Farmers' Insurance v. La Rue

2 Cin. Sup. Ct. Rep. 236
CourtOhio Superior Court, Cincinnati
DecidedApril 15, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2 Cin. Sup. Ct. Rep. 236 (Farmers' Insurance v. La Rue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Superior Court, Cincinnati primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farmers' Insurance v. La Rue, 2 Cin. Sup. Ct. Rep. 236 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1872).

Opinion

Yaple, J.

This suit is prosecuted by the Farmers’ Insurance Company, a joint stock insurance company, incorporated under the laws of this State, against George S. La Rue, as the auditor of Hamilton county, to perpetually enjoin the levy, etc., of a tax upon eighty thousand dollars of its notes, which were given to, and received by, it for the unpaid subscription to its capital stock, between November 19, 1866, and December 14, 1866. The insurance company was incorporated with an authorized capital of $100,000, of which $20,000 was paid in by the subscribers, and the above-mentioned notes taken for the residue of the subscriptions to the capital stock.

A temporary injunction has been allowed, and is still in force.

The insurance company asks for the injunction. It is in the full exercise of its corporate functions, and does not claim that it intends to wind up its affairs without calling upon its stock subscribers to pay these notes given therefor. It claims that they are not taxable to it, though it may con[237]*237tinue as a corporation, doing an insurance business, for an indefinite period.

On the trial, in Special Term, the court found the facts and reserved the case for decision here. The finding is as follows:

“ That the notes referred to in the petition were given by subscribers to the capital stock of the plaintiff for balances of unpaid subscriptions thereto, and said notes were dated November 19, 1866, to December 14,1866; and that the. stock was issued to said stockholders, and said notes taken, in all respects conformably to the act of April 11, 1856.”

The notes are in this form:

“ $- Cincinnati,-, 18 — .

On demand, — promise to pay to the Farmers’ Insurance Company the sum of-dollars, for value received, the same being a balance due on-shares of the capital stock held by-in said company, subject to the call of the board of directors, in whole, or in such installments as may be required to meet their liabilities.”

The shares of stock are required by law to be twenty dollars each.

Section 4 of the act of April 11, 1856, 1 S. & O. 361, relating to the incorporation of joint stock insurance companies, provides, that “ at the time of subscribing for stock in any company organized under this act, the person so subscribing shall pay the sum of four dollars in money, on each share subscribed, and the balance on each share shall he subject to the call of the directors, secured to their approval by indorsed notes, payable on demand, or by other property or stocks,” etc.

Section 10 of the same act provides that, “It shall be lawful for such company to loan or invest any part of its capital stock, money, or other funds, in such way as the directors shall deem best for the safety and interest of the stockholders, and to sell, transfer, and dispose of any in[238]*238terest which the company may have acquired by any such loan or investment.”

In 1869, 66 O. L. 325, prior to the action of the auditor complained of, another act was passed in relation to joint stock insurance companies, section fourteen of which is as follows:

“ Sec. 39. Any company heretofore organized under any law of this State for any of the purposes mentioned in this act, which has taken notes or obligations of its stockholders for any portion or portions of the amount subscribed by them to its capital stock, shall, . . . within five years from the first day of July, a. d. 1869, increase its capital stock to at least one hundred thousand dollars, paid up and invested in the manner required by section 6 of this act,” etc. It also requires fifty per cent, of all dividends to be retained and applied to unpaid stock notes until such notes shall be fully paid. Such investments are required to be in stocks of the United States or State of Ohio, producing six per cent, per annum; or in bonds and mortgages on improved unincumbered real estate in the State of Ohio, worth fifty per cent, more than the amount loaned thereon.

Our laws of taxation applicable to the case are substantially as follows : Constitution, article 12,' section 2, “ Laws shall be passed, taxing by a uniform rule, all moneys, credits, investments in bonds, stocks, joint stock companies, or otherwise,” etc.

The term “credits” was incorporated into the constitution with the meaning which prior laws of the State had given it.

“ The term ‘ credits ’ . . . shall be held to mean and include every claim or demand for money, labor, or other valuable thing- due or to become due,” etc. Tax law of 1846, 44 O. L. 85; and see 2 S. & C. 1439, 1440, sec. 2.

Section 16 of the tax law of 1859, 2 S. & C. 1446, provides that, “ The president, secretary, or principal accounting officer of . . . or other” [every] “jointstock [239]*239company, . . . for whatever purpose they” [it] “ may have been created . . . shall list for taxation, . . . all the . . . moneys and credits of such company or corporation, within the State, at the actual value in money,” etc. Also, S. &. S. 756.

Section 2 of the act just referred to, permits individuals to deduct certain classes of their debts from their credits, and to return only the excess of the credits for taxation; but that section enacts, that, “ But in making up the sum of such debts owing, there shall be taken into account no obligation to any mutual insurance company, nor any unpaid subscription to the capital stock of any joint stock company, . . . nor any acknowledgment of any indebtedness unless founded on some consideration actually received and believed at the time of making such acknowledgment to be a full consideration therefor,” etc.

And section 10 of the same act, 2 S. & C. 1444, provides: “No person, company, or corporation shall be entitled to any deduction, on account of any bond, note, or obligation of any kind, given to any mutual insurance company; . . . nor on account of any unpaid subscription to, or installment payable on, the capital stock of any company, whether incorporated or unincorporated.”

And section 6 of the same act, p. 1442, S. &. S. 758, requires every person to list for taxation all his “ investments in stocks and joint stock companies.”

The constitution also gives the legislature power to alter or repeal laws under which corporations may be formed. Art. 13, sec. 2. So no part of the charter of a corporation formed under our State constitution can amount to a contract, except it be a contract, one of the terms of which is, that it may be altered at the pleasure of the State. The constitution of the United States forbids the passage of any law, by a State, impairing the obligation of contracts. Art. 1, sec. 10.

And article 2, section 28, of our State constitution pro-provides, that “ the general assembly shall have no power [240]*240to pass retroactive laws.” But by the decision of the Supreme Court, in Rairden, etc. v. Holden, 15 Ohio St. 210, no statute is retroactive or retrospective, within this clause of the constitution, which does not take away or impair vested rights acquired under existing laws, or create a new obligation, impose a new duty, or attach a new disability, in respect to transactions or considerations already past.

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Related

Farmers & Mechanics' Insurance v. La Rue
2 Cin. Sup. Ct. Rep. 493 (Ohio Superior Court, Cincinnati, 1873)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Cin. Sup. Ct. Rep. 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-insurance-v-la-rue-ohsuperctcinci-1872.