Barber Asphalt Paving Co. v. Poe

115 A. 24, 139 Md. 332, 1921 Md. LEXIS 155
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 29, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 115 A. 24 (Barber Asphalt Paving Co. v. Poe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barber Asphalt Paving Co. v. Poe, 115 A. 24, 139 Md. 332, 1921 Md. LEXIS 155 (Md. 1921).

Opinion

Boyd, C. J.,

delivered thei opinion of the Court.

The Barber Asphalt P’aving Company filed a claim before the auditor for $3,141.99 for unearned premiums on bonds on which the United Surety Company was surety. It was disallowed by the auditor, and the Circuit Court of Baltimore City sustained him. This appeal was taken from the decretal order of that court, in so far as it disallowed said claim.

The United Surety Company was on a large number of construction and maintenance bonds, given by the appellant to the City of Chicago for paving streets in that city, the most of them having been given in 1906, and some covered a period of ten years and others five years. On February IP, 1913, at the request of the city, the appellant gave new bonds, with the United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company as surety on thirty-seven out of sixty odd, on which the United Surety Company was originally surety. The cost to the appellant of the new bonds was $633.15, but it contends that it is entitled to the amount of unearned premiums on the bonds for which the new ones were given, which it says is a sum stated in the claim filed by it. What are called “construction and maintenance” bonds were given by the con* *334 tractor to secure the obligee (City of Chicago) for the performance of the contracts for the construction of the work, and then for its maintenance for the period agreed upon— in this case five and ten years.

The receivers contend (1) that the evidence does not show that the United Surety Company was released from its obligation, and hence no unearned premiums could be recovered, and (2) if that be not correct, that there can in no event be a recovery for more than $633.Y5, the amount paid by the appellant for the new bonds. They also contend that the appellant was not required to g’ive the new bonds, and, as it was voluntary on its part in doing so, it cannot recover the latter sum, even if the position taken by then under what we have marked (1) be not sustained.

We will first consider what we have marked (2) above, as we-think the appellant is not entitled to more than it actually paid out for the new bonds. There is a clear distinction between this case and the Casualty Insurance Company’s Case, 82 Md. 535. That company had been adjudicated to be insolvent, and the Court was dealing then with such a company, while the United Surety Company had not prior to the time the new bonds were given been declared to be insolvent, but on the contrary it was confidently believed by the receivers, for some time after they were appointed, that it was solvent, and'possibly might be able to resume business. Ln the case of Vandiver v. Poe, 119 Md. 348, decided January 14th, 1913, we reversed an order of the lower court requiring the State Treasurer to turn over to the receivers the $100,000 of registered- stock of the City of Baltimore — that sum being required to be deposited by such a company by our statutes — and another $100,000 of similar stock, which the company had deposited with the State Treasurer, to meet the requirements imposed by the laws of some other states in which the company desired to do business. We said: “We can find no sufficient warrant in the statute, or in the condition of the company as it now exists, to justify the turning *335 over at this time to the receivers of a solvent corporation, securities which have been placed in the hands of a trustee for a specific trust purpose, and with beneficiaries scattered in a large number of states.” Tbe Court referred to the fact that the solvency of the company in question was not merely alleged in the bill under which the receivers had been appointed, but had been reiterated time and time again by the receivers in various papers filed by them, and was testified to by one of them. In the case of United States v. Poe, 120 Md. 89, the Court pointed out some of the differences in the application of principles to he applied to the payment of, or distribution among, the creditors of insolvent corporations, from such a one as tbe United Surety Company, which had not been declared or decreed to be insolvent. It said that the effect of a decree of dissolution, or of an adjudication of insolvency, was undoubtedly to determine the outstanding contracts of the company, operating between the company and its creditors, as does the death of an individual between himself and his creditors. In the Casualty Company’s Case, on page 569 of 82 Md., it had been said that: “The insolvency of the company cancelled all outstanding policies of insurance for the future.” Again, on page 570, it was said: “If the accidents, which form the basis, of the claims now made for indemnity, happened after the insolvency was declared, then, inasmuch as the insolvency cancelled the policies, there ca?i be no claim under the policies, but as tbe company by its insolvency committed a breach of its contracts, the policyholders thereupon became entitled to damages for that breach, and these damages are the values of the destroyed policies. The policies being thus destroyed, of course, all liability under them, from the date of the insolvency, for accidents occurring subsequently to the insolvency, ceased, consequently losses which happened after the insolvency under policies in existence at the date of the insolvency, are not provable against the funds in the receivers’ hands. Whilst this is so, the values of the destroyed policies are provable, and ao *336 cording to 'well-settled rules, these values consist solely of the unearned or return premium.”

Ciiiee Judge McSheery was then speaking of a corporation which had been declared insolvent. In the case of the United Surety Company, the first time the court said it was insolvent, so far as has hecn brought to our attention, was on February 25th, 1921, according to a copy of a decree filed by agreement of the solicitors — it being recited in the decree for the sale by the Treasurer ‘of the $200,000 of stock of the City of Baltimore. The decree goes on to say: “And it appearing to the Court that the property of the United Surety Company is insolvent, and that there are no assets in the hands of the receivers sufficient to pay claims allowed against the property by the Auditor’s report,” etc. It is true that the company was unable to issue new policies shortly after the receivers were appointed, and was prohibited ■from doing so in some states until it restored the surplus and capital which had been lost by bad management, and of course, after the company went into the hands of receivers, it could not be expected that it could get new business, unless its stockholders or others came to its relief and put it on a proper basis, but nevertheless it had not been declared insolvent, and’ proceedings had not been taken for its dissolution. As con■ditions existed when the new bonds were given, it could not ~be said that the United Surety Company would not he able to meet demands on it in case of default of its principal. There is no evidence that there was any default by the principal for the periods covered by the bonds. It would, therefore, seem to he clear that the appellant should not he pei’nrit.tff.fi to recover more than it was required to pay for the new bonds, even if it had a valid reason for entering into them.

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276 F. 949 (D. Maryland, 1921)

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Bluebook (online)
115 A. 24, 139 Md. 332, 1921 Md. LEXIS 155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barber-asphalt-paving-co-v-poe-md-1921.