Blanchard v. Prudential Insurance Co. of America

79 A. 533, 78 N.J. Eq. 471, 8 Buchanan 471, 1911 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 62
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedFebruary 25, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 79 A. 533 (Blanchard v. Prudential Insurance Co. of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blanchard v. Prudential Insurance Co. of America, 79 A. 533, 78 N.J. Eq. 471, 8 Buchanan 471, 1911 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 62 (N.J. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

Howell, V. C.

The bill in this case was originally filed by Leon E. Blanchard for himself and other stockholders of the Prudential Insurance Company of America, who were similarly situated with him, to enjoin the company from carrying out a scheme whereby certain benefits were given to the holders of certain of its non-participating industrial policies, and to compel the company to pay to its stockholders such dividend out of its surplus as would be sanctioned by a judicial inquiry into the affairs and assets of the company. There are other forms of relief sought touching the payment of. salaries and the expenditure of moneys in building operations, but the two grounds above mentioned are the only ones which were seriously litigated. The facts are voluminous and intricate and largely of a technical character, but as to those which are material to the decision of the points litigated there is but little variance.

After the cause was at issue, other stockholders were admitted, so that now the complainants are eighteen in number, holding somewhat more than twenty per cent, of the total share capital of the company. These additional complainants join in the prayer of the bill.

The company was organized under the name of. “The Widows and Orphans Friendly Society,” by a special act of the legislature of this state approved April 3d, 1873. Its name was changed to “The Prudential Friendly Society,” by another special act in 1875, and again by a. certificate pursuant to a statute then in force on March 30th, 1877, to “The Prudential Insurance Company of America.”. It began business with a very small capital, which has been increased from time to time by the declaration of stock dividends from its accumulated surplus until at the time of the filing of the bill it had a capital of $2,000,000, divided into forty thousand shares of the par value of $50 each. It has paid to its stockholders a dividend at the rate of ten per cent, per annum for many years. At the beginning, and until 1886, it issued what is known as non-participating industrial policies only. These were policies issued for a definite and specified amount upon payment of definite and specified premiums, and the policyholders were not entitled by the terms of their contracts [473]*473to any rebates, dividends or other participation in such profits as the company might make in the transaction of the business. By 1886 the financial standing of the company had become so well established that it began issuing what is called.ordinary policies, the great majority of which by their terms entitled the holders to such dividends or participation in the company’s profits as the directors might determine upon. There was a class of these policies by which the holder was entitled to participation in the profits at the end of certain periods of years, as, for instance, policies were issued which entitled the holder to a dividend not annually but at the end of each period of five years from the date of the policy, provided he was living at the end of the term. These are called deferred dividend policies.

In November, 1896, at a meeting of the executive committee, the president of the company explained and outlined a scheme for granting concessions, as they were called, to the holders of industrial policies by giving to them a post-mortem dividend after five years, a cash dividend after fifteen years, and establishing a surrender value for the policies after twenty years; whereupon a resolution was passed directing the officers to perfect and modify the plan in their discretion; and they were authorized to extend it to old policies as far as they considered it wise to do so. This committee appears to have made a report at a meeting of the board of directors on January 6th, 1897, and while the record (page 738) does not state that it was adopted, it appears to have been acted upon in such a manner as to make all the industrial policies outstanding at that time participants in the profits of the company. This action then put nearly all the policies of the company on a participating basis, and they remained so for a period of ten years. By section 12 of chapter 72 of the laws of 1907 (P. L. 1907 p. 133) every domestic stock life insurance company was put to its election whether it would carry on its business in the form of participating or non-participating business. This election was required to be made by a resolution of the board of directors to be filed with the commissioner of banking and insurance on or before September 1st, 1907, and it was provided that after December 31st, 1907, such companies should conduct only the kind of life insurance which they severally had so elected to [474]*474cany on, and should not thereafter conduct both the participating and non-participating branches of the business. In pursuance of this legislation, the company passed a resolution on July 8th, 1907, electing to carry on its business in the form of nonparticipating business, and providing that it should cease the issuing of participating policies on August 1st, 1907. At the time this election went into effect, the company had outstanding three classes of policies, to which frequent reference will hereafter be made — (1) industrial policies; (2) ordinary policies; (3) deferred dividend policies. By the term “ordinary policies,” I refer to the various forms of policies issued from what has been called the ordinary branch of the business, and exclude industrial policies. These throe classes of policies must, of course, remain participating policies, and their holders cannot be deprived of their right to participation so long as the present contracts are outstanding.

During the life of the company it has in several instances granted to its policyholders what it has denominated increased benefits under their policies, which are not called for by the terms of the contracts. These increased benefits consisted in enlarging the amount , payable to the policyholder at maturity. The result was reached by an addition to the face of the policy rather than a reduction of the premiums, for the reason that a reduction of the premiums would run into fractions of a cent, which would be inconvenient, if not impossible, to handle and calculate in practice. Such concessions, as they have likewise been called, were made in 1880, 1885, 1891, 1897, 1899, 1906 and 1907. The officers of the company declare that the giving of such concessions or benefits is now and always has been the policy of the company; that when the company started business it was without accurate life tables as to industrial lives; that it fixed upon a table of rates which eventually turned out to be too high, and that inasmuch as the policyholder’s money had created a fund that was larger than was deemed necessary to protect the company’s obligations, they should be entitled to the benefit thereof by an increase in the face value of their policies: With this series of acts in mind, the board of directors, on June 14th, 1909, passed a resolution, the result of which was another concession or benefit to the industrial [475]*475policyholders, beginning with all industrial policies issued on and after July 5th, 1909, not by reducing the premium, but by adding about ten per cent, to the amount of insurance that the same premium would thereafter purchase. This particular concession or benefit was likewise extended to all industrial policies which were issued after the beginning of the year 1907, which should be in force on July 1st, 1909. Complaint is made of this by the bill (page 32) in these words:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
79 A. 533, 78 N.J. Eq. 471, 8 Buchanan 471, 1911 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blanchard-v-prudential-insurance-co-of-america-njch-1911.