Foley v. Oklahoma State Union

1947 OK 176, 181 P.2d 259, 198 Okla. 628, 1947 Okla. LEXIS 536
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 27, 1947
DocketNo. 32658
StatusPublished

This text of 1947 OK 176 (Foley v. Oklahoma State Union) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Foley v. Oklahoma State Union, 1947 OK 176, 181 P.2d 259, 198 Okla. 628, 1947 Okla. LEXIS 536 (Okla. 1947).

Opinion

BAYLESS, J.

The plaintiffs, Ed Foléy and 14 other individuals, all claiming to be members of the Oklahoma State Union of the Farmers’ Educational and Co-Operative Union of America. (hereafter called the State Union), together with three local unions which are members of the State Union, brought suit in the district court of Oklahoma county against the State Union, its officers, the members of its executive- committee, and the Union Mutual Insurance Company (hereinafter called the Union Mutual) .

Plaintiffs prayed for the appointment of a receiver to take charge of the assets of the Farmers’ Union, for an accounting, that the executive committee of the Farmers’ Union be enjoined from engaging in ultra vires activities, and that the Union Mutual be impressed with a trust for the benefit of the members of the State Union. The trial court decided the issues in favor of the defendants, denying plaintiffs any relief, from which adverse decision the plaintiffs have appealed.

The defendant, the State Union, is an unincorporated association chartered by the National Farmers’ Educational and Co-Operative-Union of America, a Texas corporation. Said defendant has never been issued a charter by the Secretary of State of Oklahoma and has not incorporated in this or any other state. It is an entity separate and distinct from that of the national organization. It is a nonstock, nonprofit organization, authorized to buy for and sell only to its members under the provisions of its constitution and by-laws. [629]*629The following are eligible to become members of this organization: farmers, country mechanics, school teachers, physicians, and ministers of the gospel. However, provision is made in the bylaws for nonvoting members, who may belong to any business or profession and may participate in the financial, educational, and social benefits of the Union. The purposes of the Farmers’ Union as stated in its constitution are to assist the members in buying and selling, to educate the farming class in scientific farming, to systematize methods of production and distribution, to secure profitable prices for agricultural products, and to bring farming up to the standards of other industries and business enterprises. The membership fee is $1 and the annual dues are $2 for each member. The State Union was organized over 30 years ago and its membership is now in excess of 25,000. It is managed by its president under the supervision of the executive committee. The president is elected for a term of one year and the executive committee for a term of three years. The officers and the members of the executive committee are elected at the annual state meeting, where each local union is represented by its elective delegates.

For the past 25 years the State Union has written insurance on farm property and crops upon a mutual assessment plan. Insurance premiums for the year 1945 amounted to $395,000. The State Union operates a merchandising exchange in Oklahoma City. Originally it sold only binder twine, fence posts, and coal, but in recent years it has expanded in scope so that it now handles many articles of merchandise, such as flour and feed, clothing, hardware, automobile accessories, groceries, gasoline, oil, and kerosene. The gross sales from this department exceeded $411,000-and the net profit exceeded $22,000 for the year 1945. The net value of the assets of the State Union as of December 31, 1945, are given as $388,259. These assets are back of its insurance and business activities.

Prior to 1938 the State Union wrote fire and tornado insurance on rural churches, schools, and business pro'perty, mostly in unincorporated towns. The question was raised as to the authority and propriety of writing this type of insurance. The executive committee decided to organize a separate insurance company and to transfer these policies to the new company.

The following minute was entered in the journal of the State Union under date of March 8, 1938: '

“The proposition of the Constitution and By-Laws for the Union Mutual Insurance Company was carefully considered and adopted.”

Twenty persons are listed in the articles of incorporation as being the organizers of the Union Mutual, seven of whom were officers and members of the executive committee of the State Union, and they (the same seven) comprised all but two of the members of the board of directors of the Union Mutual, which consisted of nine members. Some 500 policies were transferred from the State Union to the Union Mutual. At the same time $10,000 was transferred by check from the State Union to the new company. This money, as unearned premiums, belonged with the policies transferred to the Union Mutual or, as some of the witnesses described it, as surplus reserves accumulated while said policies were held by the State Union. The following minute was entered in the State Union’s journal on March 8, 1938:

“After some discussion with reference to the most feasible plan of procedure insofar as legalizing the new insurance company, financially speaking, it was moved by Smith and seconded by Hend-rickson that President Cheek and Secretary Lawter, be and are hereby authorized to set over the necessary unearned premium due the said insurance company on such risks as have been set over from the Farmers’ Union Mutual Property Insurance Company to the Union Mutual Insurance Company. Carried unanimously.”

The $10,000 figure was not computed by an actuary but it was computed by use of a formula furnished by the State [630]*630Insurance Board. The annual statement or report of the Union Mutual filed with the Insurance Board for the year 1944 contains the following statement: “Donated Surplus . . . $10,000.” That is the only evidence indicating that this fund was donated or given to the new company. There is abundant evidence to the contrary. The Union Mutual has occupied office space in the State Union’s offices without paying rent or utility bills since the date of its organization. However, the evidence discloses that the State Union derives certain benefits from the Union Mutual. It furnishes the State Union, free of cost, printed forms of endorsements of various kinds to be attached to policies. By writing policies on rural, schools, churches, and lodges in small communities the Union Mutual has helped to build up good will and contacts for the membership and the insurance department of the State Union, so that both organizations are mutually complementary and helpful. At the time of the trial three of the officers of the State Union and three of its directors, or a total of six of its officials, were members of the board of directors- of the Union Mutual. The 1945 audit prepared for and at the expense of the State Union carries the Union Mutual as one of the departments of the State Union, and under the “Consolidated Balance Sheet by Departments” which is part of the audit, the assets and liabilities of the Union Mutual are listed along with those of the other various departments of the State Union. The State Union has from time to time advanced money to the Union Mutual without charging interest therefor. In 1943 the Union Mutual owed the State Union over $15,000, commented on by the Insurance Commissioner in his report as follows:

“. . . It has been and is at this time the practice, that the Farmers Union will issue its check for expense and disbursement items, when due, and the Company issue its check at a subsequent date to the Farmers Union covering the combined total of the various amounts.

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Bluebook (online)
1947 OK 176, 181 P.2d 259, 198 Okla. 628, 1947 Okla. LEXIS 536, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foley-v-oklahoma-state-union-okla-1947.