Great Falls Mutual Fire Insurance v. Harvey

45 N.H. 292
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJune 15, 1864
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 45 N.H. 292 (Great Falls Mutual Fire Insurance v. Harvey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Great Falls Mutual Fire Insurance v. Harvey, 45 N.H. 292 (N.H. 1864).

Opinion

Bartlett, J

The plaintiffs must show that the assessment made against the defendant was an assessment to which he was legally liable. Atlantic Company v. Fitzpatrick, 2 Gray, 279. The plaintiffs’charter, among other things, provides for four classes, and that "each class shall be hable for its own losses”; that the premium notes of each class "shall be holden and assessed to pay the losses occurring in their respective classes, and not each for the other”; that [the company shall open books of account with each class, and that "all the business receipts, disbursements, losses, assessments and expenses, shall be put to the several classes to which they are applicable”; and that "the general expenses of the company,which are not strictly applicable to either class, shall be apportioned to the several classes according to the amount insured by each; provided that any member of said company may at any time surrender his policy, and in sixty days thereafter be entitled to receive his premium note upon the payment of his proportion of all losses and expenses incurred at the date of such surrender”; that all persons becoming insured in the company "shall be deemed and taken to be members thereof during the term specified in their respective policies and no longer”; that every person who shall become a member "shall, before he receives his policy, deposit his promissory note for such sum of money as shall be determined by the directors, apart, not exceeding ten per cent., of which note shall be immediately paid for the purpose of discharging the incidental expenses of the institution, and the remainder of said deposit note shall be payable, in part or the whole, at any time when the directors shall deem the same requisite for the payment of losses or other expenses ; and, at the expiration of the term of insurance, the said note or such part of the same as shall remain unpaid after deducting all losses and expenses accruing during said term shall be relinquished and given up to the signer thereof.” Secs. 2,3,6. It also provides that every member shall be bound "to pay his proportion of losses and expenses happening or accruing in and to the class in winch his property is embraced”; that, in case of loss or damage by fire happening to any member upon any prop[298]*298erty insured in the company, such member shall give notice thereof in writing to the directors, (he., wdthin thirty days of the time of such loss or damage, and thatthe directors shall ascertain and determine the amount of such loss or damage within ninety days after such notice, &c.; that "all assessments shall be determined by the directors, and the sum to be paid by each member shall always be in proportion to the original amount of his deposit note of the class in which his property is embraced,” &c.; that, in certain cases of neglect by a member "to pay the sum assessed upon his note in conformity to this act, the directors may sue for and recover the whole amount of said deposit note, with costs of suit, and the money thus collected shall remain in the treasury of the company subject to the payment of such losses^and expenses as have or may thereafter accrue, and the balance, if any remain, shall be returned to party from whom it was collected, on demand after thirty days from the expiration of the policy”; that "the directors shall settle and pay all losses within three months after they shall have been notified as aforesaid,” unless they elect to replace or repair the property, &g. ; that, upon the alienation of any property insured, the policy thereupon shall be .void and shall be surrendered, and, upon such surrender, the insured shall be entitled to receive his note upon the payment of his proportion of all losses and expenses that have accrued prior to such surrender; that, in case of the destruction of property insured by fire, "the directors may retain the amount of the premium note given for the insurance thereof, until the time for which such insurance was made shall have expired, and, at the expiration thereof, the insured shall have the right to demand and receive such part of said retained sum as has not been expended in losses or assessments.” Secs. 7, 8, 9, 12, 13 and 14.

Under this charter and the by-laws established under it, the defendant was liable to assessment only for losses and expenses properly chargeable to the second class, in which his property was insured, accruing during the term mentioned in his policy. Herkimer Company v. Fuller, 14 Barb. 375; Bangs v. Gray, 15 Barb. 272; S. C. 2 Kernan, 482; Tallmadge v. Rensselaer, 21 Barb. 611; Devendorf v. Beardsley, 23 Barb. 663; Ohio Company v. Marietta, 3 Ohio State Rep. 350; Brown v. Williams, 28 Me. 254; and see Swamscot Company v. Partridge, 25 N. H. 373. The declaration accordingly avers that the directors "did settle and determine the sums to be paid by the several persons who were members in said second class of said company at the time when said losses happened and said expenses were incurred.” The evidence fails to support this allegation or to show that the losses and expenses for which the defendant was assessed accrued during the term of his policy, for it merely tends to show that certain losses had occurred and certain expenses had accrued before the assessment. The evidence as to what was included in the assessment is by no means distinct; but we understand it as showing that expenses and liabilities incurred long before the defendant became a member of the company were included in the assessment, and this seems admitted in the argument of the plaintiffs’ counsel. An assessment including such expenses would be invalid as against the defendant. Long Pond Company v. Houghton, 6 Gray, [299]*29977. The present case, therefore, differs from N. E. Insurance Company v. Belknap, 9 Cush. 140, and Marblehead Company v. Allen, 3 Gray, 210, where substantial accuracy in the assessments was held sufficient.

After the defendant’s policy was issued,the company adopted the two by-laws numbered fourteen and fifteen. These by-laws were offered by the plaintiffs and were, we think, properly rejected by the court.

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Bluebook (online)
45 N.H. 292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/great-falls-mutual-fire-insurance-v-harvey-nh-1864.