Lancashire Insurance v. Maxwell

30 N.E. 192, 131 N.Y. 286, 43 N.Y. St. Rep. 299, 86 Sickels 286, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1024
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 1, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 30 N.E. 192 (Lancashire Insurance v. Maxwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lancashire Insurance v. Maxwell, 30 N.E. 192, 131 N.Y. 286, 43 N.Y. St. Rep. 299, 86 Sickels 286, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1024 (N.Y. 1892).

Opinion

Peckham, J.

Stated briefly the plaintiff, the insurance company, desires to withdraw from the custody and control of the defendant, the superintendent of insurance of this state, all the funds which such company has heretofore deposited with the defendant, over and above the sum of $200,000, which is the minimum amount provided for by law to be deposited with such superintendent by a foreign insurance company as a condition of doing business within this state. The question is primarily one of power on the part of the court to direct or permit such withdrawal upon any terms or conditions whatever. And that question depends upon the character in which the defendant received the deposit of such funds or securities over the amount of $200,000.

*289 In construing the statutes relating to deposits with the superintendent, we agree with the General Term herein. The importance of the question to the plaintiff, which its learned counsel has stated, has induced us to' look with extreme care into the course of legislation upon this subject, but we are wholly unable to come to any other conclusion than that arrived at by the General Term of the Supreme Court. The statute, chapter 367 of the Laws of 1862 (§ 23, at page 618)., provides that an insurance company incorporated by or organized under the laws of any foreign government, shall “ deposit with the superintendent of the insurance department for the benefit and security of policy holders residing in the -United States, a sum not less than two hundred thousand dollars in stocks,” etc. Prior to the passage of this act the legislature had provided for the doing of business within this state by a foreign insurance company and had enacted that before any of its agents should be permitted to do business for it in this state evidence should be furnished to the comptroller that such company had invested in securities of a similar character to that required of home companies, an amount equal to the capital required from such home companies by section 6 of the general act, and that such securities and investments were held in trust by citizens of the United States for the benefit and security of such as might effect insurance with such agent. (Chap. 466 of the Laws of 1853, § 23.)

The act of 1862 substituted an official trustee, viz.: the superintendent of the insurance department for the individual trustees with whom deposits had been made theretofore for the benefit and security of such as may effect insurance,” etc. The deposit under the act of 1862 was made with the official trustee “ for the benefit and security of the policy holders in the United States.” The act provided that the deposit should be a sum not less than $200,000 in stocks of the United States or of the state of ISfew York * *

Although the minimum sum to be deposited under this .act with the superintendent of insurance equaled the minimum amount of capital which home companies organized .to do busi *290 Hess in the county of New York or Kings were permitted to have, yet the sum so deposited was not technically the capital of the company making the deposit. It was a trust fund placed in the hands of' an official trustee for tire benefit of policy holders in the United States. It was a special security to such persons, and although it might have been taken from the capital of the company, yet when deposited with the official trustee under our own statute, it became a trust fund for specially-named policy holders to which they could resort by virtue of the deposit, and not because it was capital in any sense. The learned counsel for the plaintiff does not claim that the ininimum amount of $200,000, deposited under the provisions of this statute could be withdrawn from the possession of the superintendent until all the conditions of the trust had been complied with, but he claims that inasmuch as the statute names a minimum amount, that any sum deposited with the superintendent above such minimum amount may be withdrawn tinder proper provisions made as to security by. a court of equity.

We think not. Although at least $200,000 must be deposited as a condition of the license to the foreign company to do business in this state, ye.t we are entirely clear that any greater sum deposited with the superintendent as security is deposited under the terms of the statute, and that both as to the superintendent and the company, the rights in the fund so deposited over the $200,000 are precisely the same as they are in regard to the last-named sum. The whole deposit constitutes but one sum and the whole is made in trust for the benefit of the same policy holders and is in fact and law one trust fund.

I cannot see any importance, upon the question here involved, to be attached to the fact that the statute fixes the minimum sum of such deposit. There is no prohibition as to making a larger deposit and there can be no claim successfully set up that the deposit made by this company above the $200,000 was made under any other statute than that which provided for a deposit of at least the above-named sum. The implication is conclusive that any sum greater than the minimum, *291 which might he deposited, would be held by the official trustee upon the same terms precisely as the $200,000. I see no special force in the fact, conceding its existence, that the fund thus deposited might be liable for the other debts of the company after the policy holders had been satisfied. The primary persons for whose benefit the fund is deposited are the policy holders, and what becomes of the fund after it has satisfied those for whose benefit it was primarily liable is not important to them. The superintendent is not a trustee for any others than those named in the statute.

An argument in favor of the right to make this order on the part of the court is sought to be maintained upon the assumption that the legislature has itself made this fund a part of the capital, the American capital, as it is called, of the company, and hence liable for all the debts of the company. Being so liable, the argument is the trustee can be changed from a public officer to an individual by order of the court. The correctness of this latter claim is not obvious. I do not, however, think the character of this fund as a trust fund under the act of 1862, has been changed by subsequent legislation. The act of 1862 added to section 6 a provision that no fire company transacting business in the state should take any one risk to an amount exceeding ten per cent of its paid-up capital. For nine years this provision stood, although a foreign corporation with a large paid-up capital in the foreign state might properly have claimed that the limitation as to risks must be bounded by its actual paid-up capital and not by the sum on deposit with the superintendent of insurance, which might be no more than $200,000. The act of 18Y1 (Chap. 888) was, therefore, passed, wherein it was enacted that the capital of a foreign insurance company should, for all the purposes of that act and of the general vnswranoe laws of the state, “ be the aggregate value of such sums or securities as such company shall have on deposit in the insurance or other departments of this state and of the other states of the United States for the benefit of policy holders in any of such states or in the United States,” etc., and the act also provided for treating as capital

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 N.E. 192, 131 N.Y. 286, 43 N.Y. St. Rep. 299, 86 Sickels 286, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1024, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lancashire-insurance-v-maxwell-ny-1892.