Continental Mutual Insurance v. Cochrane

4 P.2d 308, 89 Colo. 462, 1931 Colo. LEXIS 316
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedOctober 5, 1931
DocketNo. 12,513.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 4 P.2d 308 (Continental Mutual Insurance v. Cochrane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Continental Mutual Insurance v. Cochrane, 4 P.2d 308, 89 Colo. 462, 1931 Colo. LEXIS 316 (Colo. 1931).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Moore

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Continental Mutual Insurance Company, a mutual insurance corporation organized under the laws of Colorado, and authorized to transact business therein, sued *463 Jackson Cochrane, as insurance commissioner of the state of Colorado, in the Denver district court seeking to obtain a declaratory judgment determining an alleged controversy between it and the defendant claimed to arise out of the opposing legal constructions of certain provisions of its charter membership policy, form No. 6.

These controverted provisions are alleged in the complaint as follows:

“In consideration of a Two Hundred Dollar Charter Membership Fee, the payment of which is hereby acknowledged, the Insured is hereby appointed a Charter Member of the Company and, as such, shall be entitled to the Charter Membership Benefits as provided on the third page hereof.”

“If, after the Company shall have received cash for the Charter Membership Fee named herein, this policy shall permanently terminate a Certificate of Membership will be issued to the Insured, if he be living, otherwise to his executors, administrators or assigns, continuing each and every Charter Membership benefit herein mentioned, the same as if this policy had not terminated. ’ ’

“Within two years after discontinuing the sale of Charter Membership Policies a meeting of the policyholders of the Company will be called to consider the proposition of converting the Company into a Stock Insurance Company — hereinafter referred to as Stock Company—having the right, among other rights, to issue Health and Accident Insurance; such conversion to be by consolidation with, or reinsurance of any part or all of this Company’s business in, such Stock Company. If at such meeting or any subsequent meeting of the policyholders of the Company a sufficient number, as now required by law, of the policyholders shall vote, either in person or by proxy, in favor of such conversion this Company will invest its surplus in the stock of such stock company and the stock so acquired will be distributed ratably to all Charter Membership policyholders, or their executors, administrators or assigns, who have paid their *464 ■Charter Membership Fees. The amount of stock to be distributed hereunder shall be such a part of all of the stock so acquired as the Charter Membership Fee paid by the Insured be in proportion to the total Charter Membership Fees paid by all Charter Membership policyholders. ’ ’

“Until this Company be converted into such Stock Company, as aforesaid, this Company 'will in February, 1930, and in February of each year thereafter ascertain a Charter Membership Profit Fund which shall be equal to all the Company’s net profits made during the calendar year immediately prior to the date the Charter Membership Profit Fund be ascertained and such a part of such Charter Membership Profit Fund shall be payable as a Charter Membership Dividend hereunder as the Charter Membership Fee named herein shall be in proportion to the aggregate Charter Membership' Fees under all Charter Membership policies authorized. The number of Charter Membership policies authorized is Five Thousand, each with a Charter Membership Fee of One Hundred Dollars or an aggregate equivalent thereof in other amounts.”

It is further alleged in the complaint that said policies, having’ been approved by the defendant, were sold by the plaintiff to numerous persons in the state of Colorado during* the year 1928; that the amount of charter membership fees contracted to be paid by the purchasers of said policy during the year 1928 were $50,350; that of this amount, $7,177.52 was paid by cash by such policyholders and of said last named amount, $4,796.77 was paid by plaintiff as commission to its agents and that plaintiff received and holds in cash the balance of said cash payments amounting to $2,380.75. Plaintiff further received notes representing the unpaid portion of said charter membership fees.

These facts were incorporated in plaintiff’s 1929 annual report filed. The complaint charges that said re *465 port shows plaintiff to have a surplus over and above all of its liabilities. It further avers that:

“* * * defendant, upon the filing of said report advised the plaintiff that in the opinion of the defendant, under the said Aot of 1921, and other acts amendatory thereof and supplementary thereto, and under the terms of said policy, plaintiff could not lawfully expend for commissions, or for any other purpose, any part of the moneys received by it as charter membership fees from holders of said policy, but that plaintiff under said laws and said policy is obligated to retain and keep intact in trust for said charter membership policyholders the entire fund derived by plaintiff from such charter membership fee, and that defendant would act upon such opinion in the disposition which he made of said report, and would make all orders appropriate to be made under such construction of the law and of said policy; and plaintiff alleges that said construction so made by the defendant of said laws and policy is erroneous and unjustifiable, and plaintiff alleges that under said laws and policy, plaintiff is not absolutely and at all events obligated to retain and keep intact in trust for said charter membership policyholders the entire fund derived from said charter membership fee, nor to return or repay the same to said policyholders at all events, but plaintiff avers that under said laws and the terms of said policy, plaintiff is only obligated to pay to said charter membership policyholders the profits, if any, that shall accrue as provided in said policies, and to deliver to such charter members, stock of the Stock Insurance Company if and when said Stock Insurance Company is organized, as provided in said charter membership certificate, and plaintiff avers that it may lawfully use said charter membership funds for any legitimate purpose of its business, including the payment of commissions on the sale of said charter membership policy.

“That by reason of the premises a controversy exists between the plaintiff and defendant, involving the con *466 struction of the statutes and the policy aforesaid; that said controversy pertains solely to the right and power of the defendant by reason of the facts hereinabove alleged to find that plaintiff has not complied with, or that, plaintiff has violated, the insurance laws of the State of Colorado in such case made and provided and in the particular -hereinabove set forth, and said controversy has not arisen between the plaintiff and any of its charter membership policyholders.

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Bluebook (online)
4 P.2d 308, 89 Colo. 462, 1931 Colo. LEXIS 316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/continental-mutual-insurance-v-cochrane-colo-1931.