Pierson v. Cronk

7 N.Y.S. 573, 27 N.Y. St. Rep. 122, 54 Hun 636, 1889 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1178
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 7, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 7 N.Y.S. 573 (Pierson v. Cronk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pierson v. Cronk, 7 N.Y.S. 573, 27 N.Y. St. Rep. 122, 54 Hun 636, 1889 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1178 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1889).

Opinion

Daniels, J.

This action has been brought by the plaintiff as receiver of the Widows’ & Orphans’ Benefit Life Insurance Company. It was created as a corporation under the laws of this state, and authorized to make insurances upon lives. On the 8th of March, 1877, the corporation was dissolved by a judgment of this court, upon the application of the attorney general; and this action was brought by the receiver appointed upon the dissolution of the corporation, to recover the amount unpaid upon policies of insurance issued by the company. To maintain the action against the intestate, who died during its pendency, a proposal made by him as president of the Mutual Protection Life Insurance Company, and by the vice-president and secretary of that company, to the trustees of the Widows’ & Orphans’ Benefit Life Insurance Company, on the 5th of March, 1871, was read in evidence. By this proposal an offer was made to purchase the majority of the stock of the Widows’ & Orphans’ Company, and substantially to consolidate it with the Mutual Protection Life Insurance Company. This proposal, to that extent, was accepted as a basis for the consolidation of the two companies. The stock to the amount required for this purpose was purchased by the officers of the Mutual Protection Life Insurance Company; a majority of the directors or trustees of the Widows’ & Orphans’ Company resigned, and others, selected for that purpose by the Mutual Protection Life Insurance Company, were [574]*574elected as their successors; and in this manner the Widows’ & Orphans’ Company was placed under the control and management of the Mutual Protection Life Insurance Company. The latter company afterwards transferred its assets to still another company, which finally became insolvent. The plaintiff averred the intestate to have become liable for the payment of the amounts left unpaid upon the policies of the Widows’ & Orphans’ Company, by reason of a contract entered into as a part of the proposal, the performance of which was guarantied by him. In support of the appeal it has been alleged that the plaintiff was also entitled to maintain the action because of the misappropriation of the assets of the Widows’ & Orphans’ Company; and provisions of the statute of this state have been referred to as sustaining this theory. But it is sufficient, by way of answer to this position, to say that the action was not brought in that form. It was upon an alleged guaranty of the proposed contract of the Mutual Protection Company that the complaint was formed; and that this was the understanding at the time when the action was about to be commenced appears from the petition made for leave to commence and prosecute it. That'petition applied for a direction for the receiver to “bring an action against the guarantors upon the said contract, or that your petitioners may have leave to commence such action in his name as receiver, for their benefit and the benefit of such other policy-holders of said Widows’ & Orphans’ Company who may come in and contribute to the expenses of such proceeding, upon giving indemnity to said receiver in such sum as to the court may seem just.” The order which was made pursuant to the application was of the same tenor, for it authorized the applicants “to commence a $ suit in behalf of themselves, and of others similarly situated, in the name of Henry E. Pierson, receiver of the Widows’& Orphans’Benefit Life Insurance Company, upon the guaranty in said petition set forth.” There was no misunderstanding, therefore, as to the nature of the proceeding intended to be taken when the application and order were made, and the complaint itself discloses no other intention than to proceed upon the alleged guaranty, as the ground of action; and, unless the plaintiff can maintain the right to recover in the action upon the guaranty, it necessarily must fail, as it was held that it should at the circuit. 5 N. Y. Supp. 53.

In the proposal which formed the basis of the consolidation of the widows’ & Orphans' Company with the Mutual Protection Life Insurance Company this statement was made: “It need hardly be said—but for greater clearness we do say, and thereto pledge ourselves—that the contract obligations entered into by the Widows’ & Orphans’ Company with its policy-holders and others, of every name and nature, will be rigorously fulfilled, to the same extent and in the same manner as if no change such as is contemplated should take place. ” And following the proposal was added this guaranty: “In consideration of one dollar to each of us paid, and for other valuable considerations ns thereunto moving, we hereby individually and collectively guaranty the fulfillment of the agreement in the foregoing letter of the Mutual Protection Life Insurance Company, ”—which was subscribed by the intestate, as one of the parties to it. The effect of these two instruments was caí ef ully considered in Wise Morgan, 13 Daly, 402. That was an action brought by a policy-holder in the Widows’ & Orphans’ Company, to recover the amount unpaid upon it under this guaranty; but it was held by the court that the action could not be maintained—First, for the reason that the guaranty itself did not inure to the benefit of the individual policy-holders; and, secondly, for the reason that it contemplated no more than the faithful management and administration of the affairs of the Widows’ & Orphans’ Company by the officers to be placed in charge after the consolidation should be affected. This case was afterwards appealed to the court of appeals, and the judgment was affirmed in 103 N. Y. 682. The present action differs from the case then before the court in the circumstance that it has now been brought by the receiver, not only represent[575]*575ing the Widows’ & Orphans’ Company, but also its policy-holders and other ■creditors. He is in a situation, therefore, where, if this contract could be legally construed to create a pecuniary obligation for the payment of the ■amounts mentioned in the policies for whose recovery the suit has been brought, it might be maintained. But no such obligation as that appears to have been intended to be entered into, either by the Mutual Protection Life Insurance Company itself or by the persons subscribing this guaranty. What the officers of the Mutual Protection Company proposed to do was to fulfill the policy contracts, as well as others, of the Widows’ & Orphans’ Company, to the same ■extent and in the same manner as that would have been done if no change in the way of a consolidation should take place. It was not proposed, in any event, to pay what might become due upon the policies of the Widows’ & Orphans’ Company, but to fulfill the contracts the same as though the change which was contemplated should not be brought about; and that is all that the intestate himself became liable for by subscribing the guaranty, as he did, at the foot of the proposal. There was no pecuniary obligation assumed, in any event, to pay the policies; but the agreement was to manage the affairs of the consolidated companies in such a manner that the holders of policies in the Widows’ & Orphans’ Company should be in the same condition as though no consolidation had been projected. And the difficulty in the way of maintaining the plaintiff’s action seems to arise out of the circumstance that proof was not given at the trial that the Widows’ & Orphans’ Company would have been in any better pecuniary condition than it was at the time when the receiver was appointed if this consolidation had not taken place.

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Related

Pierson v. Cronk
13 N.Y.S. 845 (New York Supreme Court, 1890)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 N.Y.S. 573, 27 N.Y. St. Rep. 122, 54 Hun 636, 1889 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pierson-v-cronk-nysupct-1889.