Arizona Corp. Commission v. California Insurance

236 P. 460, 28 Ariz. 128, 1925 Ariz. LEXIS 239
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedMay 22, 1925
DocketCivil No. 2283.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 236 P. 460 (Arizona Corp. Commission v. California Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arizona Corp. Commission v. California Insurance, 236 P. 460, 28 Ariz. 128, 1925 Ariz. LEXIS 239 (Ark. 1925).

Opinion

ROSS, J.

This is an action by the California Insurance Company against “the Arizona Fire Insurance Company to collect an indebtedness in the sum of about $204,000, evidenced by promissory notes, and to foreclose mortgages given as security on certain real estate situated in Phoenix, Arizona. The' suit was filed February 13, 1923. In addition to the debtor, the Bank of Bowie, Herbert J. Mann, Cohn-hlickelsburg & Company, and the Arizona Corporation Commission were made defendants, the first three because they claimed some interest in the mortgaged property, and the last because of an order of liquidation made in the superior court of Maricopa county, on June 7, 1922, under and by virtue of which order it took charge of all the property and effects of the Arizona Fire Insurance Company, including the mortgaged property. The plaintiff had judgment for its debt *130 against defendant Arizona Fire Insurance Company and a decree of foreclosure of its mortgage on property, with, an order of sale. °

The complaint contained two causes of action. The first was to recover $75,000 evidenced hy two promissory notes and secured by mortgage upon lots 2, 4, and 6 of block 89 of the original town site of Phoenix, Arizona, and the rents, issues, and profits thereof. There is no question before us as to this cause of action, and we do no more than merely state the fact.

The second cause of action is to collect a note of $144,000, secured by mortgage upon the same property. The complaint goes into great detail in stating the transaction out of which these latter instruments grew. We undertake to epitomize as follows: The defendant, Arizona Fire Insurance Company, is a domestic corporation and for a long time prior to 1921 had been engaged in soliciting fire insurance and issuing policies against loss by fire. In May of that year such company had outstanding fire policies the unearned premiums on which amounted to $229,000. At that time, it was hopelessly insolvent and unable to meet its obligations, due to extraordinary fire losses and unwise investments. It sought different insurance companies in an effort to procure them to reinsure its live policies, and presented to plaintiff a written statement of its assets and liabilities showing it to be solvent, and represented that, if its outstanding policies could be reinsured, it had assets to take care of all its other debts and liabilities.

The plaintiff, after investigating its statement and making inquiries, formed the conclusion that defendant Arizona Fire Insurance Company was a going and solvent concern with sufficient assets to meet its obligations, if its fire policies were reinsured, and thereupon made an offer to reinsure such policies for 70 per cent of the unearned premiums; that such premiums were represented to be approximately *131 $206,000, but later it was disclosed to be $229,000; that the Arizona Corporation Commission sat with the defendant Arizona Fire Insurance Company and considered the plaintiff’s offer and recommended its acceptance; that thereupon the plaintiff reinsured the outstanding policies of Arizona Fire Insurance Company and assumed the obligation to pay any fire losses sustained by the policy-holders, and fully performed its contract in that behalf; that in consideration of the plaintiff’s reinsuring defendant’s outstanding policy-holders the defendant gave to the plaintiff its note for 70 per cent of the unearned premiums, which it represented amounted to $206,000, such note being for the sum of $144,000 and secured the same upon the above-described real property and also a pledge of certain bonds and mortgages, out of which plaintiff realized an amount which, when applied on note, left a balance of $110,044. The appeal is prosecuted only by the Arizona Corporation Commission and the Bank of Bowie. The questions raised by each of these appellants are entirely unrelated and will therefore be separately considered.

The Bank of Bowie appeals from the final judgment and assigns as error the court’s ruling sustaining the demurrer to its answer. We will first consider this appeal. The answer consists of an attack upon the transaction out of which the $144,000 note and mortgage arose, on the theory that the assets of the Arizona Fire Insurance Company were a trust fund for the benefit of its creditors, and that since the giving of the note and mortgage to the plaintiff was a transaction out of the ordinary course of the business of insurance and resulted in taking all, or practically all, of the assets of the corporation, it should be treated in the same manner as if the defendant had sold such assets. There are general allegations of actual fraud charged against the plaintiff and the defendant Insurance Company, but we do not *132 understand, that the appellant particularly relies upon actual fraud. In its brief it says:

“We instantly admit that if the Malcolm Case or trust-fund theory is not the law in Arizona no fraud is alleged.”

The question then, in short, is, May the assets of a fire insurance company in failing circumstances be legally hypothecated or mortgaged when the transaction is in good faith and done for the purpose of enabling .it to meet its obligations and to continue to carry on the business for which it was organized? or, May a general creditor, under the claim that the assets of such corporation are a trust fund, have such assets, or so much thereof as may be necessary, to the exclusion of the mortgagee, applied to the satisfaction of his claim? The appellant contends that the rule laid down in Valley Bank v. Malcolm, 23 Ariz. 395, 204 Pac. 207, to the effect “that the assets of a private corporation constitute a trust fund for the benefit of its creditors,” has application to the facts of this case.

In the Malcolm case there was an out and out sale by the insolvent bant of all of its assets, made for the purpose of cleaning up the affairs of the selling corporation so that it might cease to be, and the question was as to whether the purchasing corporation under such circumstances could be held liable for one of its general debts. Here the transaction did not contemplate the dissolution of the Arizona Fire Insurance Company, or that it should go out of existence, or cease to do business. On the contrary, the help obtained from the plaintiff was for the purpose of preventing its dissolution and ruin, to preserve its credit, and enable it to carry out its obligatons, and also to perpetuate its existence. The mortgage now objected to was not given for a past debt and was not made for the purpose of preferring one creditor to another. *133 It was made to secure, indemnify, and pay the plaintiff for a credit of which it was very much in need, and whichf inured to and was for the benefit of the policy-holders of the Arizona Fire Insurance Company .Jj "We know of no reason why a private corporation, in the absence of any actual fraud, may not borrow money and give its notes secured by mortg’ag’e upon its assets, when done in the course of its business and in aid thereof, the same as an individual engaged in business.

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Bluebook (online)
236 P. 460, 28 Ariz. 128, 1925 Ariz. LEXIS 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arizona-corp-commission-v-california-insurance-ariz-1925.