Parris v. Carolina Mutual Fire Ins.
This text of 91 S.C. 344 (Parris v. Carolina Mutual Fire Ins.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The opinion of the Court was delivered bji-
In this action, brought by the plaintiff as receiver of Carolina Mutual Fire Insurance Company, the allegations of the complaint are that assessments were duly levied on. the members of the company; that the defendant, one of the members, refused to pay his assessments of $33.67 and $31.33, and that under section 1916 of the Civil Code a lien exists on the property insured, and the land on which it is situated, to secure the payment of the assessments. The defendant demurred to the complaint on the ground that it failed to state a cause of action, in that: “1. The complaint does not allege that the said insurance company is and was solvent during the period of insurance covered by the policy covered in the complaint. 3. That the complaint does not allege that protection had been had by the insured during the period of insurance alleged in the complaint. 3. That it appears upon the face of the complaint that the said insurance company was and is insolvent.” To sustain the demurrer the defendant relies [346]*346on the statute enacted February 23, 1910 (26 Stat. 695), which provides: “That any fire insurance company doing business in this State, claiming a lien upon the property insured for the premium for such insurance, shall, upon an action being brought upon such lien, or to' collect such premium, establish that protection had been had by the insured, and that such company during the period of insurance was solvent."
The Carolina Mutual Fire Insurance Company went into the hands of a receiver in 1908. All the obligations of the company and of its members then became fixed, the act of the Court in taking charge of it through a receiver being for the purpose of enforcing these obligations, and adjusting all the equities of the parties. Wetmore v. Scalf, 85 S. C. 285, 67 S. E. 298. The demurrer depends on the proposition that the General Assembly by an act passed more than a year afterwards changed the legal relations and the rights of the parties.
. The act does not purport to destroy the obligations assumed and the rights acquired by the members of fire insurance companies, but it very materially changes them; for surely it would be difficult to prove as an affirmative' fact the solvency of a corporation which must always have undischarged obligations, and which has no capital except the liability of its members to pay assessments, and to prove further that the member sued for his assessment would have been paid had he incurred loss.
It is the judgment of this Court that the judgment-of the ■Circuit Court be affirmed.
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91 S.C. 344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parris-v-carolina-mutual-fire-ins-sc-1912.