Lord v. Equitable Life assurance Society

57 Misc. 417, 108 N.Y.S. 67
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 57 Misc. 417 (Lord v. Equitable Life assurance Society) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lord v. Equitable Life assurance Society, 57 Misc. 417, 108 N.Y.S. 67 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1908).

Opinion

Crane, J.

The litigation between the plaintiff and the defendants has heretofore received the attention of the courts (47 Misc. Rep. 187; 109 App. Div. 252); but, an act of the Legislature having subsequently been passed (Laws of 1906, chap. 326) under which the society 'has acted or attempted to act/ the plaintiff by supplemental complaint attacks'the constitutionality of that law and the legality of the steps taken under it, all of which comes before me on demurrer of the defendant to the sufficiency of this supplemental complaint and the previous amended complaint, both being taken together under stipulation as the plaintiff's final pleading in this case. While there are questions now presented which could not have been before the courts in the decisions heretofore rendered, yet these decisions, cited above, contain such a complete statement of the society’s, history, in so far as applicable here, and the plaintiff’s connection with the organization, that it is unnecessary for me to do more than repeat such parts thereof as make plain my position.

The Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States was incorporated in 1858 under and pursuant to chapter 463 of the Laws of 1853, its charter declaring the capital to be $100,000 in cash, divided into 1,000 shares of $100-each, drawing semi-annual dividends of three and one-half [419]*419per cent. The board of directors, it was provided, should consist of fifty-two persons, each of whom should be a proprietor of at least five shares of stock and be elected by plurality vote, every stockholder being entitled to one vote for each share of stock held by him, which vote might be given in person or by proxy.

It was further provided that, at any time after the incorporation of the defendant, the board of directors thereof might, after giving notice at the two previous stated meetings of the said board, by a vote of three-fourths of all the directors, provide that each holder of a life policy of the defendant who should be insured by the defendant in the sum of not less than $3,000, should be entitled to one vote at an annual election and that such.vote should be in person, not by proxy. The insurance business was to be conducted on the mutual plan and the policyholders were allowed to receive at stated periods, out of the net surplus created, an equitable share thereof in the manner specified. Prior to the times in question the business of the company had so enormously increased that, in May of 1905, there were outstanding 560,000 policies of life insurance of the defendant, the total amount thereof exceeding $1,495,000,000. After deducting all" possible and contingent liabilities of every kind and the dividends to which policyholders by the terms of their policies might be entitled, a very large surplus, greatly exceeding the original capital of $100,000, was left remaining to which the stockholders claim the right of disposition.

Whether from this last fact, or from the powrer which a small number of shares possessed over such a large amount of money at the disposal of the company, or from some other reason, a share of stock óf $100 par value, receiving seven per cent, annual dividend, rose in value to $5,000.

The cardinal points to be here considered are that, by the charter of the defendant, directors were to be proprietors of five shares of stock; stockholders were entitled to vote for all the directors, each share of stock representing one vote (unless policyholders were given a vote by three-fourths vote of directors in accordance with the terms of the charter) ; the directors thus elected by the stockholders were to control [420]*420the company’s affairs and, directly or indirectly, its surplus, for accumulation or distribution; and that the value of the stock had greatly increased.

La 1905, by reason of dissensions elsewhere referred to and unnecessary here to repeat, a change was proposed and attempted to be carried through whereby it was sought to take from the stockholders the right and power to elect all of the directors and transfer to the policyholders the privilege of electing a majority' of the board. This plan was not pursued under the original charter provision for mutualization, but in accordance with the claimed authorization of section 52 of chapter 690 of the Laws of 1892 (Ins. Law, am’d by Laws of 1901, chapter 722), wherein it was given to a pre-existing corporation, by a majority vote of its direc-K tors, to reincorporóte under said Insurance Law and adopt a new or amended charter with any and all changes from its existing charter to cover and enjoy any and all the privileges and provisions of existing laws which might be so included and enjoyed if it were originally incorporated thereunder; and wherein any domestic insurance ^company was given the power to amend its charter or certificate of incorporation by inserting therein any statement of\ matter which might originally have been inserted therein, "d

The board” of directors- of the defendant, in March of 1905, approved an amended charter and sought to have the same adopted as the charter of the company. Policyholders of twelve months’ standing, were given by this proposed amended charter the right to elect seven out of every thirteen directors to be elected and the stockholders the other six, that is, of the fifty-two directors the policyholders were ^ to elect twenty-eight and the stockholders twenty-four, thus passing the control of the company and its management over to the policyholders and, of course, lessening the power of the stock and necessarily, we may assume, its commercial value.

The plaintiff, owner of thirty-six shares of the defendant’s stock, at this pointTn the company’s affairs, procured from the -Supreme Court an injunction restraining the company ^ and its" directors from adopting the proposed amended ■ [421]*421charter as illegal and in derogation of his vested rights. Mr. Justice Maddox granted the injunction and, after a most careful and thorough review of the law and the facts, decided (his opinion is to be found at p. 187 of Vol. 47 Misc. Rep.) that the plaintiff’s right to vote for directors was a vested right beyond the power reserved by the Constitution and the Revised Statutes over corporations and that, if section 52 of chapter 690'of the Laws of 1892 gave to the directors the authority to amend the company’s charter so as to deprive the plaintiff of the right to vote for all the directors, it was unconstitutional. On appeal (109 App. Div. 252), while the injunction order was sustained, it was upon the ground that the Insurance Law gave to the company no such power to amend its charter in the way proposed, the majority of the court holding, however, that siich power had been reserved to and resided with the Legislature to be used in a clearly and specifically expressed act.

The facts which have occurred since the bringing of this action in April of 1905 and which were not before the courts in the previous proceedings are as follows: It having been virtually decided by the Appellate Division as above stated that section 52 of the Insurance Law was not broad enough to cover the proposed action of the directors, an act was passed in April of 1906 (Laws of 1906, chapter 326) amending section 52 of the Insurance, Law of 1892 so as to give to life insurance companies having capital stock the right to change their charters along the lines heretofore at- ‘ tempted by this defendant. The amendment added the following : “ Upon the reincorporation, or upon the amendment of the charter of any life insurance corporation having a capital stock * * * it may by a vote of a

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Related

Lewis v. Matthews
161 A.D. 107 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1914)
Lord v. Equitable Life Assurance Society of United States
110 N.Y.S. 1135 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1908)

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Bluebook (online)
57 Misc. 417, 108 N.Y.S. 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lord-v-equitable-life-assurance-society-nysupct-1908.