Sergeant v. Goldsmith Dry Goods Co.

221 S.W. 259, 110 Tex. 482, 10 A.L.R. 742, 1920 Tex. LEXIS 103
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 28, 1920
DocketNo. 2593.
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 221 S.W. 259 (Sergeant v. Goldsmith Dry Goods Co.) 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
Sergeant v. Goldsmith Dry Goods Co., 221 S.W. 259, 110 Tex. 482, 10 A.L.R. 742, 1920 Tex. LEXIS 103 (Tex. 1920).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice PHILLIPS

delivered the opinion of the court.

The certificate of the honorable Court of Civil Appeals may be thus summarized:

The suit was by the appellant as the duly appointed and acting receiver of the Commercial Underwriters of San Antonio and as trustee for certain creditors of that concern, a voluntary unincorporated association for the protection of its membership against loss by fire, against thirteen hundred of its members, seeking to enforce liability in favor of (1) members of the association with claims for losses by fire under policies issued in their favor; (2) creditors of

the association for services rendered or supplies sold it; (3) creditors with whom the association had re-insured its risks and asserting claims for such re-insurance premiums; and (4) the manager of the association for his services rendered it.

The allowance by a master of the claims asserted, had been ap- ■ proved by the court in which the receivership was pending.

Only seven of the thirteen hundred defendants were served with process. These appeared and presented a general demurrer to the plaintiff’s petition. The demurrer was sustained; and the plaintiff declining to amend, the suit was dismissed. The questions certified arise upon the court’s action in sustaining the demurrer.

A common form of application was subscribed by each member of the association in applying for his insurance, and a common form of policy was thereon issued to each member. The application and the policy evidenced the scheme of the association and expressed the contract between the members. Such parts of them as are deemed material by the Court of Civil Appeals are set out in its certificate. Prom these provisions of the two documents we are asked to determine the nature of the association, the status and the liability of the defendants, as members, for the claims involved.

The application shows that the purpose of the association was not the pursuit of a business for profit. The plan was one for the mutual advantage of those becoming members—called subscribers,” *487 and no others; whereby they might obtain fire insurance at what was intended as a low rate—a rate proportioned to.the actual experience in losses under the policies issued, and under distinct limitations as to the liability of each member for such losses. Apparently, any person, firm or corporation, approved by the “manager," could become a subscriber or member.

The general supervision of the business was in the hands of a committee of the members, annually elected. The conduct of it was in the hands of a “manager," one C. W. Cannon being named and appointed for that purpose by a common provision in each application. He issued the policies to each member, not in the name of the association, but in his own name. His duties, it was provided, were “to underwrite for the subscribers in his own name as manager policies of insurance ... to re-insure same, to make cancellations, and changes in the amounts and conditions of same; to collect all amounts due from subscribers by virtue thereof; to adjust and settle any loss; and to perform such other acts in relation to such policies as the subscribers could themselves."

Each policy was to be written upon a similar form and at the same rate as required by stock insurance companies. But in lieu of the stated premium in each policy—that is, the customary premium of stock companies for a similar risk—each member as a policy holder was to make with the manager a cash deposit in proportion to the stated premium and “the experience of the exchange"— “the exchange" being but a term to denote those who were at the time of loss members or subscribers, or, in other words, the association—for which amount the member was to receive credit.

If at any time a member’s deposit or deposits under policies in force were “expended," or an additional deposit deemed necessary or expedient by the committee, it was to become the member’s duty to pay to the trustee (manager) such sum as might be required; such sum, however, to “in no case exceed the amount of the premiums (the stated premiums) on his policy or policies then‘in force."

Upon the expiration or termination of a member’s policy, there was to be refunded to him such portion of his deposit as had not been expended or was not payable “for losses and expenses;" provided, that where a policy was renewed and the member was not maintaining a reserve equal to one-half of his premium, the part of the deposit unexpended might be retained for reserve, but to the member’s individual credit, to be returned to him upon his ceasing to be a policy holder.

The remuneration of the manager for his services and those of his clerical force was to be fifteen per cent of each member's premiums. He was authorized to prosecute legal proceedings in connection with any policy issued; to compromise such suits, appear for the members in any suit against them in relation to any policy, and in their name defend or settle it.

*488 One provision in the application was as follows:

“The sum named as each subscriber’s premium shall gauge his interest in the business, in that an amount not exceeding under any policy such premium shall be underwritten severally for each subscriber.”

The policy of insurance issued in each instance declared it to be a contract between those known as the Commercial Underwriters, (the members each acting through “their attorney in fact, C. W. Cannon”) and nominated, “the Exchange,” and the assured member, witnessing that the members of the association “severally, each for himself or itself, and not jointly, no one being bound for any other,” did thereby guarantee to indemnify the assured against all direct loss by damage or fire, except as in the policy provided, to the property described, to an amount not exceeding Pour thousand dollars. Each policy issued contained a recital that the responsibility of each member or subscriber under the policy was “in the same proportion to the entire loss or damage hereunder, which such subscriber’s deposit or deposits, at the time of such loss or damage, bear to ihe aggregate of all deposits then in force.”

The certificate of the Court of Civil Appeals recites that before the trial court ruled on the defendant’s demurrer, counsel for the parties entered into a stipulation declaring that for the purpose of obtaining a decision of the matters deemed determinative of the case the receiver and trustee abandoned all his allegations seeking to hold any of the defendants except those served with process; all allegations of liability against any of the defendants other than those declaring that because the defendant had each made to the association an application of the tenor stated, and at the time of the accrual of the demands sought to be enforced in the suit had in force policies of fire insurance of the nature shown, they were liable to the plaintiff and those for whom he sued; all allegations of liability except those to the effect that such applications and policies of fire insurance showed that between the defendants there existed a partnership in fact; and all which sought to charge them with liability unless under such applications and policies they were partners in fact.

The questions certified are as follows:

“1.

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Bluebook (online)
221 S.W. 259, 110 Tex. 482, 10 A.L.R. 742, 1920 Tex. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sergeant-v-goldsmith-dry-goods-co-tex-1920.