Sherman v. International Life Insurance

236 S.W. 634, 291 Mo. 139, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 91
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 30, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 236 S.W. 634 (Sherman v. International Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sherman v. International Life Insurance, 236 S.W. 634, 291 Mo. 139, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 91 (Mo. 1921).

Opinions

This is a suit for money had and received growing out of the issuance and sale by the Great Western Life Insurance Company of what it denominated annuity certificates.

There is no substantial controversy as to the facts. In the year 1906 there was organized under the laws of the State of Colorado a corporation known as the Great Western Agency Company, with an authorized capital of two million dollars. This company acquired an advantageous contract with an insurance company of Indiana, extending over a long period of time. Thereupon the stock in the Agency Company was sold to a great many persons, and through such sales funds were accumulated in its treasury to the amount of something like $80,000. Thereafter, in 1907, the same individuals who had effected the incorporation of the Agency Company and who were in control of it, organized an insurance company under *Page 148 the laws of this State, called the Great Western Life Insurance Company, with a capital stock of $100,000. Through their manipulation the Agency Company borrowed $21,000, and with that and the $80,000 in its treasury it paid up the entire capital stock of the Insurance Company.

Eight of the one thousand shares of such stock the incorporators held in their own names as individuals, and the remaining nine hundred and ninety-two shares they held as trustees for the Agency Company. It became merely a holding company.

During the first year following its incorporation the Great Western Life Insurance Company wrote thirteen million dollars of insurance. The premiums received therefor were absorbed by commissions and overhead expenses. Desiring to raise more funds for the prosecution of its business, it conceived the idea of issuing what it later termed annuity certificates — such certificates to represent one or more shares in the proceeds arising annually from a certain part of the premiums received by the company. The certificates issued contained the following recitals:

"Whereas, ____ has paid to the company, for ____ of its said shares, the sum of $____

"Now, therefore, in consideration of the premises, the company hereby agrees to apportion and pay to the owner thereof an annuity during his life and thereafter to his heirs or personal representatives, of ____ shares of the proceeds of twenty five cents per one thousand dollars of all insurance, except reinsurance, written by the company in the United States for fifty years from the date of its incorporation, on which premiums computed on the annual basis have been received in cash, and also for so long thereafter as premiums are received on said insurance: such annuity to be determined as follows:

"1. The aggregate of said twenty-five cents per one thousand dollars of insurance shall be ascertained at the end of each calender year, and such sum divided by *Page 149 fivehundred; the quotient obtained shall be the apportionment to each of said shares, and the total of ____ shares thereof shall be the annuity payable hereunder, within thirty days thereafter.

"2 The company guarantees that the first annuity payable hereunder shall not be less than eight per cent upon the amount paid the company therefor, as stated above.

"3. This certificate is assignable in writing and transferable only on the books of the company, in person or by attorney, upon presentation of this certificate at the home office of the company."

The certificates were sold on the basis of $150 per share. They were issued by the company in 1907. The first annuity or dividend on them became due February 1, 1908, and was duly paid.

On May 11, 1908, certain stockholders of the Great Western Agency Company filed a bill in equity in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Western Division of the Western District of Missouri against the Great Western Agency Company, the Great Western Life Insurance Company, and certain individuals, such bill alleging mismanagement of the Great Western Agency Company and the Great Western Life Insurance Company, and complaining of the issuance by the Great Western Insurance Company of these annuity or investment certificates, it being charged that they had been sold in a large number, the amount being something like $330,000, and further that an attempt was being made to increase the capital stock of the Great Western Life Insurance Company and prayer was made for the appointment of a receiver to take charge and control of the assets and property of the Great Western Agency Company and of the Great Western Life Insurance Company. A receiver was appointed as prayed. The court also appointed a master in chancery, who in pursuance of the order appointing him, gave notice that all claims and demands held by any person, company or corporation against either of the companies in the hands of the receiver *Page 150 should be presented to him as such master for a hearing on or before October 1, 1908, or the same would be forever barred.

On July 6, 1908, the court made an order directing its receiver to advertise and sell the property and assets of the Great Western Life Insurance Company. In response to the published notice calling therefor, three bids were filed with the receiver. That of the Kansas City Life Insurance Company was deemed the best by him, and on July 28, 1908, he reported a sale to that company and asked its confirmation by the court. Under the terms of the proposed sale the Kansas City Life Insurance Company would have assumed the obligations of the Great Western Life Insurance Company under the latter's contracts of insurance, but not its undertakings under the annuity certificates; and from the cash that was to be paid, the receiver would have realized only about $125,000 for the payment of debts and distribution among the stockholders of the Great Western Agency Company (hereinafter called the stockholders). As the indebtedness alone, excluding the annuity certificates entirely from consideration, exceeded that amount, it was quite apparent that, if the sale were confirmed, the stockholders would certainly get nothing, and the certificate holders would probably be in like predicament. While the report of sale was pending some of the stockholders and certificate holders held a meeting at Topeka, Kansas, for the purpose of devising means to protect their interests. The meeting was largely attended, as were subsequent ones held in Kansas City. At one of these meetings Mr. James Chappelle was "informally designated by certain stockholders and annuity certificate holders as a sort of trustee to collect money and take such steps as might be necessary to pay the debts of the insurance company and to generally handle the situation."

The application of the receiver for confirmation of the sale coming on for hearing, a postponement was asked by some of the stockholders and certificate hold *Page 151 ers. The appearances and the order of the court made in that connection, as shown by the record, are as follows:

"Now on the fifteenth day of August, 1908, being one of the regular days of the April, 1908, term of said court, the above cause came on to be heard upon the application of the receiver for the confirmation of the sale of the assets, properties and business of The Great Western Insurance Company, in accordance with the bid of The Kansas City Life Insurance Company; the receiver, C.S. Jobes, Esquire, appearing in person and by his solicitor, E.L. Scarritt, Esquire; the Kansas City Life Insurance Company, a bidder, appearing by R.J. Ingraham, its solicitor; the Philadelphia Life Insurance Company, a bidder, appearing by W.F. Guthrie, its solicitor; the National Bank of Commerce, a creditor, appearing by H.C. Ward, its solicitor, and F.M.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
236 S.W. 634, 291 Mo. 139, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sherman-v-international-life-insurance-mo-1921.