Polk v. Mutual Reserve Fund Life Assn. of NY

207 U.S. 310, 28 S. Ct. 65, 52 L. Ed. 222, 1907 U.S. LEXIS 1226
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 2, 1907
Docket45
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 207 U.S. 310 (Polk v. Mutual Reserve Fund Life Assn. of NY) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Polk v. Mutual Reserve Fund Life Assn. of NY, 207 U.S. 310, 28 S. Ct. 65, 52 L. Ed. 222, 1907 U.S. LEXIS 1226 (1907).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Moody,

after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.

' The Mutual Reserve Fund Association of New York (hereinafter called the Association) was originally incorporated under Chap. 267 of the Laws of New York of 1875. The certificate *321 of incorporation stated the purposes of the Association to be to provide “benefits for families and others dependent . . . by means of voluntary contributions . . . and to provide a fund for the common and exclusive benefit of all members.” In 1883 the Association reincorporated under Ghap. 175, Laws of 1883, and while this charter was in existence the complainants became members, and'policyholders. That law provided for the incorporation and regulation of. cooperative and assessment life and casualty insurance associations, and the charter of the Association stated the business to be conducted as. “the transaction of life insurance upon the cooperative or assessment plan.” The law, as will presently be shown, was subject to alteration or repeal. In 1892 an act known as the Insurance Law (Chap. 38 of the General Laws, Laws 1892 p. 1930) was passed, repealing previous laws upon the subject of insurance, and expressed to be “ applicable to all corporations authorized by law to make insurances.” Section 52 of this act, as amended by Chap. 722 of the Laws of 1901, is as follows:

“Sec. 52. Reorganizations of existing corporations and amendment of certificates.—Any domestic corporation existing or doing business at the time this chapter takes effect, may, by a vote of a majority of its directors or trustees, accept provisions of this chapter and amend its charter to conform with the same, upon obtaining the consent of the Superintendent of Insurance thereto in writing; and thereafter it shall be deemed to have been incorporated under this chapter, and every such corporation in reincorporating under this provision may for that purpose so adopt in whole or in part a new charter, in conformity herewith, and include therein any or all provisions of its existing charter, and any or all changes from its existing charter, to cover and enjoy any or all the privileges and provisions of existing laws which might be so included and enjoyed if it were originally incorporated thereunder, and it shall; upon such adoption of and after obtaining the consent, as in this section before provided, to such charter, and' filing the same and the record of adoption and consent in the office of the Super *322 intendent of Insurance, perpetually enjoy the same as and be such corporation, and which is declared to be a continuation of such corporation which existed prior to such reincorporation; and the offices therein, which shall be continued shall-be-filled by the respective incumbents for the periods for which they were elected, and all others shall be filled in the same manner as by such amended charter provided. -Every domestic insurance corporation may amend its charter or certificate of incorporation bv inserting therein any statement or matter which might have been originally inserted therein; and the same proceedings shall be taken upon the presentation of such amended charter or certificate to the Superintendent of Insurance, as are required by this chapter to be takeii with respect to an original charter or certificate,. and if approved by the Superintendent of Insurance, and his certificate of authority to do business thereunder is granted, the corporation shall thereafter be deemed to possess the same powers and be subject to the same liabilities as if such amended charter or certificate had been its original charter or certificate of incorporation, but without prejudice to any pending action or proceeding or any rights previously accrued. This section shall apply to insurance corporations organized under or subject to article six of the insurance law as well as to insurance corporations organized under special charters-or articles two and ten of the insurance'law; all con-. tracts, policies and certificates issued by such corporations prior to accepting the provisions of this chapter shall be valued as one year term insurance at thé ages attained, excepting when such contracts, policies or certificates shall providé for a limited number of specified premiums or for specified surrender values, in which ease they shall .be valued as provided in article two, section eighty-four, of the insurance law.”

•Following strictly the provisions of this section, the Association accepted the provisions of the insurance law, amended its charter, and became entitled to all the privileges of the law as if it had been originally incorporated thereunder. In the amendments to the charter the name of the Association was *323 changed to “Mutual Reserve Life Insurance. Company” (hereinafter called the Company), and the business of the Company was stated to be “insurance upon the lives or the health of persons, and all and every insurance appertaining thereto, the making of endowments, and the granting, purchasing and dispensing of annuities.” The effect of this was to broaden the business from that of merely cooperative and assessment life insurance to life insurance of every kind. It is conceded that , what-was done was within the authority conferred by the statute, and the subject for our consideration is whether any of the rights, secured to the complainants by the Constitution of the United States, have been impaired.

The first question certified is, whether the incorporation of the Company and the transfer to it of the assets, property and membership of the Association impaired any contract obligations between the Association and the complainants. This question possibly implies that by the reincorporation an entirely new corporation .was created, to which the property of the old corporation was transferred. But the question must be interpreted with the aid of the statement of facts which accompanies it. An examination of the facts and of the statute shows that there was simply a reorganization of an existing corporation and not the creation of a new one. The title of the section is, “Reorganizations of existing corporations and amendment of certificates.” It authorizes an existing corporation by vote of its directors to accept the provisions of the chapter and amend its charter. It provides expressly that the corporation, with its added powers and revised charter, shall be a “continuation of such corporation which existed prior to such reincorporation.” This, perhaps, makes superfluous the saving of “pending actions or proceeding or any rights previously accrued ” which the section cautiously insures. The declaration filed by the directors, and certified by the Attorney General to be in conformity with law, recites that the Association “has duly accepted the provisions'” of the insurance law, and “duly adopted the following amended charter,” The. corporation *324 was not changed to' a stock, but continued as a mutual company; The change of name cannot control the significance of these facts. We answer this and the other questions upon the assumption, therefore, that the. old corporation was still in existence, under a new name, and- with added powers, but with unchanged membership, and bound' to perform all its existing obligations.

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Bluebook (online)
207 U.S. 310, 28 S. Ct. 65, 52 L. Ed. 222, 1907 U.S. LEXIS 1226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/polk-v-mutual-reserve-fund-life-assn-of-ny-scotus-1907.