Russell v. Farmers Mutual Union Fire & Lightning Insurance

21 Ohio C.C. 472
CourtGeauga Circuit Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1901
StatusPublished

This text of 21 Ohio C.C. 472 (Russell v. Farmers Mutual Union Fire & Lightning Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Geauga Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Russell v. Farmers Mutual Union Fire & Lightning Insurance, 21 Ohio C.C. 472 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1901).

Opinion

Burrows, J.

■ The defendant in error is a corporation organized as a mutual insurance association under sections 3686 and 3687, Revised Statutes, and the plaintiffs in error are members of the corporation.

■ Upon petition of a majority of the directors for a dissolution of the corporation such proceedings were had that a judgment of dissolution was entered by the court, and a receiver appointed as provided by section 5656, Revised Statutes.

The receiver, having accepted the appointment and given bond as required by law, entered upon the discharge of his duties, and thereafter, in accordance with the requirements of the statute,filed in court his final report containing a full and complete account of all his proceedings. This report contained a full and detailed statement of the affairs of the corporation, including a full list of its creditors and the amount due to each, and a schedule of all assets. It appeared from the report that the indebtedness exceeded the assets by fifteen thousand dollars or more.

The report also contained a schedule showing by monthly periods when the indebtedness was incurred and the rate of assessment necessary to be levied for each month upon members of the corporation holding policies during the time that such indebtedness was incurred, in order to pay said indebtedness, costs and expenses.

The larger part of the indebtedness allowed and reported by the receiver consisted of claims presented by the directors on account of the personal liabilities they had assumed for the corporation by giving their promissory notes to certain banks for loans made from time to time to pay losses and expenses in the conduct of the business.

Upon the filing of this report the plaintiffs in error filed [474]*474exceptions to the same alleging the invalidity of the claims of the directors so allowed, and demanded a hearing upon such exceptions, and also asked to have the report referred to a referee. The court refused to refer the report, and also refused to hear the exceptions except upon condition that the plaintiffs in error would give bond, in due form, in the sum of five thousand dollars that they would pay, in case said exceptions were not finally sustained, all costs of such hearing and the interest on the indebtedness of the corporation during the time the final decree was delayed. Plaintiffs in error declining to give said bond, the court ordered such exceptions stricken from the files in the case; and refused to consider the same, because of the refusal of plaintiffs in error to give said bond; and thereupon confirmed said report of the receiver, and decreed the same to be final and conclusive.

To all these rulings and the decree of the court plaintiffs in error excepted.

The correctness of these rulings is the only question raised on this record. We have not examined the merits of the contention made by the exceptions to the report of the receiver further than to determine, in our opinion, that they were not frivolous or immaterial. It is contended in argument that the court below had the right to strike said exceptions from the files for the reason that it was not shown or alleged that the exceptors were solvent; and that where, as in this case, the debts of the corporation are to be collected from the solvent members alone, the insolvent policy holders had no interest in the controversy. We need not stop to inquire whether this position would be tenable where the insolvency of the exceptors affirmatively appears, or where it appears that the decree will exempt them from assessments levied to pay the debts. But we are well satisfied that there is no presumption of law or fact that these policy holders are insolvent. They had property insured, and gave their promises to pay assessments, and are presumed to be capable of performing their contracts. Besides, this question was not raised in the court below, and did not enter into the rulings of the court which are now under discussion.

The action of the court is assailed and defended by coun[475]*475sel upon either side by an appeal to the statute regulating the conduct of proceedings in such cases. No authorities-have been cited other than the statute, and its construction must determine the questions we are called upon to decide, fl I will read the sections of the Revised Statutes which are ■ supposed to bear directly upon this question.

“Section 5670. When required by the court the receiver shall render a full and accurate account of all his proceedings to the court, on oath, which may be referred to a referee or master commissioner to examine and report thereon; but before he renders any such account he shall-insert a notice of his intention to present the same, once a week, for three consecutive weeks, in some newspaper prints ed' and of general circulation in the county where the principal place of business of the corporation is situate, specifying the time and place at which such account will be rendered.”
“Section 5671. The referee to whom such account is-referred shall hear and examine the proofs, vouchers, and documents offered for or against the same, and shall report thereon fully to the court; and when the report is made, the court shall hear the allegations of all concerned therein, and shall allow or disallow the account, and may decree the same to be final and conclusive upon all creditors of the corporation, upon all persons who have claims against it,, upon any open or subsisting engagement, and upon all the stockholders of the corporation.”

It is insisted by counsel for plaintiffs in error that they are entitled to file exceptions to the report of the receiver,, and have the same heard by the court, and that such right is secured to them by the plain letter of the statute; while counsel for defendant in error contend Ihat whatever provision is made by these sections for exceptions to the report of the receiver and the hearing of the same, only an exercise of discretion is required on the part of the court; that as to-the questions raised by these exceptions the exceptors were foreclosed by the report of the receiver’; and that, the decree of the court would still leave the question of the liability of the exceptors open for contest when an attempt should be made to collect the assessments.

Upon a careful reading of these sections, and the entire-[476]*476chapter relating to the dissolution of corporations, we are inclined to the view contended for by plaintiffs in error as ■to their right to have a hearing. Whether they had a right to have the report referred to a referee may be doubtful. They contend that the power given to the court to refer, by the use of the word “may” gave him no discretion, because the exercise of such power was necessary to secure the just rights of those interested. But when we consider the subject matter of the statute it is not apparent that the rights of the parties were jeopardized by a refusal to refer the report of the receiver. Where such report is of a character requiring any serious examination and is not objected to, it would be a vain thing to refer it; and where objections are made, then the propriety or necessity of its reference would depend upon the character of the report and the objections to it, In this case the proper disposition of the exceptions might depend perhaps, mainly upon undisputed facts and the law applicable to the same.

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Bluebook (online)
21 Ohio C.C. 472, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/russell-v-farmers-mutual-union-fire-lightning-insurance-ohcirctgeauga-1901.