Grobe v. Erie County Mutual Insurance

24 Misc. 462, 53 N.Y.S. 628
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 24 Misc. 462 (Grobe v. Erie County Mutual Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grobe v. Erie County Mutual Insurance, 24 Misc. 462, 53 N.Y.S. 628 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1898).

Opinion

Spring, J.

The defendant insurance company was organized in 1814 as a mutual insmance corporation, and ever since has carried on a very successful business. The mode of insurance as spread in its constitution is conformable to the requirements of the statute applicable to such companies. Each person designing to avail himself of the insurance provided by its charter paid as cash premium a certain sum fixed by the board of trustees, and as further collateral security deposited his promissory note for such sum as said trustees determined, restricted, however, to five times [463]*463the amount of such cash payment, and payments were exacted on the note at the instance of the trustees' to meet the ordinary exigencies of the business, and upon the expiration of the policy the note was surrendered to the insured. No provision is made for any distribution of profits among the persons- insured. The scheme is to secure insurance at substantially its actual cost. The business is managed by a board of trustees who are elected annually by the persons insured, so that to that extent every person holding a policy is a member of the corporation and is entitled to voice in the selection of its management. By chapter 850 of the Laws of 1896 it is permitted a mutual fire insurance corporation having surplus assets, adequate to reinsure all its’ outstanding risks, to convert said company into a stock corporation. The prerequisite to this change is the consent of the superintendent of insurance and a three-fourths vote of the president and directors of the corporation. The power to change existed under the laws then in force, only the consent of two-thirds of the members present at a regular meeting or a special meeting called therefor was essential to become a joint-stock corporation, or in case no meeting was held the written consent of two-thirds of the members supplemented by the consent of three-fourths of the directors was a condition precedent to' such change. That is, the radical change made by the law of 1896 did away with the necessity of the consent of the members of the corporation, but vested the power wholly in the board of trustees, providing the preliminary consent of the superintendent of insurance was obtained. However unwise the enactment may be in thus depriving the members of any voice in the transfer, I cannot see that it is an infraction of any constitutional provision. Safeguards are embodied in the statute providing for notice to all the members of the corporation and giving them the preference in the purchase of stock in the reorganized corporation, and an accounting and investigation are taken at the instance of the superintendent of insurance after the capital stock has all been subscribed for and paid in, and if the proceedings have been carried through, conformably to the statute, that official so certifies and the reorganization is complete. The plaintiff in this action held a policy with defendant and brings his suit in equity, alleging that the trustees intend changing to a stock corporation, and seeks to restrain them from so doing.

There are many averments in the complaint that have very little to do with the substantive cause of action, averments evidently in[464]*464corporated in the complaint arising out of a desire to attack and impugn the motives of the trustees. Eor instance, the complaint al- ■ leges that prior to 1895 voting by proxy was prohibited by the constitution of. the corporation, and that year at a regular meeting this inhibition was removed. There is no allegation charging any undue action on the part of the trustees in making this change, nor are they charged with fraud in regard to it. It seems to have been done at a regular meeting, and in a regular way, soi that even though the amendment may have been injudicious it involves no criticism against the trustees. '

Again, it is charged that a large number of the members became distrustful of the management and made á vigorous effort at the last annual election to oust the trustees, but the latter secured their retention by proxies, from the various members. This accusation, inasmuch as no unfair or fraudulent conduct is charged, is a trifle amusing. Each proxy represented a member, and as that was the mode of voting prescribed by the organic law of the company, any one could be energetic in. procuring powers of attorney from his associate members, and the fact that one man was more successful possibly than his rival in the race, should not subject him to obloquy. About, all there is in that allegation is that two' parties were striving for the ascendancy, and the defeated party, like an unfortunate candidate for political preferment, felt sore over its defeat and has come to regard the election of its competitor as a public calamity,

Again, the complaint alleges that the act .permitting the change fróm a mutual to a stock corporation without the consent of the members was .enacted through the influence of these trustees. Ro averment of any improper interference on their part is embodied in the complaint, so that this charge has little of merit in it so> far as the pleading shows. The further allegations relate to the excellent financia] status of the company and the various acts showing the intention of the trustees to become a stock corporation in pursuance of the legislative enactment mentioned. After all the pith of the controversy is as to the right of the trustees to make this change without the consent of the members, The argument of the plaintiff is that every-policyholder by virtue of his membership, is a co-partner and entitled to a pro rata share in the assets of the corporation. ' I do not so interpret his relations to the corporation.. If that were so the death of a policyholder would ipso facto dissolve [465]*465, the copartnership and each member would be entitled to an accounting whenever the death of a policyholder occurred, or whenever a policy expired. During the life of his policy he has a voting membership which is essential to continue the organization and to insure the selection of managers. The voting power had to be vested somewhere, and by the constitution and the scheme of insurance it is vested in the policyholders, the rights of each of whom terminate upon the surrender of his note. The rights of members of mutual fire insurance companies have several times been the subject of judicial construction in this state. In Cohen v. N. Y. Mutual Life Ins. Co., 50 N. Y. 610, and which is the leading case on this subject, Judge Allen uses the following language, at page 624: “But whatever analogies there may be between mutual companies and ordinary partnerships, and the relation of the members of the two organizations, an incorporated company, although organized upon the mutual principle, is in no proper or legal sense a partnership. The defendant is a body politic and corporate, .capable of contracting and of suing and being sued, and the relation between the plaintiff and the corporation is that of insured and insurer; * * *. Other and incidental rights are secured to the'plaintiff as a member of the company, on© of the corporators; but this does not make the members partners as between themselves or affect the express contract of the corporation.”

Again, in Uhlman v. New York Life Ins. Co., 109 N. Y. 421, citing the above case as authority, Judge Peckham says, at p. 429: “ It has been held that the holder of a policy of insurance, even in a mutual company, was in no sense a partner 'of the corporation ’-which issued the policy, and that the relation between the policyholder and the company was one of contract, measured by the terms -of the policy.” See, also, People v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 Misc. 462, 53 N.Y.S. 628, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grobe-v-erie-county-mutual-insurance-nysupct-1898.