Peters v. Woodmen Accident and Life Company

104 N.W.2d 490, 170 Neb. 861, 1960 Neb. LEXIS 122
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 22, 1960
Docket34768
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 104 N.W.2d 490 (Peters v. Woodmen Accident and Life Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peters v. Woodmen Accident and Life Company, 104 N.W.2d 490, 170 Neb. 861, 1960 Neb. LEXIS 122 (Neb. 1960).

Opinion

Chappell, J.

Plaintiffs, James C. Peters, Ruth Tucker Newberg, Helen A. Adamson, and Arthur H. Newberg, brought this action as minority stockholders in Woodmen Central Life Insurance Company, for themselves and said company and all other stockholders thereof similarly situated, against defendants, Woodmen Accident and Life Company, a mutual insurance corporation, Woodmen Central Life Insurance Company, a stock corporation, and its named officers and directors. Plaintiffs sought thereby to obtain recovery of the value of an alleged agency force of Woodmen Central Life Insurance Company for which no consideration was included or paid under a reinsurance agreement whereby Woodmen Accident and Life Company, generally called Woodmen Accident, purchased the assets and reinsured the life and annuity contracts of Woodmen Central Life Insurance Company, generally called Woodmen Central. Plaintiffs alleged that officers of Woodmen Central were also officers of Woodmen Accident except Victor L. Toft and Ervin F. Rucklos, who were made directors of Woodmen Accident after the dissolution of Woodmen Central; that officers and directors of Woodmen Central and Woodmen Accident entered into a fraudulent plan. *864 scheme, and conspiracy to cheat and defraud plaintiffs and other stockholders, and pursuant thereto and by false representations believed by and relied upon by plaintiffs, defendants obtained the reinsurance agreement and thereby wrongfully appropriated the value of the agency force of Woodmen Central, causing its stockholders to be defrauded thereof, for the use and benefit of Woodmen Accident and other defendants.

Plaintiffs’ prayer was for an accounting and for judgment in favor of plaintiffs on behalf of stockholders of Woodmen Central and said company for the alleged reasonable value of its agency force. In that connection, all defendants were served except defendant Joseph A. Spangler, and he is not primarily involved here.

Defendant Woodmen Central answered separately, denying that plaintiffs’ action was for the use and benefit of it or any of its stockholders; admitting the sale of its assets and the reinsurance of its insurance in force; alleging that said reinsurance agreement was entered into freely and voluntarily by the parties thereto and for a full and adequate consideration; and alleging that said agreement was duly adopted and approved by its stockholders at a meeting thereof held on December 20, 1954, at which 17,784 shares out of a total of 19,491 shares outstanding, were represented in person or by proxy who unanimously approved said agreement. Said defendant also alleged that the agreement was a valid and binding obligation of the parties thereto, and that defendants never received from plaintiffs or from any other stockholders any demand to bring this action or any similar action prior to the filing of this action. Woodmen Central’s prayer was for dismissal of plaintiffs’ petition at plaintiffs’ costs.

The answer of other defendants admitted execution of the reinsurance agreement and denied all plaintiffs’ allegations of fraud and conspiracy. They alleged that plaintiffs and all other stockholders were completely and fully advised of the transaction before its consum *865 mation; that there was no concealment or misrepresentation of any fact or information relating thereto; that complete records of Woodmen Central were open and available to plaintiffs at all times; that plaintiffs had a right and full opportunity to attend the business meeting of said company and cast their votes in person or by proxy concerning said transaction and otherwise protect their rights, if any; and that the price, terms, and conditions set forth in the reinsurance agreement represented the true, just, and fair value of all the assets involved, and reflected the sound business judgment of the respective parties based upon extensive study, consultation, and experience. Defendants also alleged that said agreement was unanimously approved by the directors of each company and was unanimously approved by the stockholders and policyholders present and represented by proxy at a meeting called for consideration of the agreement; that Woodmen Central, prior to 1936, was known as Cornbelt Life Insurance Company, which was in unsound financial condition and never became in such financial condition as would justify or permit distribution of earnings or surplus in the form of dividends to the stockholders. Defendants denied that Woodmen Accident appropriated an agency force of Woodmen Central, but alleged that it never had any separate agency force which was available and subject to appropriation by Woodmen Accident. Defendants specifically alleged that officers and directors of Woodmen Accident during 1954 and at the time of the reinsurance agreement transaction consisted of defendants Edwin J. Faulkner, Richard L. Spangler, and Walter S. Henrion, together with H. J. Requartte, Thomas C. Woods, Walter W. White, George P. Abel, Burnham Yates, and Thomas H. Wake; that with the exception of Edwin J. Faulkner, Richard L. Spangler, and Walter S. Henrion, none of said Woodmen Accident directors were officers, stockholders, directors, or otherwise interested in Woodmen Central; and that the negotiations and final *866 recommendations on behalf of Woodmen Accident with reference to said reinsurance agreement were carried on and concluded by a committee of said directors for Woodmen Accident, having no affiliation with or interest in Woodmen Central. Defendants also alleged that joint application for approval of the transaction was filed with the Department of Insurance on November 3, 1954; that said application was investigated by said department and staff and ordered approved on November 12, 1954, subject to approval at a meeting of stockholders and policyholders of the respective companies, which was done; and that no appeal was ever taken by anyone from the decision and order of said department.

Defendants further alleged that plaintiff Peters attended the annual meetings of Woodmen Central in 1955 and 1956, at which time minutes of special meetings of the company approving the reinsurance agreement and authorizing distribution of the assets in liquidation of the company were read and approved by him and other stockholders; and said plaintiffs are estopped from maintaining the action and plaintiffs’ action is barred by laches. Defendants’ prayer was for dismissal and recovery of costs.

Plaintiffs’ replies were general denials. Interrogatories were submitted and answered. Plaintiffs then filed separate requests for admissions by defendants, some of which were objected to for reasons unimportant here, and some of which were denied or admitted in whole or in part, or qualified in material respects. Thereafter trial was had to the court whereat voluminous evidence was adduced by the parties and a judgment was rendered which found and adjudged the issues generally in favor of defendants and against plaintiffs, and dismissed plaintiffs’ petition at plaintiffs’ costs. The court therein specifically found and adjudged, as far as important here, that no fraud, deception, concealment, misrepresentation of fact, overreaching, plan, scheme, or conspiracy to cheat or defraud the stockholders of *867

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Bluebook (online)
104 N.W.2d 490, 170 Neb. 861, 1960 Neb. LEXIS 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peters-v-woodmen-accident-and-life-company-neb-1960.