Mutual Security Co. v. Sidney Blumenthal & Co.

86 A. 573, 86 Conn. 667, 1913 Conn. LEXIS 68
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedApril 17, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 86 A. 573 (Mutual Security Co. v. Sidney Blumenthal & 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
Mutual Security Co. v. Sidney Blumenthal & Co., 86 A. 573, 86 Conn. 667, 1913 Conn. LEXIS 68 (Colo. 1913).

Opinion

Wheeler, J.

The plaintiff appeals from the refusal of the court to direct a verdict in its favor and for the direction of a verdict for the defendant. The plaintiff is a mutual insurance company authorized by its charter (14 Special Laws, p. 181) to insure against loss or damage from the interruption or suspension of business by reason of strikes, at such rates and for such terms as it may determine; and it may require the further agreement to pay such sum or sums as may be assessed against each policy-holder to pay for losses or expenses accruing during the term of the policy, not exceeding five times the amount of the cash premium of each policy.

The plaintiff issued to the defendant a policy of insurance for twelve months from June 1st, 1906, in consideration of which it paid a premium of $800, and further obligated itself to pay all sums assessed on the policy by the president and directors in conformity with its charter and by-laws.

The plaintiff, on May 1st, 1906, issued to the Buffalo Forge Company its policy of insurance against loss from strikes, and under it the Forge Company on December 1st, 1909, recovered judgment for $29,449.49 for losses suffered by it from strikes between May 1st and November 1st, 1906. The Buffalo Steam Pump Company also recovered upon a similar policy issued to *669 it for loss from strike accruing between the same dates. The total loss on. both policies to July 16th, 1910, was $33,000.

The president and directors, on August 16th, 1910, voted to levy an assessment to pay said several sums, with interest at the rate of six per cent, from July 16th, 1910, and further found that the expenses incident to the adjustments of said sums so due and of collecting and enforcing the assessments so made were reasonably estimated at $5,000, and then voted an assessment against each policy-holder for a sum equal to twenty-five per cent, a month of the premiums on his policy. The policy of defendant which was assessed expired June 1st, 1907. The vote of assessment was on August 16th, 1910.

The main ground for the defendant’s contention that this assessment was void, is because it was made after the expiration of the policy and after an unreasonable time. This claim conflicts with the purpose of the assessment provision of mutual insurance. Premiums in stock companies are fixed sums calculated upon a basis of payment of the losses and expenses of the business and providing a surplus for a reserve and for profits. In a mutual insurance company the members are at the same time insurers and insured. Premiums may be, as in this case, partly in cash and partly in the right, arising out of the agreement in the policy, to levy assessments to meet actual losses. The assessments are thus in reality deferred premiums based on actual rather than on probable loss. This assessment obligation of the policy-holders constitutes a guaranty ftmd for the protection of the insured against loss suffered by him. Unless the right to levy assessments to meet accrued losses against those policies in force during the period of loss is preserved, the protection of the contract is taken from the insured and the guarantee fund de *670 stroyed upon which the safety of this system of insurance rests, and without which the insolvency of the company would be ultimately inevitable.

The charter intended, and the policy intended, that the assessment would provide a fund to meet the losses accruing from strikes. A limitation of the time of assessment to the life of the policy would take away a great part of the protection afforded by the assessment right. The defendant does not claim that a mutual insurance company, such as the plaintiff, may not, if duly authorized, make contracts of insurance with its members extending their liability beyond the date of membership; its claim is that the plaintiff’s right to assess is limited to the period covered by the life of the policy. The right of assessment is governed by the charter, and the defendant’s liability to pay an assessment by its contract of insurance made in conformity to the charter. There is no specific limitation in the policy as to the time when the assessment may be made. To read into the policy a limitation to the period covered by the policy, is to interpret it counter to the intention of the parties. Membership terminates with the policy, and the defendant argues that all obligations created by the policy cease with it. This argument, the plaintiff points out, confuses the incidents arising from the contract of insurance with those arising from the membership of the policy-holder. Membership carries with it no obligations to be met by assessments arising out of losses before the inception of the policy, nor does it impose obligations arising after the policy has terminated. Under this contract of insurance, the policy-holder remains liable only for those losses which accrue during the life of the policy. When the contract begins, the liability thereunder begins; and, when it ends, the liability for future losses can never attach. The liability of each policy-holder for a loss *671 accruing during the life of the policy arises when the loss occurs and continues until it is paid, and may be satisfied, if needs be, by an assessment duly made within a reasonable, time. It might not infrequently be. impossible to adjust a loss and make the assessment within the life of the policy. In such cases, under the defendant’s construction of this policy, no valid assessment could be levied since the membership has ceased and the policy terminated. Thus losses which accrued during the life of the policy, and which might be met by assessments laid in all other respects within the contract, must remain unpaid because the assessments are levied after the policy has matured. The security of the assessment privilege would be greatly minimized, and the object of its incorporation in the contract largely imperiled, if assessments could not be levied upon policies after their termination. Contracts for a limited period, whether for insurance, rental, or otherwise, do not by their termination avoid liabilities accruing during their life. We cannot sanction the defendant’s claim that the language of this policy limits the right of assessment to the period of membership.

The policy does limit the life of the lien provided against the property of the policy-holder to the term of the policy. Some definite period must be fixed for the life of the lien, otherwise contracts of this character would not be entered into; and the term of the policy was selected perhaps because most assessments would be made and collected within this period.

Again, it is said the policy provides for the payment of “such sums as may be assessed against each policyholder,” and, after the termination of the policy, the defendant was no longer a policy-holder. The obligation for the loss accrued against each policy-holder during the period of the loss, and his designation as a policy-holder is a convenient and proper way of naming *672 him. The right of assessment, it will be noticed in § 6 of the charter, is not confined to assessments against members, or for losses accruing during membership, but extends to assessments against each policy-holder for losses accruing during the term of each policy.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Commonwealth Ex Rel. Schnader v. Keystone Indemnity Exchange
11 A.2d 887 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1940)
Commonwealth v. Keystone Indemnity Exchange
34 Pa. D. & C. 505 (Dauphin County Court of Common Pleas, 1938)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
86 A. 573, 86 Conn. 667, 1913 Conn. LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mutual-security-co-v-sidney-blumenthal-co-conn-1913.