Hammond v. Knox

125 A.D. 9, 109 N.Y.S. 367, 1908 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2707
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 4, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 125 A.D. 9 (Hammond v. Knox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hammond v. Knox, 125 A.D. 9, 109 N.Y.S. 367, 1908 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2707 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Spring, J.:

On the 11th day of March, 1904, the plaintiff was appointed receiver of the Atlas Mutual Insurance Company, a mutual fire association organized in pursuance of the laws of the State of Massachusetts, with its principal place of business in Boston in that State. The defendant resides in the city of Buffalo, in the State.of Kew York; and in September, 1903, the insurance company issued to him two fire insurance policies. The premium on one policy was $555, and the other $2,620. Each policy contained an agreement by the [11]*11insured as a condition of this policy that the said insured or their legal representatives shall pay in addition to said cash premium all such sums as may be assessed by the directors of said company, pursuant to the laws of the commonwealth of Massachusetts, but in no event shall said assessment or assessments exceed a sum equal to the amount of said cash premium.”

This action is commenced by the receiver to recover of the defendant assessments claimed to have been made in compliance with the contract provision quoted, and the regularity of the proceedings terminating in the assessment is assailed. The record on appeal does not purport to contain all the evidence given upon the trial. It is made in form a bill of exceptions, containing a synopsis of each of the exhibits received in evidence and which pertain mainly to the proceedings culminating in the assessments against the stockholders. These exhibits and the findings of the court, which in the main include in detail the various steps taken, with very little oral proof, comprise the case on appeal.

The proceedings were instituted in pursuance of certain statutes of the State of Massachusetts. The Revised Laws, chapter 118, sections 47 and 48, are as follows: “ Section 47. If a mutual fire insurance company is not possessed of cash funds above its reinsurance reserve, sufficient for the payment of incurred losses and expenses, it shall make an assessment for the amount needed to pay such losses and expenses upon its members liable to assessment therefor, in proportion to their several liability. * * * Section 48. If by reason of depreciation or loss of its funds or otherwise, the cash assets of such a company, after providing for its other debts, are'less than the required premium reserve upon its policies, it shall make good the deficiency by assessment in the mode provided in the preceding section.”

Section 49 provides that if the directors of the company determine that a necessity exists for a call or assessment upon the members, application may be made “to the Supreme Judicial Court for any county, by a petition in the nature of a bill in equity, praying the court to examine such assessment or call, the necessity therefor, and all matters connected therewith, and to confirm, amend or annul the assessment or call or to order that the same be made as law and justice may require.”

[12]*12A healing is had before the auditor appointed by the court, and upon his report the court acts, making such a decree as “justice and equity require,” and the decree is final' “and conclusive upon the company, and all persons liable to the assessment or call, as to the necessity of the same, the authority of the company to make or collect the same, the amount thereof, and all formalities connected therewith. An assessment or call altered or amended by vote of directors and decree of the court thereon, shall be binding upon all parties who would have been liable under it as originally made, and in all legal proceedings shall be held to be such original assessment or call.”

The findings show that while the defendant was insured in the company “ losses occurred in the lawful business of the said company, and by reason of depreciation and loss of its funds the cash assets of the said company, after providing for its other debts, became less than the required premium reserve upon its policies.” That “ by reason of such depreciation and loss it became necessaz-y to levy a mutual assessznent upon the meznbez-s of the company to provide for and pay the sazne izi accoz-dance with the laws of the Coznmonwealth of Massachusetts.” The plaintiff was appointed receiver of the company March 11, 1904, by said Supreme Court, and made application in Deceznber following to that court for an order or decree directizzg the assessment to be made upon the members. The defendant had notice by mail of this proceeding, “ and of all proceedings therenndez-,” including the hearing on the report of the auditor. In pursuance of the decree an assessment was ordered by the directors of the coznpany “ of $13,500 upon the former and present membez-s of the company liable thereto, the same being necessary for the payment of izzcurred losses and expenses of collecting, and of receivez-ship, the company beizig insolvent.”

The assessment was, on May twelfth thereafter, duly ratified by the Supz-ezne Court, but no zzotice of the application was sez-ved upon the defendant, nor was there any appearance upon his part in any of the proceedings. Schedules were znade in said decree apportioning said assessznezit among the zneznbers of the said company, and the defendant’s aliquot pz-oportion, as fixed by the decree, was $1,342.92, and which he refused to pay ozi deznand.

The record is not clear as to the exact amount of the liabilities of [13]*13the company. The resolution of the directors passed February 11, 1905, declares that the assessment of $73,500 is “ necessary for the payment of accrued losses and expenses,” including those of the receivership; and this resolution was confirmed by the court and the assessment made on that basis. The amount to be raised was to be “levied with rests at the time of each substantial fire loss,” and aggregates $28,750.61. Then follows this clause in the resolution: “ And that there be added by way of overlay to the amount so levied upon each particular policy such a percentage of every such amount as will bring the aggregate of the amounts levied on all such policies including said overlay up to the sum of seventy-three thousand five hundred dollars ($73,500) the amount of the assessment herein voted and ordered.”

An additional petition in the proceeding sets forth the amount of the assets of the company, and states that the “aggregate possible liabilities of the company, not including the expenses of receivership, are $75,583.50.” The evidence taken before the auditor is not in the record, but the synopsis of his report is that it was necessary to raise by assessment $36,751.61, and that there were creditors in Hew York State to the amount of $25,050.32; and it appears there were large sums due from assessments upon policyholders residing in that State.

The purpose of the statutes of the State of Massachusetts authorizing assessments against the members of these mutual companies was to provide a summary, speedy method of providing a fund to meet losses as they occurred. What seems to be a low premium was fixed by the Atlas Company, but there was an additional liability not in excess of the cash premium provided for in the policy. The policyholders were widely scattered for the business of the company was carried on in many of the States, and ¡personal notice was not required to be served upon them, but notice by mail was deemed to be sufficient. This notice apparently was not required in each stage of the proceeding. The defendant had notice by mail of the original petition to the court and of the other steps in that distinct part of the proceeding, but did not appear and no notice of the subsequent proceedings was given him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 A.D. 9, 109 N.Y.S. 367, 1908 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2707, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hammond-v-knox-nyappdiv-1908.