Great Nat Ins.. Co. v. Fire Ins. Co.

170 A. 165, 165 Md. 510, 1934 Md. LEXIS 159
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 10, 1934
Docket[Nos. 34, 35, October Term, 1933.]
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 170 A. 165 (Great Nat Ins.. Co. v. Fire Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Great Nat Ins.. Co. v. Fire Ins. Co., 170 A. 165, 165 Md. 510, 1934 Md. LEXIS 159 (Md. 1934).

Opinion

On December 19th, 1931, the Empire Fire Insurance Company, a foreign corporation, filed through its attorneys, Mullikin, Stockbridge Waters, a bill asking for the appointment of receivers for the Great National Insurance Company of Washington, District of Columbia; and on the same day Musgrave and Waters were appointed by the court "with the power and authority to take charge and possession of the goods, wares and merchandise, books, papers and effects belonging to the said Great National Insurance Company of Washington, D.C.," and to collect its outstanding debts. Two days thereafter, upon the petition of the receivers, Addison E. Mullikin, a member of the firm of Mullikin, Stockbridge Waters, and John H. Hessey, a member of the firm of Musgrave, Bowling Hessey, were appointed by the court counsel to the receivers.

On March 28th, 1932, the defendant, the Great National Insurance Company, filed a demurrer and answer to the bill of the Empire Fire Insurance Company of December 19th, 1931, upon which demurrer no action was ever taken.

On January 4th, 1933, the receivers filed their report showing the "total receipts" of the estate to be $5,465.13, whereupon an order was passed by the court allowing them as compensation for their services, subject to the usual exceptions, $2,000. On January 11th, Messrs. Mullikin and Hessey, upon petition filed by them, were allowed a fee of *Page 513 $2,000 as counsel for the receivers. On February 4th, 1933, an auditor's report and account was filed by the receivers, in which were charged against the estate the following items: To the receivers as compensation, $2,000; to counsel a like amount; to Arthur T. Vanderbilt, attorney, "in payment of rent and release of office furniture, etc., at Newark, N.J., March 8th, 1932, 110 dollars"; and to "Lewis Weiner for moving office furniture, books, paper, etc., from Newark, N.J., to Baltimore, $135." The Great National Insurance Company filed exceptions to the allowance of the above-mentioned items on the 6th of March, but its exceptions were overruled or dismissed, and the audit finally ratified and confirmed. It is from that order that the appeal in No. 34 was taken.

On March 13th, 1933, the Berhenid Building Loan Association, appellant in No. 35, with James Dorsey and Fannie Lipman, filed a petition alleging that they had hitherto filed one praying that a co-receiver be appointed, but, as no action had been taken thereon, they were desirous of examining orally in open court witnesses in support of that petition, and asked that they be allowed to do so; and that they might also show why Joseph Oliver, receiver of the company in the District of Columbia, should not be appointed receiver in Maryland to succeed Musgrave and Waters, who were at that time contemplating resigning, and who later did resign.

Immediately following the petition or motion is the court's action thereon in these words:

"Upon the foregoing motion of James Dorsey et al., petitioners, it is this 13th day of March, 1933, Ordered by the Circuit Court of Baltimore City that the said petitioners be allowed to produce and examine orally in open Court their witnesses in support of their petition praying among other things for a co-receiver and in opposition to the appointment of Joseph Oliver as receiver herein.

"Denied, Mch. 13, 1933.

"H. Arthur Stump." *Page 514

The counsel for the appellant, in appealing from the action of the court on the above petition or motion, directed the clerk to "enter an appeal (to the Court of Appeals of Maryland) on behalf of the Berhenid Building and Loan Association from the order passed on the 13th day of March, 1933, denying petition and order passed on the 13th day of March, 1933, appointing receiver."

It would seem that the prayer of the petition was granted by the order first passed, and subsequently, on the same day, denied by a rescission of that order.

The record in this case is in a rather confused state. Petitions and demurrers were filed upon which no action was taken; orders were passed upon petitions allowing amendments, which were made, and the order allowing such amendments thereafter rescinded. There is much in the record that should not have been inserted, as it serves to confuse rather than enlighten the court upon the issues presented.

We will first consider and pass upon the questions presented in No. 34 Appeals. The real questions go to the correctness of the court's action in allowing the items in the audit which were excepted to by the appellant. The question of the court's jurisdiction upon the application as made was raised by demurrer to the bill, upon which no action was ever taken. One of the reasons assigned for want of jurisdiction was that the insurance commissioner was not a party to the proceedings. He was not a party to the original bill, filed December 19th, 1931, and was not a party at the time of the appointment of receivers on that date. It is, however, disclosed by the record, by a statement of counsel in the nature of a stipulation, that at the time the bill of December 19th, 1931, was filed, Mr. Young, counsel for the Great National Insurance Company, appeared in court and consented to the appointment of the receivers, and at that time the assistant attorney general of the State likewise appeared with a bill on behalf of the insurance commissioner of the State against the defendant, the Great National Insurance Company. But at a conference then had by the parties named, it was agreed that the bill of the plaintiff should be *Page 515 filed rather than the bill brought there by the assistant attorney general on behalf of the insurance commissioner.

Later, however, by orders of the 4th of January, 1933, an amendment was allowed to the bill by which Joseph Oliver, a resident of Baltimore City, and permanent receiver of the defendant company, was made a party plaintiff thereto, and William C. Walsh, insurance commissioner of Maryland, a party defendant. On March 6th, upon a motion of the defendant, the orders of January 4th were rescinded, whereupon, on the same day, a further order was passed upon the petition of the plaintiff, by which William C. Walsh was again made party defendant. He so remained until the 14th of March, when the order of March 6th was rescinded and the insurance commissioner was made party plaintiff instead of party defendant.

It will thus be seen that the insurance commissioner was, at the time of the order of March 6th, from which the appeal is taken, a defendant in these proceedings, and had been a defendant since the 4th day of that year.

In section 10 of article 48A of the Code, it is provided that "the commissioner is a necessary party to any proceedings instituted for the purpose of closing up the affairs of any company, when the same shall not be in the name of the State of Maryland." It was because of this statute that the insurance commissioner was made party to the bill. At this time the Acts of 1933, chapter 552, had not been passed, and there is no provision in the statute then in force requiring the insurance commissioner to appear as party plaintiff and not as party defendant in such proceedings.

The further objection was made that the plaintiff, being a non-resident of the state, was not a party entitled to the relief sought. This claim was made on the ground that the assets of the corporation in this state would first have to be applied to its creditors in Maryland, and that it was only in case of an excess of assets over the amount owing creditors in this state that any of such assets would go to the creditors of other states.

It was not known, nor did the record show, that there was *Page 516 no excess of assets.

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Bluebook (online)
170 A. 165, 165 Md. 510, 1934 Md. LEXIS 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/great-nat-ins-co-v-fire-ins-co-md-1934.