Mutual Reserve Fund Life Ass'n v. Phelps

103 F. 515, 1900 U.S. App. LEXIS 4826
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Kentucky
DecidedAugust 25, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 103 F. 515 (Mutual Reserve Fund Life Ass'n v. Phelps) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mutual Reserve Fund Life Ass'n v. Phelps, 103 F. 515, 1900 U.S. App. LEXIS 4826 (circtdky 1900).

Opinion

EVANS, District Judge.

On the 14th day of July, 1885, James S. Phelps procured a certificate of membership (otherwise a policy of life insurance) in the complainant association, and at stated periods .thereafter paid the dues and the mortuary calls or premiums thereon as stipulated in the certificate. This continued until about January, 1900, a period of nearly 14’- years, and for that length of time, he continuously paid the premiums for carrying the risk. Pursuant to the stipulations of the certificate or policy, as the insurer claimed, the mortuary calls were increased to a higher rate, and probably fixed upon a different plan than the insured thought was permitted by the terms of the certificate; and after the date last named he refused to pay the increased rates, and on the 28th day of February, 1900, instituted an ordinary action at law in the state court to recover the entire amount of the calls or premiums so paid by him, together with interest thereon. Upon a service of process, which the state court considered valid and sufficient, judgment in that action- was rendered in the plaintiff’s favor on May 19, 1900, for the entire claim then ascertained by the court to be the sum of $2,360, for which amount, with interest from that date, and the costs of the proceeding, judgment was then rendered against the association. It will be seen that this judgment allowed to the insurer no compensation whatever for the risk it had taken and carried for the 14-J- years, during which the certificate or policy had been in force, and the premiums and calls had been paid. On the 21st day of May, 1900, an execution of fieri facias was issued upon the judgment, and was' placed in the hands of the sheriff of the proper county, who subsequently, namely, on June 12, 1900, returned the writ, in substance, “No property found.” More than 60 days after the judgment, to wit, on the 4th day of August, 1900, the plaintiff in that action filed therein an amended and supplemental petition seeking to obtain satisfaction of the judgment by subjecting the assets and credits of [517]*517the insurer in Kentucky, and which consisted of the mortuary calls and premiums afterwards to become due from other Insurers upon like certificates or policies; and upon considering this last paper the state court, although no process had been Issued upon it, nor any notice of it given to the association, on the same day of its being filed transferred it to the equity docket, acted upon it, and appointed the Fidelity Trust & Safety-Vault Company receiver for the complainant in Kentucky, and directed it to collect all the revenues and income from the members or policy holders, and also ordered them, under threat of contempt, to pay the same as they accrued to the said receiver, although none of them were parties to the action, nor had any of them been summoned to answer as garnishees. After unsuccessfully attempting to file a petition for the removal of that action to this court on the 22d'day of August, 1900, and after an equally unsuccessful attempt to have the bond tendered therewith approved by that court as sufficient, the complainant began this action, seeking to enjoin the efforts of the defendants Phelps and the Fidelity Trust & Safety-Vault Company to reduce any of complainant’s revenues or income to their possession, upon grounds set forth in the bill of complainant, — that the last steps taken in the state court were void; that its policy holders were very numerous, and a great multiplicity of actions would otherwise result. Whether the judgment in the state court action was valid, as being based upon a sufficient service of process, we need not inquire at this stage of the proceeding. As the defendants are estopped from denying its validity, we shall assume it to be valid, for the purpose of the inquiry before us, only remarking that in the late case of Swann v. Association (C. C.) 100 Fed. 922, we had occasion to pass upon a somewhat kindred question, though not in that case inquiring into the nature of the agency of a “local treasurer,” such as Mr. Frese appears possibly to have been in this case. That may become an important question in the future progress of this case, when the character of his agency, if any, is fully disclosed, hut it is not so at present.

Whether the fund raised by the complainant from mortuary calls and premiums through its manner of insuring is a trust fund for all its members and beneficiaries, which cannot be diverted to the benefit of a mere creditor, who is not now a member, and for that reason possibly not entitled to participate as such, he not having contributed to the joint fund to be raised upon future mortuary calls, is an important question, though it need not now receive more than an incidental consideration. Ordinarily we might say that such a fund could not be subjected to a creditor’s demand in a case like the one in the state court, and by process which, if anything, is substantially that of garnishment. In this case, where the mortuary calls, as shown by defendant Phelps in Ms pleading in the state court, are a trust fund to pay the losses of the contributors to it, the matter seems even clearer. Whether a premium or a mortuary call yet to be paid for life insurance, where the policy can only be kept alive by its payment, is a subject of any species of garnishment by creditors, in the hands of the policy holder, is another question which may become of much moment. Ordinarily we would certainly say that it was not a [518]*518debt due to the insurer at all, nor an asset belonging to it, until it was actually paid. The relation of insurer and insured admits of the construction only that the insured may purchase the-insurance for a prescribed period by voluntarily and at his option paying the premium. This and the plan of insurance offered by the complainant may be slightly-different, but, if the mortuary calls are not paid, the certificate of membership must in all cases lapse. So that, if the policy lapse, the insured has got nothing for his money. He has only paid a portion of a debt of. the insurer, if what he is about to nay for the purchase of insurance for the future is taken from him for another and different purpose. It may be assumed to be at least extremely doubtful whether premiums or mortuary calls, not being in any sense debts, but only a cash payment for the purchase, at the option of the insured, of some future benefit, can in any sense be garnishable. If they can, the policy holder will lose, and the insurance company gain. The policies and all accumulations, if any, may be forfeited for nonpayment to the company, and the money, instead of paying for insurance, may be most unjustly diverted to the payment of the insurance company’s debt. Justice to the policy holders, and every consideration, therefore, would seem to enforce the conclusion that the accruing premiums or calls cannot be garnished by any mere creditor of the company.

Section 720 of the Eevised Statutes of the United States forbids the issuing by this court of any injunction against any proceedings in a state court, except in bankruptcy matters. This necessarily means a pending, and not a past or terminated, suit. The statute is a wise one, as nothing could be more incongruous and unseemly than for the courts of the United States to attempt to control by their processes the ordinary actions of the state courts.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
103 F. 515, 1900 U.S. App. LEXIS 4826, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mutual-reserve-fund-life-assn-v-phelps-circtdky-1900.