Homer A. Bonhiver, Receiver of American Allied Insurance v. Affiliated Companies of America

447 F.2d 108
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 9, 1971
Docket71-1105
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 447 F.2d 108 (Homer A. Bonhiver, Receiver of American Allied Insurance v. Affiliated Companies of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Homer A. Bonhiver, Receiver of American Allied Insurance v. Affiliated Companies of America, 447 F.2d 108 (5th Cir. 1971).

Opinion

SIMPSON, Circuit Judge:

The Receiver of a Minnesota corporation brought a creditor’s action below against the alleged recipients of fraudulent transfers of funds and property. Following a non-jury trial the lower court dismissed the action, holding that the applicable statute of limitations had run and that the transfers which formed the basis for the suit were not fraudulent.

On March 7, 1968, the appellant Homer A. Bonhiver (Bonhiver), Receiver of American Allied Insurance Company (American), obtained a judgment for unpaid reinsurance premiums in the amount of $34,205.59 against a Texas corporation, International Reinsurance Agency, Inc., (International Re) in the Ramsey County, Minnesota District Court. The judgment was made the basis of an action in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas. The district court rendered judgment on October 15, 1968, for appellant against International Re in the amount of $34,205.59. Appellant was unable to collect his judgment out of the assets of International Re and thereupon brought discovery proceedings after judgment which revealed the transactions upon which. the present suit against Affiliated Companies of America (Affiliated) and its stockholders was based.

During the period 1963-1965, Southwestern States General Agency (South *110 western States) was engaged principally in the school child accident insurance business. Southwestern States was not itself an insurer or a reinsurer, but an agent which engaged in the placement of business, the collection of premiums, the payment of claims and the documentation and payment of premiums over to the insurance carriers. Southwestern States, the name of which was later changed to Affiliated Companies of America, had two stockholders, Jack Murphy and Ellison Miles.

International Re, the debtor under the original Minnesota state judgment, was formed in March, 1963, with Murphy, Miles and Francis J. Savage as stockholders. Savage acted as International Re’s manager and president, with Miles and Murphy taking no part in the day-to-day operations. International Re principally acted as a reinsurance intermediary by placing reinsurance business for the benefit of insurance carriers.

Initially, Southwestern States and Resolute Insurance Company (Resolute) entered into an arrangement whereby Resolute furnished the policies, together with licenses to act on its behalf in various states, and Southwestern States performed the usual agency functions. Resolute then hired International Re to place reinsurance with other companies for the full amount of its outstanding policies and also to arrange stop loss coverage 1 with another insurance company.

In August or September, 1964, Savage, as president of International Re, proposed to Murphy, as president of Southwestern States, that the two companies enter into a three year program of reinsurance, including a fronting company, primary reinsurers, and a stop loss reinsurer. International Re’s proposal asked that Southwestern States pay to International Re advance premium deposits totaling $20,000.00. As part of the proposal, International Re promised to hold such deposits in escrow pending completion of the contracts. On October 2, 1964, Southwestern States responded with a detailed counter-proposal dealing with the purchase by Southwestern States of a second stop loss cover. Accompanying the counter-proposal was Southwestern States’ check in the amount of $20,000.00 as a deposit premium, to be held in escrow. Two additional checks, in the amounts of $30,000.00 and $20,000.00, were sent to International Re by Southwestern States on December 23, 1964, as deposit premiums for the second layer stop loss cover. All three checks sent to International Re by Southwestern States were deposited in International Re’s general bank account.

On December 31, 1964, Murphy and Miles each withdrew from International Re the sums of $5,000.00, which were denominated consulting fees. During 1963 and 1964, International Re purchased furniture and fixtures at a total cost in excess of $3,600.00, which were carried on its books as of December 31, 1964, at a value of $2,500.00. The furniture and fixtures were sold to Southwestern in 1965 for less than $1,200.00. When Southwestern defaulted on its obligation to pay these items, the account receivable was written off on International Re’s books as uncollectible.

On February 18, 1965, Murphy and Miles, who were officers of both International Re and Southwestern States, withdrew $70,000.00 from International Re’s account and deposited that amount in Southwestern States’ account. By letter dated February 26, 1965, Murphy wrote to Savage (who was in London, England) that the $70,000.00 had been recaptured by Southwestern States because of International Re’s failure to perform the conditions stipulated in the counterproposal of October 2, 1964. In early March, 1965, Savage relinquished his position as president of International Re. At some point in time prior to leav *111 ing the presidency of International Re, Savage was hired as vice president in charge of reinsurance by American.

The appellant Bonhiver filed his complaint in the court below on April 24, 1969. It alleged that the withdrawals of December 31, 1964, and February 18, 1965, and the transfer of furniture and fixtures from International Re to Southwestern States violated the fraudulent conveyance statutes of the State of Texas. 2 3 Named as defendants were Miles, Murphy and Affiliated. The defendants denied that the transactions were fraudulent and affirmatively plead,ed the four and two year statutes of limitations. 3

The district court made the following crucial findings of fact which we paraphrase slightly for the sake of clarity and brevity:

1. The $70,000.00 sent to International Re by Southwestern States was to be held in escrow pending completion of the signed contracts.

2. International Re did not comply with the reinsurance premium arrangements stipulated in the counter-proposal of October 2,1964.

3. On February 18, 1965, Murphy and Miles withdrew the $70,000.00 held in escrow by International Re and deposited it in the genera] account of Southwestern States.

4. Savage was employed by American as vice president and general manager of reinsurance prior to February 18, 1965. He was advised and was aware of the withdrawal of the $70,000.00 from International Re shortly after February 18, 1965, and resigned as president of International Re in early March, 1965.

5. In June, 1965, Philip Kitzer, Jr., President of American, was advised of and was aware that $70,000.00 had been withdrawn from International Re in the spring of 1965 and deposited in Southwestern States’ account.

6. The payments of $5,000.00 each to Miles and Murphy on December 31, 1964, did not render International Re insolvent and were appropriate fees for services rendered.

7.

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Bluebook (online)
447 F.2d 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/homer-a-bonhiver-receiver-of-american-allied-insurance-v-affiliated-ca5-1971.