Munich Re-Insurance Co. v. United Surety Co.

77 A. 579, 113 Md. 200, 1910 Md. LEXIS 47
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 6, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 77 A. 579 (Munich Re-Insurance Co. v. United Surety Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Munich Re-Insurance Co. v. United Surety Co., 77 A. 579, 113 Md. 200, 1910 Md. LEXIS 47 (Md. 1910).

Opinion

*203 Boyd, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a decree which dismissed the hill of complaint of the Munich Re-Insurance Company filed against the United Surety Company, decreed that the defendant was entitled to cross-relief as prayed in its answer, and referred the cause to the auditor to ascertain and report the amount, if any, due by the plaintiff to the defendant under what is called a “participation contract.” The bill charges that the Munich Company was induced to enter into and execute that contract with "the Surety Company through false and fraudulent representations of material facts on the part of the Surety Company and certain of its officers. It alleges that upon discovery of the frauds the Munich Company rescinded the contract and notified the Surety Company that by reason of said fraud's the contract was null and void from the beginning, but that the Surety Company had denied the right of the Munich Company to rescind the contract, and had instituted a suit at law to recover damages against it, under the terms and provisions of the contract. It then prayed that a decree might be passed declaring the contract null and void, and cancelling it, and also praying for an injunction restraining the Surety Company from further prosecuting the suit at law.

The defendant answered the bill and neither admitted nor denied' the allegations of fraud set out in it, but called for strict proof thereof. It further alleged that it was immaterial whether the charges of fraud and misrepresentations set out in the bill were true or not, for the reason that the plaintiff had ratified and confirmed the contract in question, and had waived any right to rescind it, after discovery of the frauds and with full knowledge thereof. By way of cross-relief the defendant then charged that the plaintiff was indebted unto it under the provisions of the conti act in a large sum of money, and prayed for an accounting and a decree in its favor for such amount as might be found to be due.

*204 The Munich Company answered the allegations for cross-relief, alleging that, apart from and' in addition to the invalidity of the contract by reason of the fraud and misrepre sentations charged in the bill, the Surety Company was not entitled to relief because at the time of the execution of the contract it had not come into being, had no corporate exist ence and was legally incapable of having or exercising any of the rights or privileges contained in its charter, and was legally incapable of executing or entering into the contract because by its charter it was a condition precedent to acquiring or having any corporate existence or exercising any corporate powers that all of the capital stock of the Surety Company, to wit, five thousand shares, should first be subscribed for, and that fifty per cent, should first be paid in cash, while a large part was unsubscribed for, and far less than fifty per cent, had been paid in cash.

The authorized capital of the Surety Company was five hundred thousand dollars, divided into five thousand shares, of one hundred dollars each. It was determined that the stock be subscribed at one hundred and fifty dollars per share—thus making a surplus of two hundred and fifty thousand dollars, in addition to the authorized capital. Oliu Bryan, the then president of the Surety Company, entered into negotiations, in the early part of 1906, with Carl Schreiner, who had charge of the “Foreign Department” of the Munich Company, and had his headquarters in London but spent part of his time in this country, with a view to making a contract with the Munich Company, whereby it should undertake, upon terms to be agreed upon, to participate in some part of the business of the Surety Company and also requested the Munich Company to become a subscriber to the capital stock of the Surety Company. The bill alleges that in the course of the negotiations between them it was understood and agreed, as a condition of the Munich Company entering into the contract and subscribing to the stock, that the whole capital should be subscribed and actually paid into the treasury at the rate of $150.00 per share, without *205 discount or rebate to anyone, so that the entire capital of $500,000 and $250,000 of surplus should be actually paid in cash and be available for the purposes of the business of the Surety Company. It was agreed that upon those terms, the Munich Company would take three hundred and thirty-three shares, at $150.00 per share, and in order to have a definite and official confirmation of the representations and statements of said Bryan, on March 24th, 1906, Schreiner wrote to the Surety Company requesting it to deliver to the banking firm of Ladenburg, Thalmann & Co., of New York, the three hundred and thirty-three fully paid shares of stock, together with a statement as to its capital, etc. On March 30th, 1906, Bryan, as president, wrote to the banking firm stating that all the shares had been subscribed for at $150.00 per share, no discount or rebate being allowed on a single share to any stockholder, of which there was then paid $443,000 in capital and $221,500 in surplus, making $664,-500, which with the 333 shares subscribed by them would make a total of $714,500 which would leave an unpaid balance of $35,550, being 237 shares, and that all of the capital and surplus would be paid on or before the 15th of April, 1906. The amount of the Munich Company’s subscription to the stock was duly paid by two drafts, and the contract, which is at times spoken of in the record as a “participation contract,” and in other places as a “re-insurance contract,” was executed in duplicate by the Surety Company on Ma'rch 20th, and by the Munich Company on April 10th. 1906— the duplicates having been sent to the home office at Munich, Bavaria, for execution by that company.

Amongst other provisions in the contract Art. VIII provided for a detailed account by the Surety Company to the Munich Company of certain income and disbursements, and . Art. IX in part is, that: “If the account provided for in the preceding article shows a profit, the ‘Munich’ shall receive one-third (1/3) thereof as its share under the terms of this agreement. If the said account shall show a loss, the ‘Munich’ will pay one-third (1/3) of said loss to the United.”

*206 The bill alleges that approximately 2312% shares were unsubscribed. and unpaid, and only 2687% shares (including what the Munich Company paid) actually subscribed and paid for; that the plaintiff and its agent, Schreiner, were at the time of making the contract and making the subscription, respectively, entirely ignorant of the true and actual condition of the defendant, and relied' on the representations and statements of Bryan, which were false and fraudulent. It is later in the bill alleged that for reasons and considerations stated, the plaintiff did after the discovery of the frauds and misrepresentations, and upon the terms and conditions thereafter set out, waive the said frauds and misrepresentations, in respect to its contract of subscription to said capital stock, and ratified' and confirmed it, but at no time since the discovery of the frauds did it waive the same in respect to the participation contract.

During the summer of that year it was discovered that a large number of the shares of stock were not in point of fact bona fide

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
77 A. 579, 113 Md. 200, 1910 Md. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/munich-re-insurance-co-v-united-surety-co-md-1910.