GUARANTEE RESERVE LIFE INSURANCE CO. v. Holzwarth

366 P.2d 377, 148 Colo. 366, 1961 Colo. LEXIS 422
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedNovember 13, 1961
Docket19165
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 366 P.2d 377 (GUARANTEE RESERVE LIFE INSURANCE CO. v. Holzwarth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
GUARANTEE RESERVE LIFE INSURANCE CO. v. Holzwarth, 366 P.2d 377, 148 Colo. 366, 1961 Colo. LEXIS 422 (Colo. 1961).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Hall.

In the trial court the plaintiffs in error were defendants and the defendants in error were plaintiffs. We refer to defendants in error as plaintiffs or individually as John or Caroline; to the plaintiffs in error Guarantee Reserve Life Insurance Company as Guarantee, The American Hospital and Life Insurance Company as American, and S. E. McCreless by name.

Long prior to 1953 plaintiffs owned stock in Guarantee and its predecessor. In 1949 John became a policyholder in Guarantee. Prior to 1953 Guarantee had held several annual conventions at the Grand Lake Dude Ranch of plaintiffs.

On February 17, 1954, Guarantee loaned plaintiffs *368 $46,000.00. The indebtedness arising out of this loan was evidenced by a promissory note payable in annual instalments of $3066.66 with interest at five and one-half per cent, and secured by deed of trust on three parcels of Grand County real property with an appraised value of $190,050.00.

In all of the dealings whereby John became a policyholder and plaintiffs became stockholders in and borrowers from Guarantee, as well as host to those attending its annual conventions, he and they dealt entirely with one John S. Sherritt, principal stockholder and president of Guarantee, and one Charles M. Buescher, Jr., son-in-law of Sherritt and general counsel, stockholder and director of Guarantee.

As early as March 1953 and prior to making the loan to plaintiffs, Guarantee was in serious financial difficulties; in fact, the Insurance Commissioner of Colorado was insisting that its alleged surplus be made real instead of fanciful.

To meet this problem the directors of Guarantee met on March 2, 1953, and decided to offer on a pre-emptive basis to its then stockholders from authorized but unissued shares of its stock one share for each share held at $2.00 per share. The insurance commissioner took a dim view of this proposal for the reason that such sale would not produce sufficient funds to establish an adequate surplus and “thought” that to assure an adequate surplus the sales price should be raised to $3.50 per share. Consequently, another directors’ meeting was held May 26, 1953, at which it was agreed that the stock be offered at $3.50 per share instead of $2.00.

Understandably, the stockholders were laggard in exercising the pre-emptive right to add to their then holdings; consequently, some of the stock offered remained unsold.

About August 1, 1954, Sherritt and Buescher called on plaintiffs at their ranch and offered to sell to them 10,000 shares of Guarantee stock at $3.50 per share. By *369 way of inducement they offered to reduce the interest on the $46,000.00 loan from five and one-half to four and one-half percent; to make John a director of Guarantee, and to increase their loan to $91,000.00 to take care of the $46,000.00 loan, $35,000.00 to pay for the stock, and an additional $10,000.00 for ranch improvements. Plaintiffs made no commitment but told Sherritt and Buescher that they would consider the matter and advise them later.

About two weeks thereafter John went to Guarantee’s office in Fort Collins and there met Sherritt and discussed with him the foregoing proposal. John, speaking for himself and Caroline, accepted the proposal as outlined by Sherritt and Buescher at the ranch, subject to the following provisions: (1) that for three years they pay no interest on the $35,000.00 to be borrowed to purchase the stock, and for a like period they receive no dividends declared on the stock; (2) that of the three tracts of land described in the $46,000.00 mortgage, only one (the home place appraised at $150,000.00) be included, and that in lieu of the two parcels omitted they pledge the 10,000 shares of stock; (3) that he not be made a director; (4) that there be a repurchase agreement whereby plaintiffs could at any time within three years elect not to keep the 10,000 shares of stock, whereupon their indebtedness to Guarantee would be reduced by $35,000.00. Sherritt agreed to these conditions and stated that he would have Buescher draw up the necessary papers.

A week or two after this meeting between Sherritt and John, Buescher and his wife appeared at the home of plaintiffs and at that time and place the following transpired: (1) plaintiffs signed a note dated August 5, 1954, payable to Guarantee for $87,847.32; (2) they signed a new deed of trust containing only the one parcel of land, recorded September 16, 1954; (3) to further secure this note they received and endorsed in blank stock certificate No. 4025 of Guarantee for 10,000 shares *370 of its stock — this certificate was signed for Guarantee by Sherritt, president, and one Smith, secretary; (4) they received Guarantee’s check for $35,000 which they endorsed in blank. The plaintiffs on that occasion delivered all of the foregoing documents to Buescher.

John and Buescher testified to all of the foregoing facts — there was no testimony to the contrary. At the time of delivery of these documents, according to the uncontradicted testimony, the contractual rights and duties of plaintiffs and Guarantee were fully consummated, defined and fixed and the trial court should have so held.

On or about August 27, 1954, plaintiffs received through the mail a letter dated at Fort Collins, Colorado, August 27, 1954, written on stationery of Guarantee. In the upper left corner appears: “John S. Sherritt, President.” In the upper right corner appears: “Franklin Beard, Secretary.” This letter is as follows:

“John G. Holzwarth and Caroline E. Holzwarth Grand Lake, Colorado
“Dear Mr. and Mrs. Holzwarth:
“Referring to your Mortgage dated August 15, 1954, please be advised that your payments under that Mortgage providing you do not draw the additional $10,000 provided for in the face amount of the Mortgage will be $3,432.37 payable on August 15, of each year from August 15, 1954, until paid in full. This payment will be in lieu of that payment set out in the said Deed of Trust and Note itself. Interest payments will continue as provided for in the said Note.
“In consideration of your assigning all dividend rights under Stock Certificate No. 4025 for 10,000 shares of Guarantee Reserve Life Insurance Company capital stock issued to yourselves, we agree to pay the interest due on $35,000 under the above mentioned Noted and Deed of Trust for a period of three years from August 15, 1954, to and including August 15, 1957. We also agree that anytime upon sixty days notice in writing to repur *371 chase the 10,000 shares of stock covered by the above mentioned Certificate for a full purchase price of $35,000.
“With kindest personal regards, we are
Sincerely yours,
John S. Sherritt
CMB/rr John S. Sherritt
Charles M. Buescher, Jr.
Charles M, Buescher, Jr.”

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Related

American Hospital and Life Insurance Co. v. Kunkel
376 P.2d 956 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1962)

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Bluebook (online)
366 P.2d 377, 148 Colo. 366, 1961 Colo. LEXIS 422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guarantee-reserve-life-insurance-co-v-holzwarth-colo-1961.