Hobza v. State Farmers Insurance

252 N.W. 214, 125 Neb. 776, 1934 Neb. LEXIS 187
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 4, 1934
DocketNo. 28670
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 252 N.W. 214 (Hobza v. State Farmers Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hobza v. State Farmers Insurance, 252 N.W. 214, 125 Neb. 776, 1934 Neb. LEXIS 187 (Neb. 1934).

Opinion

Eberly, J.

This is an action at law upon a “domestic assessment association” policy bearing date August 24, 1931, issued by the defendant, State Farmers Insurance Company of Omaha, to the plaintiff, Rudolph H; Hobza, insuring the latter against loss or damage to the property described therein by fire, lightning, tornado and wind. On November 15, 1931, certain property described in this policy was completely destroyed by fire. This action was instituted to recover the loss and damage thus caused. The defendant interposed as its defense the contention that under the by-laws constituting a part of the insurance contract an assessment had been levied upon the insured which became due and payable October 1, 1931, and de[777]*777linquent November 1, 1931, and plaintiff having utterly-failed to pay the same, the policy ceased to be enforceable thereafter, and was in that condition at the time the property was destroyed. A jury was waived by stipulation and the cause tried on the merits to the court, and judgment was entered for plaintiff. Defendant appeals.

The evidence clearly establishes as a fact that the assessment payable October 1, 1931, was unpaid on November 15, 1931, when the loss occurred. But plaintiff challenges the validity of this assessment as being in excess of the limitation upon assessments provided in said policy, and contends that the legal effect of the default of plaintiff in the payment of this assessment on or before November 1, 1931, was waived by the defendant as the result of the following transaction: On November 5 the plaintiff mailed to the defendant his check for $27.15, drawn on a bank therein named, the same being the amount of the assessment. It seems that the record justifies the inference that this check was duly indorsed by the insurance company and transmitted in due course of business to the drawee bank named therein, where payment was refused-and this instrument was thereupon returned because of “insufficient funds.” The insurance company, it appears, had credited the check as payment of this assessment payable October 1, the entry being made on November 8, 1931. On the return to it of this check, unpaid and dishonored, it had “charged it back” on November 14, 1931. On January 2, 1932, the plaintiff evidently requested the return of this dishonored check, which was refused on January 6, 1932, the reason therefor, as stated by the secretary of the company, being: “We cannot return this check until an equivalent amount is received, as it is the only evidence we would have for the state examiner, as to why we made this charge off in the journal.”

But the defendant also introduced evidence from which the following facts may be justly inferred: Hobza became a member of the State Farmers Insurance Company [778]*778of Omaha, Nebraska, in October, 1924. At that time he paid as “an advance assessment” the sum then required by section 1, art. V of defendant’s by-laws; and October 1 has been treated as his “assessment date” since his membership in the company was obtained. Thereafter at a regular meeting held on the first Thursday after, the second Monday in January, 1925, and on a like date in each subsequent January of the years 1926, 1927, 1928, 1929, 1930, 1931, there was levied by the board of directors an annual assessment in the sum of 2^ mills on the amount of insurance carried by plaintiff. These annual assessments were paid by plaintiff excepting only the assessment made in January, 1931. The failure to pay the assessment last referred to constitutes the entire basis of defendant’s denial of plaintiff’s claim. The actual loss of the property by fire is unquestioned.

Naturally the first question presented for consideration is the plaintiff’s challenge to the validity of the assessment. It appears that the insurance company in this litigation may be properly termed a “domestic assessment association.” An “assessment association,” as defined by statute, “is one that meets its losses and expenses from assessment levied upon its members.” Comp. St. 1929, sec. 44-102. See Western Life & Accident Co. v. State Insurance Board, 101 Neb. 152.

The fact renders controlling, so far as applicable, the sections of our insurance code pertaining to assessment associations, thereby including section 44-402, also sections 44-901 to 44-911, inclusive, Comp. St. 1929. These provisions in pari materia are to be construed together. In re Estate of Mathews, ante, p. 737.

In section 44-402, Comp. St. 1929, we find the provision: “Any assessment association organized to insure property may, in its by-laws, limit the liability of its members for assessment * * * to” a rate “which upon dwelling-houses and farm properties insured against loss by fire and lightning shall not be less than one-half of one per cent, per year after the first assessment. If the amount col[779]*779lected in any one year, including the amount in. the contingent funds, be insufficient to pay all losses sustained and expenses incurred during that year, then the members sustaining losses shall receive their proportionate share of such funds in full satisfaction of their losses.”

Section 44-908, Comp. St. 1929, provides for, and authorizes, this “first assessment” which is collected at the inception of each insurance contract as referred to in section 44-402. This is in turn the foundation of the “contingency fund.” The statutory plan thus evidenced contains the further provision: “Any diminution of the contingency fund. (by payments, expenses, etc.) shall be a liability to be provided for by the next assessment.” Comp. St. 1929, sec. 44-909.

By section 44-902, Comp. St. 1929, the right of assessment by the company is limited to a method which will secure for each member an assessment in “proper proportion to his risk” and not in excess of such member’s “pro rata amount” of his “liability for losses and his share of the expenses,” subject of course to the further limitation already referred to.

Section 44-903, Comp. St. 1929, provides: “No assessment shall be made on a member for liability occurring prior to his membership.”

Section 44-902, Comp. St. 1929, also provides: “All assessments shall be made by the board of directors unless otherwise provided in the articles of association (incorporation) .”

The articles of incorporation (or association) of this company provide: “The board of directors shall * * * Fourth, levy assessments.” (Art. VII, sec. 2.)

Two inescapable conclusions are supported by a fair construction of all the statutory provisions above referred to, considered in reference to the facts disclosed in the record in the instant case, viz., assessments must be levied by the board of directors subject to the limitations expressed, which are to be construed as on an annual basis, and can only be levied for losses actually accrued at or [780]*780prior to the date of the assessment levied; and future anticipated losses or expenses may not be covered by assessments. Indeed, this is the undoubted rule in assessment associations in the absence of statute or express membership contract to the contrary.

“But generally the authority of the directors to make assessments to pay losses and expenses, however broad the language of the provision conferring it, is not absolute. It depends upon the contingency of the happening of the losses and expenses to which the persons assessed are liable to contribute, and which have been duly ascertained by the directors and necessitate a resort to an assessment.” 32 C. J. 1216.

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Related

Ehlers v. Farmers Mutual Insurance
264 N.W. 894 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1936)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
252 N.W. 214, 125 Neb. 776, 1934 Neb. LEXIS 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hobza-v-state-farmers-insurance-neb-1934.