Phillips v. Perue

229 S.W. 849, 111 Tex. 112, 1921 Tex. LEXIS 70
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 6, 1921
DocketNo. 3334.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 229 S.W. 849 (Phillips v. Perue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phillips v. Perue, 229 S.W. 849, 111 Tex. 112, 1921 Tex. LEXIS 70 (Tex. 1921).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice PHILLIPS

delivered the opinion of the court.

The facts upon which are predicated the questions certified are, in brief, these:

The Casualty Company of America, a New York fidelity, guaranty and insurance corporation, for the purpose of pursuing its business in Texas, in 1914 complied with Article 4930 by depositing with the State Treasurer $50,000.00 in securities. It surrendered its right to do business and withdrew from the State in 1916, leaving the deposit in the hands of the State Treasurer, and making no effort to comply with Article 4932 by giving the bond there required of such a company for the protection of its outstanding contracts, upon withdrawing from the State.

The company becoming insolvent, Jesse S. Phillips, Superintendent of Insurance of the State of New York, on May 4, 1917, in virtue of the insurance laws of the State of New York and of an order of the Supreme Court of New York County, was appointed liquidator of the company and vested with title to all of its property.

Later, in 1917, the appellee Sarah Perue, as a creditor of the company under one of its policies, filed this suit against it in the District Court of Walker County for the sum of $1800.00, seeking to subject the deposit in the hands of the State Treasurer to the payment of her claim, alleging the company’s insolvency and the appointment in New York of a receiver of its affairs, and asking for the appointment of a receiver in Texas for the deposit pending the determination of her suit. On the same date, on this petition, the District Court of Walker County appointed W. C. Jones as such receiver, directing him to take possession of all the company’s assets within the State of Texas and hold them subject to the court’s orders. Jones at once qualified under this appointment.

Afterwards various parties intervened in the cause, asserting claims against the Casualty Company on bonds and policies issued by it and seeking their payment out of the deposit in the State Treasurer’s hands.

In September, 1917, the District Court of Walker County entered an order directing that all interventions against the company be filed in the suit by March 1, 1918. This order was later extended. Forty-two. creditors of the company other than the plaintiff filed such interventions on claims arising from bonds and policies issued by the company, seeking to have their claims satisfied out of the deposit with the State Treasurer.

*119 In April, 1918, the State Treasurer also intervened in the cause, setting up the custody of the deposit; the withdrawal of the company from the State without having given the bond required by Article 4932; alleging that the statutes provided no way for the execution of the trust imposed upon him by Article 4930, and tendering the deposit in his hands into the court for such disposition as it might determine.

This intervention was considered by the court, and judgment rendered that as there was no provision of the statutes under which the State Treasurer was authorized to convert the securities into money or distribute such funds under the company’s situation,. or providing any method by which those entitled could obtain satisfaction of their claims out of such deposit, it was necessary that it be delivered into the hands of the court’s receiver, and directing that it be so delivered, and adjudging that thereupon the State Treasurer be relieved of the trust imposed upon him by the statutes in its relation. Pursuant to this judgment the State Treasurer delivered the deposit to the court’s receiver.

Jesse S. Phillips, as liquidator of the company under the appointment of the New York court, also intervened in the cause, asserting his right to the fund and asking that it be turned over to him for administration in the New York court.

Judgment was rendered in the cause, April 18, 1918, against the company, the receiver, and also against Jesse S. Phillips denying his claim — in favor of Sarah Perue and the other intervening creditors, establishing their respective claims and ordering their satisfaction out of the securities constituting the deposit, which the receiver was directed to convert into cash for that purpose.

The questions certified are:

1. Whether the deposit with the State Treasurer constituted a trust fund to which the Texas creditors of the company had a claim superior to the right of Jesse S. Phillips, as liquidator of the company under the laws of the State of New York.

2. Whether the District Court of Walker County had the authority to appoint a receiver for the deposit. And if so, whether it was empowered to order, as directed in its judgment, the disbursement of the fund through the receiver, rather than through the State Treasurer.

The decision of the first question depends entirely upon the effect of our statutes governing the deposit. It was fully within the power of the State to prescribe the conditions on which the foreign corporation might pursue its business within its borders. It therefore had the right to require of the corporation, if deemed necessary, the special deposit as a trust fund for the protection of its obligations arising under its policies so issued within the State. Pierce Oil Corporation v. Weinert, Secretary of State, 106 Texas, *120 435, 167 S. W., 808; Blake v. McClung, 172 U. S., 239, 43 L. Ed., 432, 19 Sup. Ct., 165; People v. Granite State Provident Association, 161 N. Y., 492, 55 N. E., 1053; Lewis v. American Savings & Loan Associatoin, 98 Wis., 203, 39 L. R. A., 559, 73 N. W., 793.

This was a matter for the Legislature. There can be no question as to its power.

Having the authority to require the deposit and to give it the character of a trust fuhd for the benefit of such special creditors, if the Legislature has so provided by law, neither the corporation, having availed itself of the benefits of the law, nor any one succeeding to its rights, can complain of an enforcement of the law. A law to which the corporation had voluntarily subjected itself would necessarily be binding upon its shareholders and other creditors and any one standing in the stead of the corporation.

Nor would an enforcement of the law violate the Federal Constitution as a refusal to give full faith and credit to the laws of another State purporting to vest title to the fund in the liquidator of the corporation in that State. The laws of this State are not subordinate to the laws of another State- touching property lawfully within the jurisdiction of this State. It would be a novel proposition to say that valid laws of this State dealing with property here must yield to the laws of another State, which, of course, have no extra-territorial effect.

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Bluebook (online)
229 S.W. 849, 111 Tex. 112, 1921 Tex. LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-perue-tex-1921.