Commercial Standard Ins. v. Fidelity Union Ins.

111 S.W.2d 1167, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 1373
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 17, 1937
DocketNo. 13643.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 111 S.W.2d 1167 (Commercial Standard Ins. v. Fidelity Union Ins.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commercial Standard Ins. v. Fidelity Union Ins., 111 S.W.2d 1167, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 1373 (Tex. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

BROWN, Justice.

Certain fire insurance companies, including the appellee, in September, 1924, entered into what seems to be known among insurance companies as a “pool,” the contract being in writing, and the intent and purpose of which was “to provide automatic and reciprocal reinsurance between and among the subscribing Companies against their severally incurred liabilities under all policies issued to cover cotton in bales under floater reporting forms, or so called ‘Buyer’s transit,’ ‘Spark Hazard,’ and ‘legal liability’ forms and any and all other forms except forms covering only cotton at specific locations, or cotton insured under limited floater forms for specific amounts; and, second, to provide for-the taking of. reinsurance in definite and fixed proportions by the several subscribing Companies of the excess liability of any one subscribing Company that may desire to cede its liability in excess of any given amount under policies covering cotton in bales at specific locations, or under limited floater forms for specific amounts; and, third, to provide automatic and reciprocal reinsurance of any undertaking of reinsurance by any one subscribing Company of the liability of any Company or association not subscribing hereto on any risk on baled cotton.”

The apportionment made in this contract between the ten subscribing companies “for automatic and reciprocal reinsurance” provided for in' the contract shows that ap-pellee’s portion is 20 per cent.

Section 7 'of the contract stipulates: “The manager of the Southern Cotton ' Underwriters (that being the name, adopted in the contract between these Companies) shall procure for the benefit of the .subscribing Companies' reinsurance in such amount as he may determine of the excess of.- the ag *1168 gregate liabilities under policies issued by the subscribing Companies under this agreement, such reinsurance to cover at least 95% of the excess over One Hundred Thousand ($100,000) Dollars on all classes of risks except ‘AA’ Classifications.”

Section 18 of the agreement is: “This agreement shall continue in effect until terminated by mutual consent of the subscribing Companies, but any subscribing Company may withdraw and cease to be obligated hereby on first day of September of any year by giving 90 days notice in advance to the Manager of the Southern Cotton Underwriters. Upon the receipt of such notice the Manager shall notify the other subscribing Companies and the Companies remaining parties to this agreement shall immediately arrange to make up the liability represented by the Company withdrawing by reapportioning the liability among themselves or by securing another company to subscribe to this agreement.”

On September 1, 1925, appellant made the following contract with appellee:

“The Commercial Standard Insurance Company of Dallas, Texas, hereby agrees to reinsure September 1, 1925, 5% of the liability assumed by the Southern Cotton Underwriters as set forth in copy of the contract between the members of the Southern Cotton Underwriters hereto attached and made part hereof; or, in other words, the Fidelity Union Fire Insurance Company under the terms of its contract with other members of the Southern Cotton Underwriters assumes 20% of the liability of the Southern Cotton Underwriters and it is the purpose of the Commercial Standard Insurance Company to reinsure the Fidelity Union for one-fourth of its liability, which is the same as 5% of the total liability of the Syndicate.
“This reinsurance is made subject to all the terms and conditions that are stipulated in the contract between the member companies of the Southern Cotton Underwriters and the Commercial Standard hereby agrees to assume all the rights, privileges, or liabilities of the Fidelity Union as provided for in said contract, subject to a gross liability of 5% of the total liability of all Companies.”

Appellant was at no time a party to the agreement entered into by the twelve companies, which thus formed what is called in its contract with appellee, “the Syndicate,” viz.: Southern Cotton Underwriters.

Fidelity Union Insurance Company, ap-pellee, brought suit in the district court of Dallas county against appellant, and alleged the making of the syndicate agreement with the other companies, naming them; and alleged the making of the contract, above quoted, by appellant; and attached copies of these contracts to its petition as exhibits; and then pleaded: “Your petitioner further avers that in effecting settlement of the liabilities incurred by said Southern Cotton Underwriters, as a result of the loss and damage sustained in the Harlingen fire loss of July 31, 1926, above referred to (reference being made to the following allegations : “and pursuant to such reinsurance contract your petitioner became liable upon a loss, identified as the Harlingen fire loss, of July 31, 1926, for loss and damage suffered under said contract by Southern Cotton Underwriters”) payment was made by the said Southern Cotton Underwriters, and settlement and payments subsequently made by your petitioner for the liability originally incurred by it under such contracts for the total sum of $2659.69. That as such payments and settlements of liability were made by your petitioner for such original liability, statements were made by your petitioner to the said defendant company covering its-liability under its contract of September 1, 1925. That such statements, known as bordereaus, were from time to time paid by Commercial Standard Insurance Company, save and except the bordereaus aggregating the sum of $2659.69, copies of which are attached hereto and marked ‘Exhibits B, C, D and E’ which are here referred to and made a part hereof by reference, the same as if fully incorporated herein. But that although demand has been made-upon the said defendant company for payment of the said sum of $2659.69 evidenced, by such unpaid bordereaus, the said defendant company has failed and refused to make-payment of such amount, to your petitioner’s damage in the sum of, towit, $3000.00.”'

Prayer is for “judgment for the amount, of its debt, with interest and costs, etc.”

-The case was withdrawn from the jury and submitted to the court, and the judgment of the trial court reads, in part, as-follows:

“And it appearing to the court upon consideration of the pleadings and the evidence and after hearing the argument of counsel, that the plaintiff is entitled to recover from the defendant five per cent of the total li *1169 ability incurred by Southern Cotton Underwriters, under the principal contract involved herein, after allowing for excess insurance procured by them, and less the credits for payments heretofore made by said defendant thereunder; and that Southern Cotton Underwriters, under such principal contract incurred a total liability of $203,869.82 against which there was effective excess insurance in the sum of $60,-000.00; and that Commercial Standard Insurance Company has paid-heretofore upon its liability to Fidelity Union Insurance Company the sum of $5,027.78, and that the balance due from Commercial Standard Insurance Company to the Fidelity Union Insurance Company is the sum of $2165.71, for which amount plaintiff is entitled to judgment with six per cent interest from January 1, 1934.

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Related

Commercial Standard Ins. Co. v. Fidelity Union Ins. Co.
157 S.W.2d 663 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1941)

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Bluebook (online)
111 S.W.2d 1167, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 1373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commercial-standard-ins-v-fidelity-union-ins-texapp-1937.