Life & Casualty Ins. Co. of Tennessee v. McCormack

125 S.W.2d 151, 174 Tenn. 327, 10 Beeler 327, 1938 Tenn. LEXIS 96
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 4, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 125 S.W.2d 151 (Life & Casualty Ins. Co. of Tennessee v. McCormack) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Life & Casualty Ins. Co. of Tennessee v. McCormack, 125 S.W.2d 151, 174 Tenn. 327, 10 Beeler 327, 1938 Tenn. LEXIS 96 (Tenn. 1939).

Opinion

*329 Me. Justice DeHaven

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Complainant, Life and Casualty Insurance Company of Tennessee, filed its original hill-herein against James M. McCormack, Commissioner of Insurance and Banking of Tennessee, challenging the constitutionality of Chapter 177, Public Acts 1937, upon the grounds that it was violative of Article 1, section 8 and section 20, and Article 11, section 8, of the Constitution of Tennessee, and Article 1, section 10, of the Constitution of the United States and the Fourteenth Amendment. The bill set up the fact that there are two voting trusts, called respectively Voting Trust A and Voting Trust B in the stock of the complainant company, and prayed a declaratory judgment to determine whether or not said voting trusts are legal, and how Chapter 177, Public Acts 1937, if constitutional, applies to the same.

The chancellor held the Act in question unconstitutional and that voting Trusts A and B were valid.

Appellants are certain stockholders in the complainant company who were permitted to intervene as defendants in the cause.

The two voting trust agreements were filed as exhibits to the bill. Voting Trust A is dated November 6, 1934, and under its terms is to terminate January 1, 1940. Voting Trust B is dated September 2&, 1936', and under its terms is to continue in force until September 1, 1946. Certain of the stockholders who had deposited their stock under Voting Trust A agreed that this same stock should come under Voting Trust B immediately after the termination of Voting Trust A; and as to this stock, Voting Trust B does not become effective until the termination *330 of Voting Trust A. Some of the trustees under Voting Trust A were also trustees under Voting Trust B.

Prior to the passage of Chapter 90, Public Acts 1929, voting trusts were not sanctioned b^ statute in Tennessee. This Act was the general corporation law and appears as sections 3709-3771 of the Code. Section 22 of the original act which appears as section 3733 of the Code authorized the formation of voting trusts. Chapter 90, Public Acts 1929, excepted insurance companies from its provisions, but the Code contains in section 3886 a provision specifically relating section 3733 of the Code to corporations organized under the article which includes insurance companies.

Prior to the passage of Chapter 90, Public Acts 1929, there was only one voting trust in the stock of a domestic insurance company. This was a voting- trust created by stockholders of the National Life and Accident Insurance Company, by agreement of date December 20, 1928, to exist for twenty-one years.

Under their first assignment of error appellants contend that the chancellor was in error in holding Chapter 177, Public Acts 1937, unconstitutional.

The title to said Act is as follows:

“An Act to declare the policy of this State with respect to voting trust agreements by stockholders of Domestic Life Insurance Companies, to prohibit the execution of voting trust agreements by stockholders of such companies hereafter, to limit and regulate the powers of voting trustees acting under voting trust agreements heretofore executed by stockholders of such companies, to fix a penalty for the violation of this Act, to prescribe additional duties of the Commissioner of Insurance and Banking and, generally, to provide for the *331 protection of tlie policyholders of such corporation now or hereafter operating under voting trust agreements.”

The subject of the legislation, as set forth in the title of the Act, is to prohibit absolutely the execution of voting trust agreements by stockholders of domestic life insurance companies “hereafter,” and to limit and regulate the powers of voting trustees acting under voting trust agreements “heretofore” executed by stockholders of such companies.

Section 8 of the Act is as follows:

“Be it further enacted, That the provisions of this Act shall not apply to a domestic life insurance corporation acting under any voting trust which was legally in existence prior to the passage of Chapter 90 of the Public Acts of 1929 of the General Assembly of the State of Tennessee, or any renewal or extension of such voting trust; provided, that a copy of such voting trust is filed with and submitted for the approval of the Commissioner of Insurance and Banking of the State of Tennessee within ninety days after the effective date of this Act, or after such renewal or extension; and provided further, that such voting trust shall receive the approvel of said Commissioner.”

Appellee insists that section 8 of the Act is unconstitutional because violative of Article 1, section 8, and Article 11, section 8, of the Constitution of Tennessee and the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States in that a class distinction is made between voting trust agreements “legally in existence” prior to the passage of Chapter 90, Public Acts 1929, and those made subsequent to the passage of that Act. Classification in legislation must not be mere arbitrary selection. It must have some basis which bears a natural *332 and reasonable relation to the object sought to be accomplished. State v. Nashville Railroad, 124 Tenn., 1, 9, 135 S. W., 773, Ann. Cas., 1912D, 805; Fleming v. Memphis, 126 Tenn., 331, 148 S. W., 1057, 42 L. R. A. (N. S.), 493, Ann. Cas., 1913D, 1306. This principle is too well established by our cases to warrant further discussion.

We are unable to conceive any reason why the trustees under a voting agreement made when there was no statute authorizing the same, or any decision of this court holding a so-called common-law voting trust valid in this State, should be exempt from the regulations imposed by the Act on trustees under a voting trust created under authority of" statute.

Not only does section 8 exclude from the operation of the Act a voting trust which was legally in existence prior to the passage of Chapter 90, Public Acts 1929, but likewise excludes from the operation of the Act “any renewal or extension of such voting trust.” Thus the trustees of such a voting trust, by the process of a renewal or extension of the voting trust agreement, escape in perpetrating the limitations and regulations upon their powers imposed by the Act upon trustees of voting trusts created subsequent to the enactment of Chapter 90, Public Acts 1929. The rights, privileges, immunities, and exemptions thus granted to the trustees of a voting trust in existence prior to the enactment of Chapter 90, Public Acts 1929, are other than such as are by the same law (Chapter 177, Acts 1937) extended to trustees under voting trust agreements subsequently executed.

Appellants contend that section 8 of the statute makes a reasonable classification. It is argued that the Legislature attempted a classification of voting trusts based on the fact of whether or not the voting trusts were com *333 mon-law voting trusts or organized nnder the statute.

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Bluebook (online)
125 S.W.2d 151, 174 Tenn. 327, 10 Beeler 327, 1938 Tenn. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/life-casualty-ins-co-of-tennessee-v-mccormack-tenn-1939.