Relfe v. Columbia Life Insurance

10 Mo. App. 150, 1881 Mo. App. LEXIS 100
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 29, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 10 Mo. App. 150 (Relfe v. Columbia Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Relfe v. Columbia Life Insurance, 10 Mo. App. 150, 1881 Mo. App. LEXIS 100 (Mo. Ct. App. 1881).

Opinion

Bakewell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Mound City Life Insurance Company, on February 19, 1874, chauged its name to the “ St. Louis Life Insurance Company,” and on January 28, 1876, again changed its name to the “Columbia Life Insurance Company.” The name by which it is called is unimportant; the company remained the same. For the purposes of this opinion the company will be spoken of throughout by the name which it last assumed, and which it now holds.

In the cause whose title is set out above, the Circuit Court is administering, through- its receiver, the assets of the Columbia Life Insurance Company. The assets of the Atlas, Missouri, and De Soto Life Insurance Companies are also being administered in the same court by its receiver, Theodore W. Heman. Heman was directed by the court to [157]*157file intervening petitions in the original cause as receiver of the three last-named companies. The object of thesepetitions is to subject to the payment of certain notes made by the Columbia Life a lot of ground with the improvements at the corner of Sixth and Locust Streets, St. Louis, formerly owned by the Columbia Life. The sheriff, who had been substituted as trustee of the deed of trust sought to be enforced, was made defendant, as also was the collector of St. Louis, because there were unpaid taxes that were a lien upon the property. Another defendant was Silas Bent, receiver of the St. Louis Mutual Life Insurance Company. He appeared and admitted the allegations of the intervening petition, and asked that the prayer of the petition be granted. The intervenor then filed motions asking the court to sell the property described in the deed of trust, and that the proceeds be brought into court. The property was accordingly sold for $284,500, and this sum, less the amount paid for taxes, is now awaiting the determination of the present controversy. The Circuit Court made a decree adjudicating the rights of those claiming the funds, and from this decree the receiver of the Columbia Life Insurance Company appeals.

The “Act for the Incorporation and Regulation of Life Assurance Companies” (Acts 1869, p. S3; Wag. Stats. 745, sects. 21, 22) provides (sects. 20', 21) that “ No company organized under this act, or reorganized under the sixteenth section thereof, shall commence or carry on business until such company has deposited with the superintendent of the insurance department, for the security of its policyholders, the sum of one hundred thousand dollars, in stocks, or in notes or bonds secured by mortgages or deeds of trust of the description mentioned in the nineteenth section of this act; such stocks to consist only of bonds or treasury notes of the United States, or bonds of the State of'Missouri, and in all cases to be, or to be made, equal to stock producing six per cent per annum, and not- to be received at a rate above [158]*158their par value, nor above their current market value. No existing corporation organized under any general law of this State, and transacting business of the character designated in the first section of this act, shall continue' to transact such business unless it shall, within six months after the passage of this act, deposit with the superintendent of the insurance department, for the security of its policy-holders, securities to the amount and of the same value and description required by the preceding section to be deposited by similar corporations formed under this act.”

In compliance with this act the Atlas Mutual Life Insurance Company, on July 1, 1869, deposited $100,000. This deposit remained in the department, and was there on April 24, 1872, when the Atlas, having a large number of policies in force, entered into a contract of reinsurance with the Columbia Life Insurance Company, and sold all its business and assets to that company, the Columbia Life agreeing to assume and discharge all the liabilities of the Atlas. The Atlas at once ceased to do business, turned over to the Columbia Life all the assets under its control, and desired to transfer the deposit of $100,000, but the superintendent of insurance would not permit the transfer; the superintendent had at that date prepared blank forms for orders to withdraw from the department securities deposited under the act for the benefit of policy-holders, and also forms for proposals to deposit such securities, and had made a rule, which from that time was adhered to, that these forms should be signed and the formalities indicated complied with, in every case of withdrawing or depositing securities. In accordance with these rules and blank forms on the deposit of securities, the company desiring to deposit furnished a list in writing of the securities, and appointed in writing an agent to accomplish the deposit, who was obliged to certify in writing that, as agent, he was present at the vault of the Safe Deposit Company in St. Louis; that, with his assistance, at a date [159]*159named, the box containing the deposit of the company in question was unlocked and opened by the deputy superintendent of the insurance department; that the agent witnessed the deposit therein of the securities described; that the agent remained present and attentive whilst the box was relocked, and that the securities at the date of signing the certificate are on deposit in that box. The formalities prescribed for the withdrawal of securities require a description of the securities and a request for their withdrawal., and the appointment of an agent of the company to accomplish the withdrawal, all in writing and signed by the president and secretary of the company desiring to withdraw, and also a written certificate of the agent so appointed, that he was present when the deputy superintendent of insurance opened the box; that he attentively observed all that took place until the box was relocked.; that he received the securities withdrawn, and that nothing else was withdrawn.

Section 23 of the insurance law (Wag. Stats. 745) provides that.the superintendent of insurance shall require each company to keep up its deposits to full value ; that he shall, upon the receipt of the securities, at once make a special deposit of the same, and that they shall remain as security of the policy-holders so long as the company depositing shall remain solvent; but it further provides that, so long as such company is solvent, the superintendent shall permit it to collect the interest and dividends on its securities, and, from time to time, to withdraw any such securities, on depositing in lieu thereof securities of the same*value and kind mentioned in the section concerning these deposits; such withdrawal not to be made without written orders of the president and secretary of the company.

After the execution of the reinsurance contract between the Columbia and the Atlas, and the refusal of the department to permit the transfer of the deposits, the president and secretary of the Atlas signed and sealed the blank forms [160]*160required by the department, and delivered the same to the Columbia. This was necessary to enable the Columbia to collect any maturing interest and dividends on these securities. There is no direct evidence as to the purpose for which it was done. But on March 5, 1875, the secretary of the Atlas demanded of the Columbia the return of all blank orders for the transfer of deposits, and forbade their use by the Columbia, and notified the superintendent of insurance of this. No change affecting their deposits occurred from February 14th up to August 9th, excepting one, and that was immaterial, and effected by the president of the Atlas himself.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Mo. App. 150, 1881 Mo. App. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/relfe-v-columbia-life-insurance-moctapp-1881.