Lycoming Fire Insurance v. Medad Wright & Son

55 Vt. 526
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedMay 15, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 55 Vt. 526 (Lycoming Fire Insurance v. Medad Wright & Son) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lycoming Fire Insurance v. Medad Wright & Son, 55 Vt. 526 (Vt. 1883).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Royce, Ch. J.

The above cases were heard together. The first question made in argument is as to the right of the plaintiff to sue in its corporate name. When the receiver was appointed for the plaintiff, in 1881, there were statute laws in Pennsylvania, in which State the plaintiff corporation was located, which made it the duty of certain designated courts and judges, when it should be made to appear in the manner required by the statutes that any insurance company was insolvent, or the interests of the public so required, to decree a dissolution of such company and a distribution of its assets, and, if necessary, to appoint a receiver to take charge of its estate and effects and collect the debts and property due and belonging to it, with the power to prosecute and defend suits in the name of the corporation or otherwise, and do all other acts which might be done by said corporation, if in being, that were necessary for the final settlement of the unfinished business of the corporation. It is alleged that at a session of the court of common pleas held in and for the county of Lycoming on the 8th day of October, 1881, it appearing that the assets of the plaintiff company were not sufficient for carrying on its business, it was ordered to be dissolved, and J. A. Beecher, (who is prosecuting these suits in the name of the plaintiff), was appointed receiver, with the customary powers given to such an officer, and in accordance with the act of the assembly of the State of Pennsylvania in such case made and provided. By virtue of the act referred to in the order making the appointment, the right was conferred upon the receiver to prosecute suits, in the name of the corporation as far as the court could confer power. The general rule is, that the jurisdiction of a receiver is limited to the jurisdiction making the appointment; but exceptions have been frequently [530]*530recognized to that rule, growing out of the condition of the property of which he has been appointed receiver, the order making the appointment and the necessity of according to him extra-territorial jurisdiction. In Ellis v. Boston &c. R. R. Co., 107 Mass. 1, an order for the appointment of a receiver of the entire line of the defendant company’s road, which extended from Boston, Mass., to Fishkill, N. Y., was affirmed. The same question was so decided in Wilmer v. Atlantic &c. Co., 2 Woods, 418, in which case the court say : “We think the courts of other jurisdictions would feel constrained, as a matter of comity, to afford all necessary aid in their power to put the receiver of the court in possession.” In Bagby v. Atlantic &c. R. R. Co., 86 Pa. St. 291, the right of a foreign receiver to sue in Pennsylvania was affirmed. In Hurd v. City of Elizabeth, 41 N. J. L. 1, it was decided that the legal effect of the appointment of a receiver in a foreign jurisdiction in transferring to him the right to collect the property passing under his control by virtue of such office, will be so far recognized by courts of this State (New Jersey), as to enable such officer to sustain a suit for such recovery. The cases where this right has been denied have generally been where creditors in the foreign jurisdiction have intervened. In such cases the courts have held that they would not allow the property of the receivership to be removed from their jurisdiction or appropriated by a receiver appointed in a foreign jurisdiction until the claims of citizens resident in the jurisdiction where the property is situate, were satisfied. Here, as we have seen, all the effects of the company passed to the receiver. No creditor has intervened to prevent the prosecution of the suit, or asserted any claim to what may be realized from its prosecution. Upon principle and authority we think the suit may be prosecuted in the name of the plaintiff.

It remains, then, to be determined whether upon the demurrer to the pleas they are to be held sufficient in form and good in substance. The special causes of demurrer assigned to the second plea are that it amounts to the general issue, and is argumentative in alleging : “ Wherefore the said defendants say that said pre[531]*531mium note was and is void.” As we construe the plea, it substantially admits the making of the contract declared on and sets up matter in avoidance of it by stating that the defendant was induced to make it by the fraudulent representations made to him as to the financial condition of the company. It is elementary that such a defence may be specially pleaded. Chit. Pl. 480 and 526 ; Gould Pl. c. 6, ss. 44, 56, 70, 72 and 80 ; Read v. Ins. Co., 54 Vt. 413. And the fact that the defendant may avail himself of the same defense under the plea of the general issue does not necessarily preclude him from pleading it specially. See authorities before cited. When it is considered that it is to the advantage of the plaintiff that the defence should be specifically set out in a special plea, the court will not be astute in discovering or inventing technical reasons to deprive the defendant of the benefit of such a plea. Neither is the plea rendered argumentative by the use of the words specified in the demurrer. The word “wherefore” is defined as meaning “ for which reason ”;. and applying that meaning the averment would read, “ for which reason the defendants say that the premium note described in the declaration was and is void in law.” The word “ which ” refers to the reason before stated in the plea, and the averment states a conclusion of law. It is not a professed averment of any issuable fact and leaves nothing to be ascertained by inference or argument.

The demurrer reaches back to the first substantial defect in the pleadings. It is claimed that the declaration is defective in not alleging that at the time of entering into the contract declared upon, the plaintiff company was licensed to transact insurance business in this State. The constitutional right of the legislature to pass such laws upon the subject of foreign insurance companies as were in force at the time the contract was entered into, is admitted. It was provided by statute then existing, s. 3610, R. L., that it shall not be lawful for any foreign insurance company to transact insurance business in this State, unless such company shall first obtain a license of the insurance commissioners author izing the company to do so. The obtaining of such a license' was made a condition precedent to the right of the plaintiff to [532]*532enter into a legal contract. When the right of a contracting ■ party to make a contract is dependent upon his compliance with the requirements of a statute of the State which prescribes duties to' be performed by such party as a condition precedent to his right to make the contract, he must aver and prove a compliance with such requirements; he must set forth in his declaration all such facts as áre necessary to show that he has a legal cause of action ; and to show a legal cause of action it must appear that he had the legal right to make the contract upon which the action is predicated. Kent v. Lincoln, 82 Vt. 591.

The declaration is fatally defective in not alleging that the plaintiff company had obtained a license which was in force, to transact insurance business at the time the contract was entered into, unless the defect is cured by the last plea.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 Vt. 526, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lycoming-fire-insurance-v-medad-wright-son-vt-1883.