Commonwealth Mutual Fire Insurance v. Edwards

124 N.C. 116
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMarch 7, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 124 N.C. 116 (Commonwealth Mutual Fire Insurance v. Edwards) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth Mutual Fire Insurance v. Edwards, 124 N.C. 116 (N.C. 1899).

Opinion

Douglas, J.

Tbis is an action brought by tbe receiver of a mutual insurance company for the collection of certain assessments upon tbe defendants, levied under a decree of tbe Superior Judicial Court, of tbe State of Massachusetts. Tbe case comes before us on demurrer. ' Tbis disposes in limine of all statutes of limitation, which, in cases like tbe present, can be availed of only by answer. Tbe Code, section 138; Guthrie v. Bacon, 107 N. C., 337; Randolph v. Randolph, Ibid., 506; Albertson v. Terry, 109 N. C., 8. Tbis rule, however, does not apply to possessory titles, which are more in tbe nature of presumptions than strict limitations. Freeman v. Sprague, 82 N. C., 366; Asbury v. Fair, 111 N. C., 251.

Tbe following allegations, appearing in tbe complaint must be taken as facts for tbe purposes of tbis appeal: Tbe plaintiff corporation issues to tbe defendants two policies of fire insurance — one for $2,000, dated June 29, 1894, and tbe other for $3,000, dated July 14, 1894. It was stipulated in tbe policies that tbe insured should pay, in addition to tbe cash premium, all such sums as might be lawfully assessed by tbe directors of said company, but not to exceed three times tbe amount of said cash premium. Tbe present assessments are within tbe limit. Tbe policies were obtained and delivered through á local agent, denominated a broker by tbe plaintiff, but whose legal status; as between tbe parties, [118]*118is a question of law on admitted facts. On March 19, 1895, suit was brought by the Insurance Commissioner of Massachusetts to wind up the affairs of the plaintiff company, and on May 28, 1895, the plaintiff Stevens was appointed receiver, to whom the company, on the 7th day of March, 1896, executed an assignment of all its assets. After the institution of the suit, to-wit, on March 7th, 1896, the directors of the plaintiff corporation, in accordance with a decree in' the cause, levied “an assessment of $250,000 upon the former and present members of the corporation liable thereto, the same being necessary for the payment of losses incurred after the issue of the policies held by the members of the said corporation, and before their respective expiration or candi ation, and while the said defendants and the other policy holders against whom the said assessment was made were members of said corporation, and the expenses of collecting and the expenses of the receivership for which the defendants, together with the other policy holders and members, were liable.” It is further alleged that all the proceedings were had in all respects in conformity to sections 47 and 49 of chapter 522 of the Laws of the State of Massachusetts of 1894, which, in the absence of an answer, we presume, govern the proceedings in such cases.

There are other allegations in amplification of the above, and also as to notice, individual assessment and non-payment, with the important averment that the plaintiff corporation complied with the requirements of section 3062 of The Code of North Carolina, and received license to transact the business of fire insurance on the 2nd day of July, 1894. This was subsequent to the issuing of the first policy, but previous to the second policy.

The learned counsel for the plaintiff say in their brief that “If policy No. 4214, dated June 29, 1894, were made [119]*119in North Carolina, of course it would be void and the assessment could not be collected.” We tbink that in contemplation of law it was made in North Carolina, and that the broker, in taking the applications for the policies, acted as the agent of the plaintiff corporation. Section 8 of chapter 299 of the Public Laws of 1893 provides that “all contracts of insurance, the application for which is taken within the State, shall be deemed to have been made within this State and subject to the laws thereof.” Therefore the plaintiffs can not maintain their action for any assessment or other liability arising under the policy dated June 29, 1894.

Our attention has been called to chapter 383 of the Laws of 1889 allowing any citizen of this State to contract on his own account for insurance with any company doing an insurance business outside of the State, and allowing the company to be sued and to adjust the loss without being subject to penalties for taxes. We do not question the right of any citizen to apply outside the State for insurance, but in the present case the application was made within the State, and therefore subject to the Act of 1893. The Act of 1889 allows an outside company, that is, one that has not complied with our laws, to be sued, but not to sue. Its evident purpose was to allow such companies to adjust their fire losses without thereby making themselves liable for penalties or taxes. It certainly never intended to permit such companies to practically nullify our insurance laws by the legal fiction of doing business through a broker instead of an agent. To do so would ultimately turn over our vast insurance business to foreign corporations whose solvency we had no means of ascertaining, and who not only contributed nothing to our revenues, but who ignored our laws and were practically beyond our jurisdiction. Our insurance laws, applicable equally to domestic and to foreign corporations, [120]*120are intended not simply for purposes of revenue, but primarily for the protection of our people. The vast bulk of insured property is never burned, and those who continue to pay their premiums for perhaps a long series of years with no resulting loss or profit beyond the feeling of protection, have the right to demand the fullest security. Inthe case at bar the plaintiff corporation admitted its insolvency within less than ten months after it issued its policies to the defendants, and it was then apparently worth $250,000 less than nothing. When or how it became insolvent, if it were ever solvent, we have no means of knowing. In the light of these facts, can there be any question as to the justice or policy of our insurance laws ?

The prevailing tendency to corporate absorption can not be ignored, and it is the increasing duty of the State, while giving to all corporations the equal protection of its laws, to equally protect its citizens against corporate abuses. There should be no prejudice against corporations simply because they are corporations. They are not outlaws, but are the creatures of the law, and are not only capable of becoming the most powerful agencies of civilization, but'have become absolutely necessary in our present stage of material development. They can be justly condemned only when their powers are abused, but in proportion as their powers are greater than those of an individual, they are more liable to abuse and should be more carefully guarded. One of their great dangers is the risk of insolvency arising from the want of any personal liability of their stockholders, and the uncertain and perhaps fictitious nature of their assets. Some are afflicted with what may be called congenital insolvency. They .are born insolvent, capitalized into insolvency at the moment of their creation, and eke out a precarious existence in an apparent effort to solve the old -paradox of living on [121]*121the interest of their debts. Such corporations are not only intrinsically dangerous, but lay the foundation for an unjust suspicion of all other corporate bodies.

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Bluebook (online)
124 N.C. 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-mutual-fire-insurance-v-edwards-nc-1899.