MacDonald v. Aetna Indemnity Co.

92 A. 154, 88 Conn. 571, 1914 Conn. LEXIS 79
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedNovember 10, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 92 A. 154 (MacDonald v. Aetna Indemnity Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MacDonald v. Aetna Indemnity Co., 92 A. 154, 88 Conn. 571, 1914 Conn. LEXIS 79 (Colo. 1914).

Opinions

Prentice, C. J.

The receivers moved to erase this appeal, which was taken by creditors of the corporation whose affairs are in settlement, assigning as reasons: (1) that the order appealed from was not the proper subject of appeal, and (2) that the appellants were not entitled to take an appeal therefrom.

In support of the first proposition it is alleged that an appeal could not be predicated upon the order because it was not in the nature of a judgment, and did not involve the determination of any question of law or fact in issue, but was rather an order made in the exercise of the court’s discretion in respect to a purely administrative matter. The opinions of this court in Guarantee, etc., Deposit Co. v. Philadelphia, R. & N. E. R. Co., 69 Conn. 709, 714, 38 Atl. 792, and in Links v. Connecticut River Banking Co., 66 Conn. 277, 283, 33 Atl. 1003, furnish a complete answer to these contentions. The first determines that the order was the proper subject of an appeal; and the second that cred *578 itors whose interests were directly involved were proper parties to take such an appeal. See also Trustees v. Greenough, 105 U. S. 527, 531, as to the appealable character of the order.

The order appealed from was one which was entered in the exercise of the court’s discretionary power. It cannot be set aside by us unless it appears that it was so unreasonable, under the circumstances before the trial court, that its authorization amounted to a clear abuse of the judicial discretion. Wood v. Holah, 80 Conn. 314, 315, 68 Atl. 323; Cables v. Bristol Water Co., 86 Conn. 223, 225, 84 Atl. 928. The question before the trial court for decision was as to the course of business conduct which, as a matter of prudential policy, should be pursued by the receivers in the administration of the assets of a receivership estate. The question before us is the very different one of whether or not the decision arrived at was such an unreasonable one that it was without warrant in the exercise of the court’s discretion. The question presented to the trial court did not involve, nor does that presented to us involve, the decision of an issue of law. In both cases the decision to be made was, and is, one calling for a careful weighing and balancing of a variety of considerations in arriving at a conclusion as to the course of prudence under the circumstances. The field of inquiry covers the subject of the probable validity of the claim made by the receivers, the apparent difficulties, if any, likely to attend an attempt to enforce it in the courts, the collectibility of a judgment obtained, the delays likely to be involved, the importance of these delays, the expense likely to be incurred, and the amounts involved in respect to both assured recovery and surrender.

For the most part these are purely practical considerations. At points, however, some of them touch legal questions quite closely. This is particularly true *579 of the matter of the validity of the claim which is the subject of the proposed compromise. That is an important factor in the situation. No intelligent conclusion, as to the wisdom or unwisdom of the proposed compromise, can be arrived at which does not take it into account. And yet the question of validity, important as it is, is not in issue. Its decision is not called for, and none could be made which could possess any other importance than as expressing a personal view. It would bind nobody, and conclude nothing. The inquiry which the trial court was called upon to make had, and that which we are now to make has, no other purpose and possesses no other importance than the ascertainment in a general way of the probable or possible result of litigation of the claim. This inquiry, to be intelligent, must be made by one possessed of legal knowledge, and in the pursuit of it legal knowledge must be employed. But legal decision is not called for, and would be idle if attempted.

The contention of the appellants gathers around the proposition that the claim is, in its entirety, unquestionable and, beyond all save captious dispute, valid. Starting with this proposition as its fundamental premise, further propositions are added, to wit: that jurisdiction over the reinsuring corporation can be easily obtained, the claim readily embodied in a judgment, and funds for the satisfaction of such judgment be reached without difficulty. These facts established, as the appellants contend, they continue their argument by the assertion that in the presence of such conditions showing certainty of enforcement and collection, no other facts disclosed or considerations advanced, whether touching delay or expense, or any other matter, could, by possibility, furnish a reasonable justification for the surrender of the large sum involved.

This argument would be most convincing were the *580 major propositions asserted' clearly established. Evidence is lacking to support the propositions touching the means of enforcement and satisfaction of the claim by litigation, and judicial knowledge can scarcely fully supply this lack. But the convenience and sufficiency of the available procedure of enforcement and collection may be assumed, and there yet remains the underlying question of the validity of the claim made by the receivers.

Reinsurance treaties, as customarily written, have repeatedly had judicial construction, and the obligations of the reinsurer under such contracts determined. The appellants take their position upon this adjudication, and assert that they establish incontestably that this reinsurer—the affairs of the reinsured being in the hands of the court for settlement—is obligated not merely to indemnify the reinsured, but to pay to its receivers the full amount of the reinsurer’s pro rata share of all losses payable by the reinsured as soon as determined, and whether paid by it in full or only in part, or not at all. This assertion is doubtless well made if the treaty before us does not differ materially either in its general character or in some of its pertinent provisions from those under examination in the cases relied-upon. That of Allemannia Fire Ins. Co. v. Firemen’s Ins. Co., 209 U. S. 326, 28 Sup. Ct. Rep. 544, is perhaps the most recent, as well as the most comprehensive in statement, of this quite considerable group. The reinsurance treaty there was a typical one. Its provisions were in no substantial respect different from those which had entered into the adjudications of the prior cases. Upon a review of several of these cases the following clear statement of the nature of the contract and of the obligations assumed by the reinsurer was made (p. 332): "The contract is one of indemnity to the person or corporation reinsured and it binds the *581 reinsurer to pay to the reinsured the whole loss sustained in respect to the subject of the insurance to the extent to which he is reinsured.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
92 A. 154, 88 Conn. 571, 1914 Conn. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/macdonald-v-aetna-indemnity-co-conn-1914.