Corey v. Sherman

32 L.R.A. 514, 96 Iowa 114
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 21, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 32 L.R.A. 514 (Corey v. Sherman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Corey v. Sherman, 32 L.R.A. 514, 96 Iowa 114 (iowa 1895).

Opinions

Bobinso-n, J.

[117]*1171 2 [118]*1183 [120]*1204 [116]*116The defendants are -the Citizens7 Mutual Insurance Company of Waterloo, Iowa, James P. Sherman, as assignee of that company, and other persons who were concerned in its organization and business. The plaintiffs are policy holders of the [117]*117company. Measures were taken to organize the company in February, 1887. Soon after that time, it commenced to insure property owners against loss or •damage by fire, lightning, cyclones, tornadoes, and windstorms, and continued in that business until the latter part of January, 1891. On the third day of February, 1891, it made a general assignment for the benefit of its creditors. The notice and articles of incorporation provided for a corporation to do a mutual insurance business, and which should have a guaranty fund of not more than fifty thousand dollars, to be secured by the obligations of persons who should subscribe to it, in such form as the directors should approve. The form of the guaranty for this fund which was adopted is as follows: “For the purpose of the guaranty or pledge fund of the Citizens’ Mutual Insurance Company of Waterloo, Iowa, I hereby promise to take the number of shares of said fund set opposite my name at one hundred dollars per share, payable on the order of the directors of said association, provided that not to exceed ten per cent, thereof shall be payable in any six months and provided that the whole amount of my said subscription shall be void at my option after three years from date hereof. Dated this twenty-fourth day of February, A. D. 1887.” Eighteen persons signed this obligation for shares of the fund amounting in the aggregate to the sum of fifty thousand dollars, all but one or two of whom are made parties defendant. Two kinds of policies were issued by the company. To obtain one kind, the person who desired insurance signed an application which contained a promise to pay the company a specified sum at such time and by such installments as the directors of the company should order, pursuant to the articles of incorporation and by-laws of the company, the assessments not to exceed in any one year a [118]*118sum named; and the assessment for the first year was usually paid in advance. If the policy was desired for the term of six years, and the obligation was for me sum of sixty dollars, ten dollars would be paid in advance, and not more than ten dollars during each year of the life of the policy. For convenience, policies of that class may be termed1 “assessment policies.” For the other, or cash, policies, the assured paid money in advance, or gave their notes payable in full without condition. More than one-half the policies issued by the company were on the cash plan. The assessments on the deposit obligations or notes were made each year in advance, and notice thereof was sent to each policy holder, subject to assessment, thirty days before his assessment matured. The receipts of the company from ordinary sources were not sufficient to pay^losses and expenses, and during the year 1890 it incurred debts for money borrowed to meet its -liabilities to the amount of about eleven thousand dollars. On the twenty-third day of January 1891, the subscribers to the guaranty fund met and ordered a special assessment of ten per cent, of the amount of each subscription to the guaranty fund. This was the first assessment on account of that fund which had been made. Three days later the board of directors of the company met and ordered a special assessment of twenty-five per cent, on the gross amount of each deposit note held by the company on account of policies which were in force before1 the first day of January, 1891, for the purpose of paying accrued losses and expenses. It was also- ordered that no new policies should be issued until a further order by the board. On the third day of February, 1891, the subscribers to> the guaranty fund met, and adopted a resolution rescinding the action of January 23d making a special assessment of ten per cent, of [119]*119the guaranty fund, and directing that the portion of the assessment collected should be refunded. On the same day the board of directors also ordered that the portions of the assessment collected should be refunded. At the same time, notice was received from nearly all of the subscribers to the guaranty fund of their withdrawal from it. The board of directors then took action as follows: “On motion, it was resolved that general assignment of the property and business of this company be, and the same is hereby, made for the benefit of all the company’s creditors, in proportion to their respective claims.” On the next day the board elected James P. Sherman assignee, and directed the president and secretary to execute all papers necessary to carry out all orders of the board, and papers were executed accordingly. In February, 1891, the assignee obtained from the' judge of the proper district court an- order which in terms- authorized the delivery to any policy holder of his deposit note upon the -payment by him of the twenty-five per cent, assessment made by the board of directors on the twenty-sixth day of January. Not quite five thousand dollars were realized from that assessment, and notes upon which the assessments were so paid were surrendered to the .makers. In May, 1891, the district court set aside the assessment of January 26, 1891, so far as it applied to the deposit notes upon which it had not been paid, and ordered a new assessment upon -all dleposit notes in the hands of the assignee, and which he had not surrendered upon the payment of an assessment of twenty-five per cent., as directed by the order of the judge made in February. The new assessment varied according to the time the note upon which it was. made took effect, from nine per cent, to thirty-five and five-eighths, per cent. The order provided that parties who had paid the assessment ordered by the board, and taken up their notes, should [120]*120receive credit for the amounts they had paid. In September of the same year, the board of directors, on the suggestion of the assignee that the assessment of January 26th was not on a legal basis, and at his request, set it aside, and made a 'new assessment, in most if not all respects identical with that made by the district court. The money which the last assessment made by the court and by the board of directors was designed to- raise was to be used in paying -expenses of the company and losses, including those sustained by the holders of cash policies. It is probable that more than one-half the losses were under policies of that class. The indebtedness of the company seems- to have exceeded the sum of thirty-five thousand dollars, and, to pay it, there has been- collected only about five thousand dollars.

The plaintiffs, who are makers of deposit notes which were assessed by the district court in May, 1891, and by the board of directors in September of that year, claim that the organization of the company was not made according to law; that it is not a mutual insurance company; that business, transacted by it was not authorized by law; that it was procured by fraud; that the assessments in question are illegal; that an assessment of the subscriptions to- the guaranty fund should be made and -enforced, and the proceeds used to pay the losses -and expenses of the company, before the deposit notes should be assessed.

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Bluebook (online)
32 L.R.A. 514, 96 Iowa 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corey-v-sherman-iowa-1895.