Boynton v. Consolidated Indemnity Ins. Co.

185 S.E. 731, 180 S.C. 279, 1936 S.C. LEXIS 129
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMay 13, 1936
Docket14295
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 185 S.E. 731 (Boynton v. Consolidated Indemnity Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boynton v. Consolidated Indemnity Ins. Co., 185 S.E. 731, 180 S.C. 279, 1936 S.C. LEXIS 129 (S.C. 1936).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Bonham.

C. P. Allen was the administrator of the estate of Goins Boynton, deceased, with the Consolidated Indemnity & Insurance Company as surety on his administration bond. Judgment was obtained against the administrator and his surety, of which judgment the plaintiffs are the owners.

When the Consolidated Indemnity & Insurance Company was licensed to do business in South Carolina, it complied with the requirements of the statute of the State by giving bond in the sum of $10,000.00 with Guardian Casualty Company as surety.

When judgment was obtained against Allen and the surety on his administration bond, whom, for brevity, we shall call the Consolidated Company, negotiations were begun with the Consolidated Company for the payment of the *287 judgment in installments. Before the judgment was paid in full the Consolidated Company, which was a New York corporation, was placed in liquidation by the proper legal authority of that state on May 29, 1934. It appears from the statement in the record that on April 30, 1933, the Consolidated Company “reinsured all surety and insurance risks of the Guardian Casualty Company outstanding as of twelve o’clock midnight, March 31, 1933, and all surety and insurance risks thereafter written and assumed by the Guardian Casualty Company and the Consolidated Indemnity and Insurance Company assumed and agreed to pay all the debts and liabilities of the Guardian Casualty Company of every kind, that were due or may become due.”

The Guardian Casualty Company was likewise a New York corporation, and on June 2, 1934, it was placed in liquidation by the proper legal authority of that state.

When the Guardian Casualty Company was licensed to do business in South Carolina, it qualified by furnishing the bond required by Section 7947, Code of Taws 1932, in the sum of $10,000.00, with the American Surety Company as surety. The pertinent provisions of that section are here set out as follows: “Before licensing any insurance company to do business in this State, the insurance commissioner shall require each such company, to deposit with him an approved biond or approved securities, in the discretion of the commissioner, as follows: * * * Each fire, accident, or casualty or surety insurance company, or any company not herein specified, ten thousand dollars. * * *' If a bond be given, it shall be conditioned to pay any judgment entered up against any such company in any Court of competent jurisdiction in this State, and such judgment shall be a lien upon the bond or securities.”

July 25, 1934, the plaintiffs brought their action against the named defendants, setting out the matters and things hereinabove narrated, “on behalf of themselves and all ■others in like situation in this State, and all other creditors *288 in this State who may have the right to share in the bond and benefits thereof furnished by the Consolidated Indemnity and Insurance Company, the Guardian Casualty Company and the American Surety Company.”

The plaintiffs also allege: “That because the Guardian Casualty Company was taken over by the Consolidated Indemnity and Insurance Company, the American Surety Company as qualification surety of the Guardian Casualty Company is responsible for the payment of plaintiff’s judgment and like judgments and all creditors of the Consolidated Indemnity and Insurance Company in South Carolina.”

In accordance with the prayer of the complaint, Judge Johnson of the Fourteenth Circuit appointed a receiver nisi of the property and assets of the Consolidated Company in South Carolina, including the bond wherein the American Surety Company is surety for Guardian Casualty Company; with leave to defendants to show cause, and in the meantime enjoined all other suits.

The American Surety Company answered and made return to the effect that the Consolidated Company, under the law and proceedings in New York, is civiliter mortuus, and this action does not lie against said company; it admitted that it was surety on the qualification bond of the Guardian Casualty Company; denied that the Consolidated Company had taken over the Guardian Company; and denied that it was liable thereby for the judgments and debts of the Consolidated Company. It showed that the condition of its bond had not been breached because no judgment had been entered against its principal, Guardian Casualty Company, in any Court in this State, and that plaintiffs have no cause of action on the bond on which it is surety.

September 28, 1935, Judge Johnson filed his decree affirming the order appointing the Receiver, and adjudging the plaintiffs’ judgment against the Consolidated Company to be a lien on the bond on which the American Surety Com *289 pany was surety for the Guardian Casualty Company, and that the American Surety Company is liable on such bond for any judgment against the Consolidated Company.

The appeal from this decree is predicated upon ten exceptions with various subdivisions, but counsel for appellant and respondents have elected to discuss the issues made by the exceptions under three heads, and we will adopt that plan:

“1. Did the Circuit Judge correctly hold that the American Surety Company is liable in this suit ‘for any judgment against the Consolidated Indemnity and Insurance Company,’ and declare that ‘the judgment of the plaintiffs against the Consolidated Indemnity and Insurance Company * * * is * * * a ijen against the bond on which the American Surety Company is surety for the Guardian Casualty Company?’ ”

“2. Was the Circuit Judge empowered to appoint a receiver for the Consolidated Indemnity and Insurance Company when no property of that Company is involved in this action, and it is a foreign corporation?”

“3. Was the Circuit Judge empowered to appoint a receiver of the Guardian Casualty Company’s bond, which was not the property of the Consolidated Indemnity and Insurance Company for which the receiver was appointed, and no breach of the statutory condition of that bond being shown, and no cause of action thereon established?”

It has required much time and space to state the involved history of the circumstances and transactions out of which this litigation arose, but it should not require a great deal of time, nor take so much space, to dispose of the questions asked, and which must be answered.

For the orderly understanding and determination of the first issue, it is necessary that there be a clear comprehension of the statute under which the so-called “qualification” bonds are given, and the conditions, a violation of which *290 renders the maker of the bond liable, and fixes the obligee to whom the obligor becomes liable.

Section 7947, Code 1932, makes it the duty of the insurance commissioner of the State to exact of 'each insurance company desiring to be licensed to do business in this State a bond, or the deposit of securities, to be approved by him, as a prerequisite to the issuing of the license.

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Related

Robertson v. Metropolitan Casualty Ins.
84 F.2d 465 (Fourth Circuit, 1936)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
185 S.E. 731, 180 S.C. 279, 1936 S.C. LEXIS 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boynton-v-consolidated-indemnity-ins-co-sc-1936.