Manufacturing Lumbermen's Underwriters v. South Georgia Railway Co.

196 S.E. 244, 57 Ga. App. 699, 1938 Ga. App. LEXIS 368
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 17, 1938
Docket26480
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 196 S.E. 244 (Manufacturing Lumbermen's Underwriters v. South Georgia Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Manufacturing Lumbermen's Underwriters v. South Georgia Railway Co., 196 S.E. 244, 57 Ga. App. 699, 1938 Ga. App. LEXIS 368 (Ga. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinions

Broyles, C. J.

The South Georgia Railway Company, a corporation with headquarters in Quitman, Georgia, brought suit in the superior court of Brooks County against Manufacturing Lumbermen’s Underwriters, a nonresident corporation with headquarters in Kansas City, Missouri, on a policy of fire insurance, for a loss by fire of a building insured under said policy. When the case came on for trial, on the 10th day of May, 1937, and before the trial proceeded, the attorneys who had theretofore appeared generally for the Manufacturing Lumbermen’s Underwriters appeared specially as amici curiae and filed a written “suggestion” to the court, that the existence of Manufacturing Lumbermen’s Underwriters, the sole defendant in said case, had been terminated both in fact and at law by a decree and judgment in the circuit court of Jackson County, Missouri, on the 1st day of April, 1937, and that the superior court of Brooks County was without power to enter any valid judgment against said nonexistent defendant. The court overruled the “suggestion” and ordered the case to proceed to trial. “The attorneys of record appearing as amici curiee” excepted pendente lite, and now assign error upon the pendente lite exceptions. Upon the trial of the ease, the judge directed a verdict in favor of thé plaintiff for the full amount of principal sued for, interest, and costs. The defendant filed a motion for a new trial which was overruled, and on this judgment the defendant assigns error.

R. E. O’Malley, superintendent of the insurance department of the State of Missouri, filed a motion in this court in [700]*700which he “ prays that he be made a plaintiff in error.” The second paragraph of his motion is as follows: “Being the person in whom was vested, at the day of the trial, the title to all property of the defendant company, and the judgment binding a part of said property, the said B. E. O’Malley is a party at’interest entitled to appear in this court.” The motion thus shows on its face that the title to the property of the defendant company was in the movant at the time of the trial, and yet it does not appear that the movant made any effort to be made a party defendant in the trial court. We know of no rule of law or of this court which would authorize the making of a party in the Court of Appeals, where the same alleged reasons for making him a party in the Court of Appeals existed when the case was in the trial court and no effort was made in the lower court to make him a party. The movant did not see fit to intervene in the trial court, and his motion to be made a plaintiff in error is denied.

The paper denominated '“suggestion,” in which certain statutes of Missouri were quoted, and in which it was alleged that the Manufacturing Lumbermen’s Underwriters had been declared insolvent by a judgment of a court in Missouri, that B. E. O’Malley, superintendent of the insurance department of the State of Missouri, was vested with the assets of said corporation, that the corporation had ceased to exist, and that the trial court was “without power to enter any valid judgment” against the defendant, was not filed in behalf of the defendant, but was filed by attorneys as amici curiae, and the same attorneys “had theretofore appeared generally for the defendant Manufacturing Lumbermen’s Underwriters,” and, after the “suggestion” was overruled, they appeared as attorneys for the defendant in the trial of the case, and they appear as attorneys for the defendant (now plaintiff in error) in this court. It thus appears that the defendant, though alleged to be dead, after its demise actively contested and still contests the claim of the plaintiff. In an exhibit attached to the suggestion certain statutes of the State of Missouri pertaining to the dissolution of insurance companies were cited. The exhibit also set forth a judgment and decree of the circuit court of Jackson County, Missouri, dissolving the Manufacturing Lumbermen’s Underwriters. Conceding, but not deciding, that the dissolution of the company was properly shown by the suggestion and its ex-[701]*701Mbit, the court did not err in overruling the suggestion and in ordering the trial to proceed. Under the law of Georgia, the death of a nonresident fire-insurance company does not terminate a suit such as the instant one. Under the Code, § 56-301 et seq., nonresident fire-insurance companies doing business in this State are required to deposit certain bonds with the treasurer of the State. These bonds are for the protection of the citizens of Georgia who have insurance with the nonresident company, and if the foreign company ceases to do business, the bonds remain in the State treasury until such company “shall have settled all claims against it55 in this State, and are subject to the claims of Georgia citizens under certain prescribed conditions. As long as there are any claimants to these bonds under the laws of Georgia, a receiver in Missouri would have no right to interfere with proceedings of the courts of Georgia instituted to assert the rights of a Georgia claimant in whose behalf the bonds were deposited with the State treasurer.

In Kelsey v. Cogswell, 112 Fed. 599, it is held: “Code Ga. 1895, §§ 2035-2043, require fire-insurance companies doing business in the State to make a deposit with the State treasurer to secure the people against loss by the operation of said companies. They provide the method by which the liability of a company for 'any loss insured against5 may be enforced against such deposit; and section 2041 provides that any claims of citizens of the State 'for losses, or on existing policies where no losses have occurred/ must be settled before the deposit can be withdrawn. Held, that the primary purpose of the deposit, under such provisions, is to secure the payment of fire losses, which are the only losses 'insured against/ although it also secures, secondarily, other claims arising on policies, such as the repayment, after the termination of the risk, of unearned premiums paid; that even when a company becomes insolvent, and the deposit is brought into a court of equity for distribution, fire losses are entitled to priority of payment from the fund over claims for unearned premiums.55 The “statement of the case55 (p. 600), on which the above holding is based, shows that “the Manhattan Fire Insurance Company, a corporation of New York State, transacting business in the State of Georgia and elsewhere, was duly declared to be insolvent by a judgment of the Supreme Court of the State of New York, and under the statutes [702]*702of said State an action was instituted in the name of the people of the State of New York to obtain a judgment dissolving said corporation, forfeiting its charter, corporate rights, privileges, and franchises.” This, in principle, is exactly what transpired in the instant case, so far as is shown by the record. Code, § 22-1210, is as follows: <cThe dissolution of a corporation either as a result of the expiration of its charter, or for any other cause, shall not bring about its total extinction nor operate to extinguish any demand or cause of action against it in favor of any person whomsoever, whether arising from contract or tort, nor shall such dissolution work the abatement of any suit pending against it at the time of such dissolution, but all such pending suits may be prosecuted and enforced to a conclusion as though such corporation were still undissolved.”

An insurance company which complies with the laws of Georgia in order to do business in Georgia, is subject to the laws of the State prescribing the conditions under which it may do business and to the statutory remedies against such corporations. E. E.

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Bluebook (online)
196 S.E. 244, 57 Ga. App. 699, 1938 Ga. App. LEXIS 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manufacturing-lumbermens-underwriters-v-south-georgia-railway-co-gactapp-1938.