Morrow v. Vaughan-Bassett Furniture Co.

4 S.E.2d 399, 173 Va. 417, 1939 Va. LEXIS 209
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 13, 1939
DocketRecord No. 2132
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 4 S.E.2d 399 (Morrow v. Vaughan-Bassett Furniture Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morrow v. Vaughan-Bassett Furniture Co., 4 S.E.2d 399, 173 Va. 417, 1939 Va. LEXIS 209 (Va. 1939).

Opinion

Holt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Lumberman’s Reciprocal Association was a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Texas and did business in sixteen other States, including Virginia. It assumed and agreed to pay losses which its subscribing members might suffer by reason of workmen’s compensation acts. The subscribers, on their part, promised to pay an[420]*420nually to this insurance company definite sums based on pay rolls. The Texas company was in substance a mutual benefit association, although the method adopted for the payment of assessments differed. Ordinarily levies are made as losses occur, or levies are made at the end of a year for those losses suffered during that period. Here, as we have seen, losses were based upon a pay roll percentage and not upon the sum of actual losses suffered during membership. The defendant became a member on March 1, 1928, and terminated its membership on March 1, 1930.

Such liability as attached must have been incurred during membership and while the company was in fact insolvent. 14 R. C. L. 970.

A suit was brought in the District Court of Travis county to wind up the affairs of the Texas company and on July 31, 1930, a receiver and trustee was appointed to carry this purpose into effect. It was held that insolvency dated from July 1, 1929, and on May 1, 1933, an assessment of 33% of premiums booked and earned from July 1, 1929, to July 31, 1930, was established as necessary to meet outstanding obligations. It was to collect 33% of defendant’s liability that this action was brought.

The plea of the five-year statute of limitations has been interposed. Code 1919, section 5810. If the statute began to run from the date on which the defendant ceased to be a member, it is good; if from the date of the assessment, it is not. This action was instituted on September 1, 1936.

Under what is known as the Glenn Cases—Lewis’ Adm’r v. Glenn, 84 Va. 947, 6 S. E. 866, and Vanderwerken v. Glenn, 85 Va. 9, 6 S. E. 806—it was held that the statute of limitations begins to run in favor of stockholders for amounts due upon unpaid stock subscriptions only from the time such assessments are made.

“As between a corporation and its stockholders, and as between creditors of the corporation and stockholders, where calls have been made by the company, and also by the court, the authorities are in conflict as to whether the statute begins to run from the maturity of the call by the company, [421]*421or from a call by the court. In Virginia the statute begins to run from the maturity of the call by the company. If no calls have been made by the company, but one has been made by the court, the statute begins to run from the maturity of the call made by the court.” Burks’ Pleading & Practice, p. 351.

The contingent liability of mutual assessment insurance companies came under review in Swing v. Taylor & Crate, 68 W. Va. 621, 70 S. E. 373. The court in that case said:

“The statute of limitations did not begin to run in favor of Taylor & Crate until the decree was made, assessing the policy holders. Their liability, it is true, existed from the issuance of their policies; but until the date of the decree it was only contingent. An action could not be brought upon such liability. It had to be made certain and absolute, either by corporate action or by judicial ascertainment, before an action would lie. Consequently the statute of limitations was not set in motion until June 11, 1901, the date of the Ohio decree.”

Not only is it necessary that an assessment be made, but it is also necessary that notice of this assessment is required to convert what was a contingent liability into a definite obligation. 45 C. J. 61.

In Federal Life Ins. Co. v. Risinger, 46 Ind. App. 146, 91 N. E. 533, the court said:

“This principle applies with equal force where an insurance company is given the right to levy assessments and where no definite time is fixed for their payment. Such levy does not become binding upon the assured, and creates no liability against him, and affects no right which he possesses under the policy until notice has been given of the assessment, * * * .”

When the defendant ceased to be a member, its contingent liabilities, if any, were not known. There were four thousand subscribers to the Texas company, and so in the nature of things it could not be known until that company’s affairs were audited; and they were not audited until after the Texas suit was brought. No sum certain was then due [422]*422and payable, and that had to be ascertained before any assessment could be levied; and it was from this date that the statute begins to run.

The defendant was not a party to the Texas suit, but that was not necessary. It was a party by representation, and that court had power to make the challenged assessment. Vanderwerken v. Glenn, supra. Nor has any change been brought about in this by Code, section 3843.

In Reed & McCormick v. Gold, 102 Va. 37, 45 S. E. 868, Judge Keith said:

“The act leaves the jurisdiction with the chancery court to ‘settle and wind up the affairs of insolvent corporations/ and as a necessary incident thereto expressly reserves to the chancery court power to make ‘assessments upon unpaid stock subscriptions/ * * *."

See also, Mountain Lake Land Co. v. Blair, 109 Va. 147, 63 S. E. 751. It was there also held that the liability of a stockholder in a foreign corporation for its debts is to be determined by the laws of the State of the corporation.

In a note to 48 A. L. R., p. 669, the law is thus well stated:

“It seems well settled that a decree assessing stockholders of an insolvent corporation is conclusive against nonresident stockholders, although not served with process within the state in which it was rendered or made parties to the proceedings, in so far as the necessity for such decree and the amount of the assessment are concerned, where, under the laws of the state, the court has jurisdiction to enter such decree, and its determination is conclusive as to such questions. Such stockholder is, however, not precluded from litigating any matter which bears upon the extent or duration of his stock holdings, or other personal defenses, such as payment, the statute of limitations, applicable to his liability as distinguished from the liability of the corporation, and the like.”
“The order authorizing an assessment, unless directly attacked and set aside by appropriate judicial proceedings, is conclusive as to the necessity for making the assessment. [423]*423The determination by the court of the amount of the indebtedness and the rate of assessment is'conclusive on the members, and not subject to collateral attack.” 32 C. J. 1044.

There are no procedural defects.

Having reached the conclusion that the statute of limitations cannot avail and that the assessment was regular, it only remains for us to ascertain if the claim of $519.33 is sustained by proof.

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4 S.E.2d 399, 173 Va. 417, 1939 Va. LEXIS 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morrow-v-vaughan-bassett-furniture-co-va-1939.