Lindauer & Co. v. Delaware Mutual Safety Insurance

8 Ark. 461
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1853
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Ark. 461 (Lindauer & Co. v. Delaware Mutual Safety Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lindauer & Co. v. Delaware Mutual Safety Insurance, 8 Ark. 461 (Ark. 1853).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Wations

delivered the Opinion of the Court. This was an action of assumpsit to recover the premium on a policy of insurance, alleged by the company, who was the plaintiff below, to have been issued to the defendants, Southeimer Lindauer & Co. The suit being discontinued as to Southeimer^ the other defendants pleaded nul tiel corporation and non as-sumpsit. Upon the trial, the plaintiff had judgment, and the defendants reserved their exceptions upon the overruling of their motion for new trial. The bill of exceptions shows several objections taken by the defendants during the progress of the trial-, arid which are here urged for érror.

It is contended that the issue formed upon the- pl'ea of nul tiel corporation, should have been tried by the court, instead of being submitted to the jury. The question whether, in a süit by a private corparation of this State, or by any foreign' corporation, of which the courts will not judicially take notice, the general issue admits the corporate existence, so that the defendant must deny it specially in order to put the plaintiff on proof, has never been settled by this court, unless it follows from the case of The Aldermen vs. Flinley, (5 Eng. 425.) See authorities collected in Angelí &' Ames on Corporations, sec. 632. The mere forin of raising the issue would not change its' charactér. In either mode, it is an inquiry of fact to be ascertained by the jury; subject, as in other cases, to the power of the court to determine, as to the competency of the evidence, and if documentary, to instruct the jury as to its legal effect. Here the corporate existence depended on the proof of the legislative acts of another State; not strictly foreign laws, as between the States composing the Federal Union. In such cases, it may often be difficult to distinguish between the province of the court and the jury; and many vexed questions as to what is the proper mode of proceeding can be imagined. Where foreign unwritten laws are to be proved, the jury must determine as to the credibility of the witness. The only rule of universal application would seem to be that the issue upon the plea of nul- tiel corporation, should be tried as a matter of fact by the jury, although, in many cases, the proof is really passed upon by the court, and the verdict necessarily in accordance with its instructions, so that the intervention of a jury may appear to be useless : yet this is so in- every case where the right of either party may depend upon the construction of a deed or writing admitted in evidence.-

The plaintiff, to maintain the issue upon the plea of nul tiel-corporation, offered in evidence authenticated- copies of certain acts of the General Assembly of Pennsylvania, from-which it appears, that the company was originally incorporated in 1835, under the name of the Delaware County Insurance Company, with a cash capital to be paid in by the stockholders. In 1843, a supplement to that act was passed, changing the whole character of the corporation, and incorporating the stockholders under the style of the Delaware Mutual Safety Insurance Company, the capital stock of which was based in whole, or in part, upon the negotiable premium notes of the insured. The supplement contains a provision, that it should take effect as soon as stockholders holding upwards of one-half of the capital stock of the company shall have signified their assent thereto in wx'iting, “which said assent shall be recorded in the office for recording-deeds in and for the city and county of Philadelphia, a certified copy whereof, under the seal of said office, shall be evidence of the acceptance, by the stockholders, of this act, in all courts of record,” &c. The defendants objected to this act being admitted as evidence without proof of its acceptance in the mode provided. This, or some other satisfactory evidence of organization and user under the supplementary act, would have been indispensable, but for the fact that, among the various acts admitted in evidence, was a further supplement passed in 1844, in which the existenceaof the corporation by n'ame, and as proposed to be organized by the act of 1843, was distinctly reorganized by the general assembly. The court, therefore, properly admitted the evidence, and should have instructed the jury that it was sufficient to prove the issue..

The plaintiff offered in evidence the deposition of a witness, which was objected to upon several grounds; one of which was that it was not taken upon sufficient notice. The statute requires three days notice, “and one day additional for every twenty miles of distance from the place of serving or setting up such notices to the place of taking the depositions.” The deposition was taken in Philadelphia, and it was proved to the court below, that "if the distance was to be computed by way of the rivers, which was the route usually traveled, there would not be the requisite number of days, from the time the notice appeared to have been served, but if the distance was to be measured by the usual direct land routes, there was time enough, though less traveled, and, in fact, less expeditious than the river route. The circuit court ruled the notice to be sufficient in time; and properly so, upon any fair construction of the provision quoted. The statute, evidently adapted to a new country, wanting in the facilities of transportation, contemplates the usual, convenient and most direct traveled land route; according to which there was ample time, and the party notified will not be heard to object that the time allowed was not sufficient, in case he chose to adopt the river route, if it was at the same time the most convenient and expeditious.

The other grounds of exception to the deposition of this witness, are involved in the statement of the merits of the controversy. The witness, who is the president of the company, testifies that, on the 7th of September, 1847, the defendants signed an order to the company for insurance, which is as follows :

“Delaware Mutual Safety Insurance Company, insure 7000 dollars on goods, valued at that sum, for transp. lines, at and from Philadelphia to Pittsburgh, and at, and from thence per steam or keel boat or boats, to Little Rock, Arkansas.

For account of ourselves, loss, if any, payable to us.
Premium, 2 per cent, ' $140
1
$141
SOUTHEIMER, LINDEAUER & CO.”

The order is exhibited, and the witness states that from it the policy of insurance, also exhibited, was issued. The order is without date, and the policy bears date on the 7th of September, 1847. The witness testifies that the policy was executed and sealed by the corporation through its proper officers, whose names are thereto subscribed. That the seal affixed to the policy is the common or corporation seal of the company affixed thereto by its proper officers, and the impression of the seal thereto is in the usual manner, &c., recognized by the courts of Pennsylvania as a proper and legal mode of affixing a seal of a corporation to a policy of insurance or other paper. That the premium of two per cent, was then the usual charge for insurance of goods from Philadelphia to Little Rock, upon the transportation indicated, That this, on goods valued at $7000, amounts to $140, which with one dollar for the policy, is due to the company from the defendants, and remains unpaid.

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Bluebook (online)
8 Ark. 461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lindauer-co-v-delaware-mutual-safety-insurance-ark-1853.