Benson v. Columbia Life Insurance

7 Ohio N.P. 113, 7 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 113
CourtOhio Superior Court, Cincinnati
DecidedApril 15, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 7 Ohio N.P. 113 (Benson v. Columbia Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Superior Court, Cincinnati primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Benson v. Columbia Life Insurance, 7 Ohio N.P. 113, 7 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 113 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1908).

Opinion

HoefhmmeR, J.

This matter came on to be heard on the motion of plaintiffs for the appointment of a receiver. The petition is voluminous, and the charges that are made .the basis of this action cover some twenty pages of typewritten matter. Plaintiffs represent some thirty shares, as against seventeen hundred shares of stock, and they likewise hold $27,500 worth of life insurance as against some _ $4,600,000 now outstanding. Plaintiffs claim they sue on behalf of themselves and all other stockholders, policy-holders and creditors, although it is not evident to the court that any stock-holder, policy-holder or creditor other than these plaintiffs evince any sympathy with the claim of plaintiffs, or join in this request for a receiver.

The directors and executive officers of .this company who stand charged with mismanagement and fraud (constructive at least), are on the whole men of probity and excellent business reputation. Almost all of them, on being apprised of the charges here made, promptly and vigorously protested against the appointment of a receiver, .and they assert that a receivership would not redound to the best interests of the share-holders and policy-holders.'

The plaintiffs themselves did not appear ,at any time during the extended hearing of this motion, save by counsel, and the principal actor on behalf of plaintiffs, the court could not help but observe, was Mr. Moore, one of the company’s general agents and partner of Mr. Carl Hansen, who has instituted suit at Chicago to rescind a contract of purchase of this company’s stock (a deal involving $160,000) and whose interests it will thus be observed are not inconsiderable.

The testimony shows that Mr. Moore was equally involved in the $2,000 transaction with Sumner Cross — a transaction now complained of by plaintiffs, facts which although they ought not to prejudice any rights of these plaintiffs, nevertheless should be borne in mind in considering the entire ease and this application for receivership.

The testimony also shows that Mr. Moore has been a constant fault finder (see testimony of James Albert Green, director), [115]*115not, however, tuith the conduct or acts of the hoard or executive officers but with the president, Felix G. Cross (see particularly his letter to C. B. Matthews, January, 1908), and his one endeavor has been, for reasons entirely disassociated with the charges here made, to have said Cross removed from the presidency of this company.

The Columbia Life Insurance Company is a young company and is passing through, what seems from the evidence to be, the common experience of all new life insurance companies. It appears that life insurance companies are of slow growth; that the expense of procuring new business is heavy; and that the expense of securing new business for this company does not exceed the expense of securing new business in all ordinary life insurance companies. While it appears that the expense of securing new business has increased for the fraction of the year up to this hearing, the $5,000 death loss referred to in Hyde’s letter to Matthews April 9, 1908, would seem to have been taken into consideration in figuring the increase, and affords explanation thereof.

The business of the company, however, while not as satisfactory as might be desired, as was substantially testified to by Director Green, has never had a year wherein it has not made some forward stride with reference at least to procuring new business, -as the following table shows. Insurance in force at the end of the year: 1904, $2,661,405; 1905, $2,922,026; 1906, $3,527,309; 1907, $4,607,276. If any percentage of this is reinsurance the -testimony of the actuary that re-insurance under mutual arrangement is valuable is not -overcome.

True the company does not appear to have made any net earnings up to date, but it ought not to be overlooked that the insurance that has been -obtained by the expenditure of the company’s money is a very valuable asset in the ordinary sense of the term at least, and this is worth, according to the evidence, thirty-five or forty dollars -a thousand. This item, then, should certainly be remembered in considering the practical solvency of the company, and when considering the rights and interests of all the policy-holders and share-holders.

[116]*116I Rave adverted at the outset to these matters generally,' because in considering the technical legal rights of plaintiffs it is proper that the court have in mind also the rights of all interested in this property. Nothing is better settled than that courts of equity act with great reluctance and caution in the matter of appointing receivers. In Baker v. Fraternal Mystic Circle, 32 W. L. B., 84, 86, it was said:

“In the whole armory of equity jurisprudence, one of the most formidable weapons is a receivership. When there is a contest, a very strong ease, a case which upon the facts stands out in persuasive clearness, must be proved before this weapon will be drawn.”

And the greatest circumspection is to be employed in the exercise of the discretion, and this is not to be influenced by the technical legal rights of the parties but by the equities of the entire case. Ibid, p. 82.

Aside from the technical legal rights of plaintiff can' there be any doubt as to what a receivership would mean in this case to all the others interested?

The appointment of a receiver would render all the outstanding insurance valueless (plaintiffs’ admission by brief). This insurance is worth, as stated (and this is uncontradicted), thirty to forty dollars a thousand — an ordinary asset of $160,000 .to $170,000/

If it be true, as plaintiffs claim, that the witness who gave this testimony is not expert, it is just as true that the court, in the absence of testimony to offset that claim, would be less warranted in substituting any opinion of its own. A receivership, then, would not only mean a loss to the stockholders of this valuable asset, but the property would be taken out of the hands of its statutory officers, designated by the vast majority of the stockholders, and the corpus would be placed in the hands of strangers to administer, thus saddling the remaining assets with the usual heavy expense incident to that mode of administration. Havemeyer v. Sup. Ct., 84 Cal., 369; Robinson v. C. C. R. Co., 5 N. P., 305.

It would spell the immediate ruin, collapse and the enforced [117]*117winding up of this corporation. Indeed counsel for plaintiffs so understand it, and with characteristic frankness assert (I do not undertake to quote in totidem verbis), "That this company is dead; that it is better for this court to wind up the corporation than to permit the recreant board to do so, or to permit the insurance commissioner to do so, as they may and must, if the relief here asked shall be denied. ’ ’

But, if the winding up of this company is the ultimate relief sought, and it appears that such relief can be afforded at law, then there is no room for the special remedy of receivership. Alderson on Receivers, Section 7, pp. 10, 11; High on Receivers, Section 301, p. 261.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

May Co. v. Jones
98 N.E.2d 358 (City of Cleveland Municipal Court, 1951)
Connelley v. Byerley
20 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 321 (Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court, 1917)
Rowley v. Bowyer
71 A. 398 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1908)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 Ohio N.P. 113, 7 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benson-v-columbia-life-insurance-ohsuperctcinci-1908.