance with the statute in such case made and provided, and as by the charter and by-laws of said company the directors of said company have or had authority to make.” 6th. The petition of the plaintiff, stating his appointment as receiver, &c. and that on the 13th day of June, 1855, an order was entered in the Oneida clerk’s office, directing an assessment to be made on the premium notes belonging to the said company, to pay the demands specified, amounting in the aggregate
But in this proceeding the courts do not adjudicate the liability of the company, or determine the amounts for which assessments shall he made, or the ratio of assessment. They merely sanction and authorize the acts of the receiver, who acts ministerially, not judicially. The assessment is the act of the receiver, and in and with him is the authority to act in the premises; and his authority depends upon the existence of the state of facts rendering the assessment necessary. The promise of the defendant is to pay upon certain conditions, and the existence of those conditions must be shown by the party seeking to enforce the contract. (Stow v. Wadly, 8 John. 124. Ferris v. Purdy, 10 id. 359.) If the directors of the company, or the receiver acting in their place in making the assessment, acted judicially, the assessment itself perhaps would be evidence, at least prima facie, of its necessity; but they do not. act judicially, and they have no arbitrary discretion in the matter, hut they are controlled by the explicit provisions of the statute, and must by proper averments and proof bring themselves within the terms of those provisions before they can enforce the collection of the premium notes. (Bangs v. Gray, 2 Kern. 477. The Herkimer Co. Mutual Ins. Co. v. Fuller, 14 Barb. 373. In the matter of Bangs, 15 id. 264. Shaughnessy v. The Rensselaer Ins. Co., 21 id. 605.) In Brouwer v. Appleby (1 Sand. S. C. Rep. 158) if was a part of the case agreed upon, that the unpaid losses of the company at the time of the trial exceeded $360,000, and its assets of all kinds, including'the defendant’s note, did not
Hubbard and Pratt, Justices, concurred.
Bacon, J. dissented.
Hew trial granted.
Hubbard, Pratt, Bacon and W. F. Allen, Justices.]