Lisbon Town Fire Insurance v. Tracy

296 N.W. 126, 236 Wis. 651
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 9, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 296 N.W. 126 (Lisbon Town Fire Insurance v. Tracy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lisbon Town Fire Insurance v. Tracy, 296 N.W. 126, 236 Wis. 651 (Wis. 1941).

Opinion

Fritz, J.

Each of the appeals under consideration is from a judgment dismissing the complaint of the plaintiff, a town mutual insurance corporation organized under the Wisconsin statutes, to recover on an assessment made by plaintiff against each defendant as a member and policyholder during the following periods :■ — Lund from July 12, 1925, to November 1, 1931; Tracy from December 12, 1926, to *654 December 12, 1935; and Troy from December 8, 1925, to March 1, 1938. By the contracts which existed under each defendant’s application for insurance and the provisions of sec. 202.09, Stats. 1925, he was liable to plaintiff on assessments levied to pay his pro rata share of all losses payable under policies of insurance issued by plaintiff, and also his pro rata share of plaintiff’s necessary business expenses, together with the costs and charges incurred in proceedings to collect any assessment.

The actions are based on an assessment which plaintiff claims was levied by a resolution adopted June 8, 1938, at a meeting of its board of directors. The judgments dismissing the complaints were based upon the court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law (1) that" plaintiff failed to establish by competent testimony that the resolution, which it claims was adopted on June 8, 1938, and which purports to provide for the assessment in question, was ever legally passed as a resolution by its board of directors as shown by its minutes of June 8, 1938; (2) that a certificate purporting to have been executed by plaintiff’s secretary pursuant to sec. 328.22, Stats., and to state that the assessment was levied, the amount due from each defendant by means thereof, and that notice thereof waS duly given to him, was deficient and did not raise the presumption mentioned in sec. 328.22, Stats., because the assessment was not levied to pay for losses, business expense, or debts for the year in which it was levied; and (3) that therefore plaintiff failed to establish a prima facie case, and there was no competent evidence of a valid assessment to repay borrowed money.

Plaintiff contends that the court erred in respect to all of those findings and conclusidns of law. To establish that the assessment was lawfully levied by a resolution duly adopted, plaintiff called its secretary as a witness and he produced and identified the minute book of the corporate meetings held by its board of directors, and from the minutes of a meeting *655 held by them on June 8, 1938, the plaintiff offered in evidence the following typewritten insertion in the minutes, which are otherwise in handwriting, to wit (so> far as here material) :

“At a meeting of the board of directors held on the 8th day of June, 1938, the following resolution was passed:
“Resolution: Be it resolved that, as there is now indebtedness outstanding against the company by reason of losses, administration expenses, and failure of members to make payments of assessments for losses occurring during the years from 1927 to 1933, inclusive, there be levied an assessment of five mills per dollar of insurance for each and every policy of insurance in force during such period of time. . . .”

In that connection plaintiff also offered the following handwritten statement with which the minutes continue, to wit: “This motion was made by Henry Grefe and seconded by M. L. Dineen.” Defendants’ counsel objected to the admission in evidence of the resolution on the grounds that “there is nothing” in the record “to show it was ever adopted,” and that “the time had expired for any collection or any resolution authorizing . . . the collection of any assessment as of the time stated” to cover 1927 to 1933. The court received the resolution in evidence subject to the objection. In addition plaintiff introduced, subject to defendants’ objection that it was not the best evidence and that the minutes as recorded could not be amended by parol testimony by plaintiff’s president, the latter’s testimony that he called and attended the directors’ meeting on June 8, 1938, and that the resolution in question was acted upon and unanimously passed by all directors. However, the court, in subsequently deciding that plaintiff failed to establish the adoption of the resolution by competent testimony, evidently concluded that the typewritten resolution in the minutes and the statements therein and in the testimony of its president as to the passage of the resolution were incompetent and inadmissible as evidence.

*656 The court erred m its conclusions in that respect. The statement, “At a meeting of the board of directors held on the 8th day of June, 1938, the following resolution was passed,” which is in the typewritten insertion in the handwritten minutes recorded in the minute book, together with the handwritten statement, “This motion was made by Henry Grefe and seconded by M. L. Dineen,” which is in the minutes immediately after the typewritten resolution, afford presumptive proof that the typewritten insertion was used in its entirety by the secretary as correctly stating the terms as well as the fact of the passage of the resolution; and that the board’s action at the time as recorded in the minutes included all acts necessary to render the passage of the resolution legally effective. As is stated in 20 Am. Jur. p. 826, § 977,—

“The minute books of a corporation are, when properly authenticated, evidence on behalf of the corporation of the transactions shown by the minutes to have taken place at the meeting at which they were recorded.”

See also 1 Jones, Commentaries on Evidence (2d ed.), p. 357, § 212; 5 Fletcher, Cyc. Corp. ch. 17, p. 525, § 2196.

In Grand Nat. Bank of St. Louis v. Taylor, 176 Ark. 1, 7, 1 S. W. (2d) 818, the court said,—

“The minute book of a corporation, when identified, is competent evidence as to all recitals contained therein, and, even though unsigned, the minutes may be used to prove what took place at the meeting, and that a resolution was passed thereat.”

See also Heintselmanv. Druids’ Relief Asso. 38 Minn. 138, 36 N. W. 100; Commissioner of Banks v. Cosmopolitan Trust Co. 253 Mass. 205, 148 N. E. 609, 41 A. L. R. 658, 665, Moreover, if the minutes as recorded were insufficient or imperfect, as defendants contend, to establish the contents or passage of the resolution, the fact that it was passed in the form and manner recorded in the minutes, including the typewritten insertion, was duly established by the testimony *657 given by the president of the corporation. As his testimony was not in contradiction, but rather corroborated the statements in the minutes as to the passage of the resolution, it was clearly admissible and sufficient to establish that fact. As is stated in 2 Jones, Commentaries on Evidence (2d ed.), p. 1440, § 778,—

“. . .

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296 N.W. 126, 236 Wis. 651, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lisbon-town-fire-insurance-v-tracy-wis-1941.