Betts v. Connecticut Life Insurance

62 A. 345, 78 Conn. 442, 1905 Conn. LEXIS 107
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedDecember 15, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 62 A. 345 (Betts v. Connecticut Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Betts v. Connecticut Life Insurance, 62 A. 345, 78 Conn. 442, 1905 Conn. LEXIS 107 (Colo. 1905).

Opinion

Hall, J.

The appellants from the order of the Superior Court are Lewis A. Platt, Henry L. Wade, and the executors of the will of C. M. Platt, said named persons having been directors, and said Lewis A. Platt president, of said insolvent company.

In April, 1903, the appellant Lewis A. Platt filed an application in the Superior Court alleging that the New Haven Trust Company, which in 1899 had been appointed by said court receiver of the defendant company in the above entitled proceeding, had, in 1903, obtained a judgment against said applicant and one John B. Doherty for the sum of $14,280.83 (See New Haven Trust Co. v. Doherty, 75 Conn. 555) ; that said Doherty had no property from which any part of said judgment could be satisfied; that a claim of the *444 applicant against said company had been allowed by the court to the amount of $9,208 ; that the assets in the hands of the receiver were insufficient to pay his claim in full. The application asked that the receiver be restrained from collecting said judgment, and that said claim of the applicant be. set off against said judgment.

Upon the demurrer of said Lewis A. Platt to the receiver’s answer to said application, the court held that said claim might be set off against said judgment, unless it should appear that the sum due on said judgment was needed to pay claims entitled to a preference over said applicant’s claim.

Upon a hearing upon the receiver’s application concerning the marshaling of assets and the preferring of claims, these facts were found by the court: The defendant insurance company, to wind up the affairs of which a receiver was appointed upon the application of the insurance commissioner, has for more than ten years been engaged, under a charter from the legislature of this State, in the business of life insurance on the assessment plan.

The assets in the hands of the receiver, and the claims allowed by the court, are :—

Assets.
Proceeds of the sale of bonds deposited by the company with the State treasurer and surrendered to the receiver under §§ 3607 and-3611 of the General Statutes, with interest to December 28th, 1904, 15,859.74
Money derived from judgments against stockholders for amounts due on stock subscriptions, and judgments against officers and directors for negligence in management, and disposition of moneys belonging to expense fund, estimated at 30,000.00
*445 Judgment against L. A. Platt for a tort, unaccompanied by force, (against which said Platt claims a set-off of his claim below stated of
$9,208), 14,280.88
$60,140.57
Claims Allowed.
Preferred claims for taxes, costs, etc., ' ' 172.05
Mortuary claims, 44,502.78
Claims on accident policies for accidents occurring prior to receivership, 852.99
Claims on policies without an assessment clause, 2,032.22
Claims on policies in force at commencement of receivership and containing an assessment clause, 2,919.17 50,479.21 General claims for money loaned on contracts, for service of officers, agents, etc., 93,320.34
$143,799.55
The following are included among the general claims so allowed :
Lewis A. Platt for salary and amount due on contract 9,203.00
Henry L. Wade for money loaned and due on contract 3,456.83
C. M. Platt for money loaned and due on note and contract 48,381.24
$61,041.07

Of the money so loaned to the company by C. M. Platt, $14,108 was used for the payment of death claims and was secured by collateral, $12,823 of the proceeds of which have been applied in payment of the sum so used, and the value *446 of the remainder of said collateral is estimated to be sufficient to pay the balance of the sum so used. The remainder of the sum so loaned by the appellants was used in the payment of obligations of the company chargeable to the expense fund.

Upon said application of the receiver the court upon these facts directed: (1) that from the assets in the hands of the receiver there be first deducted the sum of $2,500 for administration expenses; (2) that the accrued interest upon the fund received from the State treasurer, as well as the principal, be applied as a trust fund for the policy-holders; (8) that after deducting said amount allowed for administration expenses; all the assets remaining in the hands of the receiver be first applied to the payment pro rata of all valid mortuary, accident, and policy claims; (4) that after said deduction and the payment of said claims, the remainder of the assets, if any, be applied to the payment pro rata of all other valid claims against the company; (5) that none of the appellants, as to claims against the company, be subrogated to the rights of mortuary claimants; (6) that said L. A. Platt be not allowed to set off his claim of $9,203 for salary, etc., against the judgment recovered against him by the receiver.

No question is made regarding that part of the order which directs that the $2,500, allowed for administration expenses, be first deducted from the fund in the hands of the receiver.

The direction regarding the application of the fund received from the State treasurer, and including as a part of it the income therefrom while it was in the hands of the receiver, is correct. By statute (§ 3607) the securities deposited by the company were held by the State treasurer in trust for the policy-holders, with the right in the company, while they were so held, to “ collect and receive the interest and dividends thereon.” By § 3611 they were delivered to the receiver to “ administer the trust fund invested in such securities for the benefit of the policy-holders . . . under the orders of the court.” By the order made and the facts *447 found by the. Superior Court the fund has, in legal effect, been applied to the payment of the claims of policy-holders as of as early a date as when it was delivered to the receiver; and he is to be regarded as having since that time held the securities as belonging to the policy-holders, and the proceeds and income therefrom as having been derived from, the property of the policy-holders.

There is error in that part of the order which directs that all the remaining assets in the hands of the receiver be first applied to the payment of mortuary, accident and policy claims. Section 3 of the charter (10 Special Laws, p. 616) provides that “ said corporation shall have a working capital to an amount not exceeding one hundred thousand dollars, divided into shares of one hundred dollars each, . . .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 A. 345, 78 Conn. 442, 1905 Conn. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/betts-v-connecticut-life-insurance-conn-1905.