Shearer v. Farmers' Life Ins.

262 F. 861, 1919 U.S. App. LEXIS 1977
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedDecember 2, 1919
DocketNos. 5372, 5373
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 262 F. 861 (Shearer v. Farmers' Life Ins.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shearer v. Farmers' Life Ins., 262 F. 861, 1919 U.S. App. LEXIS 1977 (8th Cir. 1919).

Opinion

SANBORN, Circuit Judge.

These are appeals from decrees of rescission of contracts between the appellants and the appellee, by means of which the appellee, the Farmers’ Life Insurance Company, secured and retains all the assets of the Anchor Life Insurance Company, in which the appellants Shearer and Wible, were the controlling stockholders when the contracts were made. A brief statement of the situation of the parties when the contracts were made and at this time since the decrees, and a history of their transactions, is necessary to an understanding of the questions at issue.

In September, 1914, the Anchor Life Insurance Company, a corporation of the state of Kansas, was conducting its insurance business in Kansas City. It had issued its policies to the amount of about $1,600,-000, and the annual premiums payable thereon were about $49,000. Under the statutes of Kansas this company was required to maintain [863]*863a deposit of securities with the officers of that state to the amount of $100,000, the par value of its 1,000 shares of capital stock, in order to secure permission to conduct its business in that state, and to the amount of about $25,000 more to maintain a legal reserve to secure the payment of its policies. Its insurance had so increased that it was difficult for it to maintain the required deposits, and Mr. Jones, an examiner for the insurance department of Kansas, after examining the securities of the company, had filed a report in the insurance department to the effect that there should be deducted from the value of its assets, which were $160,814.06, as shown by its report of December 31, 1913, $30,000 on account of two mortgages, aggregating $30,000, made by one Wade, $9,000 on account of eight mortgages, for $1,250 each, and $29,500, the value stated in that report of $41,000, face value, of the bonds of the Williamsville, Greenville & St. Louis Railway Company, making in all a deduction of $68,500, leaving the value of the company’s assets $92,314.06, and showing an impairment of its capital to the extent of $34,554.94, according to the report of Jones. Shortly after the filing of this report, the superintendent of insurance notified the company that it must deposit securities sufficient to remove this impairment, or he would be compelled to apply for a receiver of its property at the end of 30 days.

In September, 1914, the Farmers’ Life Insurance Company, a corporation of the state of Colorado, was conducting a life insurance business at Denver in that state. Its capital stock was $1,000,000, divided into shares of the par value of $3 each. The aggregate amount of the insurance it had written was about $850,000, or about one-half of that which had been written by the Anchor Company. The evidence tends to show that it is necessary for a life insurance company to have about $5,000,000 of insurance to enable it to maintain its required deposits, pay its expenses, and conduct a profitable business from its income; and, as the addition to insurance which a company has itself written of insurance already written by other companies does not materially increase its overhead expenses, and increases its insurance much faster than to solicit and to write it, the Farmers’ Insurance Company was endeavoring to buy such insurance of other companies, by purchasing them or their property and reinsuring their risks. Mr. Royce was the superintendent of its agents. He had been bank examiner of the state of Kansas, was well acquainted with Mr. Lewis, the superintendent of insurance of Kansas, had secured the admission of the Farmers’ Company into' that state, and was well qualified to examine, ascertain, and state the value of the assets of insurance companies, tie, Mr. Temple, the secretary or attorney of the Farmers’ Company, and Mr. O’Shaughnessy, one of its agents, went from Denver to Kansas City in September, 1914, to secure the insurance and other property of the Anchor Company for the Farmers’ Company. Before they went, some of them had seen a copy of the report of the Anchor Company of December 31, 1913, and before any contract was made by them, or the Farmers’ Company, some of them had notice of the contents of Mr. Jones’ report, of the worthlessness of the Wade mortgages, for $30,000, and of the railroad bonds, [864]*864for $41,000, par value, and of the fact that notice had been given to the Anchor Company that an application for a receiver of its property would be made shortly, unless it speedily deposited securities to remove the reported impairment of its capital. They endeavored to acquire the insurance and assets of the Anchor Company, by arranging an exchange of the stock of the Farmers’ Company for that of the Anchor Company at the rate of 15 shares of the former for one share oi the latter. Mr. William F. Shearer owned 135 shares and was the president-of the Anchor Company. Mr. John A. Wible owned 351 shares of that company’s stock and was its secretary. They controlled the insurance, the property, and the business of the Anchor Company.

The agents of the Farmers’ Company conferred and negotiated with them from some time in September until November 16, 1914, to obtain their stock for the Farmers’ Company and their assistance in getting the other stock of the Anchor Company for it, to the end that that company might have the Anchor Company and all its insurance, income, and assets. The result of these negotiations was that between November 13 and November 17, 1914, the Farmers’ Company made contracts with Shearer to pay him for his 135 shares of Anchor stock $27,000, $13,500 in 1,350 shares of the stock of the Farmers’ Company and $13,500 in notes which that company had received for the sale of its stock; that the Farmers’ Company did and would pledge 1,350 shares of its stock and the 135 shares of stock of the Anchor Company bought by it of Shearer as collateral security for the payment of the stock notes; and that the stock and the stock notes ^secured thereby should be and they were delivered to Townsend and Smith in trust to -secure the performance of these agreements. . The Farmers’ Company at the same time made agreements with Mr. Wible to pay him for his 351 shares of Anchor stock $62,500, $5,000 in cash, $17,500 in three mortgage notes, for $3,500, $6,000, and $8,000, respectively, which notes were secured on Wible’s property and were owned by the Anchor Company, and $40,000 in stock notes owned by the Farmers’ Company and made by the purchasers of its stock; that the Farmers’ Company would and did pledge 4,000 shares of its stock and the 351 shares of the stock of the Anchor Company bought by it of ■Wible as collateral security for the payment of the $40,000 of stock notes; and that the stock so pledged and the notes so secured should be and they were delivered to Townsend and Smith in trust to secure the performance of these contracts. The stock pledged by these contracts, the notes secured thereby, and their proceeds were prior to the decrees placed in the custody of the court below and constitute a part of the subject of this litigation. These contracts gave the Farmers’ Company unrestricted control and possession of the insurance and other assets of the Anchor Company.

At the time these contracts were made the Farmers’ Company hired Shearer and paid him $2,500 to assist it in exchanging its stock with other holders of Anchor stock at the rate of 15 for 1, in getting the Anchor Company insurance over to the Farmers’ Company, and inducing the Anchor Company’s policy holders to reinsure in the Farmers’ Company, and in acquiring all the other assets of the Anchor Company. [865]*865All this was practically accomplished by the early part of January, 1915.

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Bluebook (online)
262 F. 861, 1919 U.S. App. LEXIS 1977, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shearer-v-farmers-life-ins-ca8-1919.