People Ex Rel. American Bankers Insurance v. Palmer

2 N.E.2d 728, 363 Ill. 499
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 24, 1936
DocketNo. 23536. Writ awarded.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 2 N.E.2d 728 (People Ex Rel. American Bankers Insurance v. Palmer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People Ex Rel. American Bankers Insurance v. Palmer, 2 N.E.2d 728, 363 Ill. 499 (Ill. 1936).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Farthing

delivered the opinion of the court:

Pursuant to leave granted, the American Bankers Insurance Company (hereinafter called the company) has filed its petition for a writ of mandamus to compel the defendant, Ernest Palmer, the Director of Insurance of the State of Illinois, to recognize the validity of policy liens described in the petition and to take such liens into consideration in valuing the outstanding policies issued by the company, in accordance with the statutes of this State.

The petition alleges as follows: The company is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of this State providing for the organization of legal reserve life insurance companies. (Ill. State Bar Stat. 1935, chap. 73, par. 315, et seq.) The amended charter of the company provides that its corporate powers shall be exercised by its board of directors and that it shall have power, among other things, to issue policies of insurance upon such terms and conditions as the board of directors may from time to time authorize, not inconsistent with the charter of the company and the statutes and constitution of this State.

The defendant is the duly appointed, qualified and acting Director of Insurance of this State, and as such director he is under the statutory duty to “annually make valuations of all outstanding policies, additions thereto, unpaid dividends and all other obligations of every life insurance corporation doing business in this State,” (Sec. 10 of Life Ins. act of 1869, as amended; Ill. State Bar Stat. 1935, chap. 73, par. 331;) and if he “shall find, in the case of any company doing business under this act, that the admitted assets of a stock life insurance company in excess of the minimum amount of capital stock required under this act, * * * are less than its liabilities, including the net value of its policies computed by the standard of valuation established by this section, such department [director] shall give notice to the company of the amount of such deficit as determined by it, [him,] and shall require that the deficit be made good,” etc.

The company had in force as of December 31, 1935, life insurance to the amount of $20,988,312, in policies held by 35,255 policyholders. Out of this amount $6,665,952 is made up of policies averaging less than $300 each, which are held by 22,768 policyholders who pay premiums weekly, and these premiums average nineteen cents per week. They totaled $201,907.57 in 1935. This is commonly called industrial insurance. It is the opinion of the company that if this business were interrupted for as much as thirty days the agency force necessary to its collection would be disrupted and the greater portion of this business would be lost.

Of the total insurance in force, $14,322,360 is written on policies which conform to the Standard Provisions act of this State. These policies are held by 12,487 persons, most of whom pay annual premiums. In 1935, for this class of business the total premiums amounted to $322,-322.86, of which $230,441.21 was paid in cash, $84,577.71 by policy loans and $7303.94 by notes or dividends.

In 1935 policyholders were paid in cash $263,798.53, of which $180,271.51 ivas on death claims, $38,375.29 on matured endowments, $6625.25 on disability claims, $28,-219.94 by way of surrender values and $10,306.79 as dividends. The December 31, 1935, balance sheet is attached and made a part of the company’s petition. The value of the outstanding policies on December 31, 1935, was $4,539,-048.68. This is also called the reserve and is a liability of the company. No deduction is here made on account of the waivers or liens executed by policyholders. These waivers were executed by nearly one-half of the holders of the larger policies, written on the annual premium basis. They amount in the aggregate to $1,004,449.51 and are for fifty per cent of the reserve in each instance, applicable to the policy of the policyholder who executed the waiver. The company kept the Director of Insurance informed as to these waivers or liens both as to their existence and amount, showed them as assets in its balance sheet as an offset to its total reserve liability, and it notified the Director of Insurance that it intended to show them either as assets offsetting reserve liabilities or as a reduction of reserve liabilities in the tabulation of such liabilities,, in its financial statement due March 1, 1936. The company has requested the defendant, in computing the value of its policies under section 10 of the Life Insurance act, to give effect to these waivers or liens as a deduction from the reserve liability of the respective policies whose holders have assented to such waivers or liens, and thereby to reduce the reserve liabilities by the amount of said waivers or liens.

On January 10, 1936, the defendant wrote the company a letter relative to the “so-called voluntary liens.” He stated that there had been considerable correspondence and several conversations between himself, as Director of Insurance, and the company, and that he had been advised that the company had more than $800,000 in liens which it had advised him it contemplated setting up in its statement as an asset to determine its solvency. The defendant called attention to an opinion of the Attorney General of this State rendered on March 7, 1935, and another such opinion rendered on July 18, 1935, and advised the company that in view of these opinions his department could not, under the law, consider the voluntary lien values either as an admitted asset or as a reduction of the reserve liability of the company, and that if such values were shown in the company’s annual statement to be filed before March 1, 1936, either as an asset or as a reduction of liabilities, the report would not be considered sufficient under the statute. He also advised the company that the State Insurance Department would not in any respect give consideration to such “voluntary liens” in the computation of the reserve liabilities or policy values which that department is required to compute by section 10 of the act under which the company was organized and authorized to do business, viz., “An act to organize and regulate the business of life insurance,” approved March 26, 1869.

The petition continues: Early in 1934, upon the filing of the company’s annual report for 1933, at which time the amount and character of insurance in force was substantially the same as above described, the defendant suggested to the company that the value of certain of its assets had depreciated as a result of adverse economic conditions, and that unless new assets were obtained from some source, it might develop, upon a complete appraisal, that the company was insolvent under the definition contained in section 10 of the Life Insurance act and subject to receivership proceedings under the provisions of the Insurance Companies Liquidation act of 1925 as amended. Ill. State Bar. Stat. 1935, chap. 73, par. 105, et seq.

The company, its officers, its policyholders and the defendant had before them the facts as to the experience of such Illinois legal reserve life insurance companies as the Illinois Life, National Life of U. S. A., Peoria Life and Victory Life, the Security Life, a Virginia company having its principal office in Illinois, and of four named companies in neighboring States.

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2 N.E.2d 728, 363 Ill. 499, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-american-bankers-insurance-v-palmer-ill-1936.