Sims v. Homeseekers Fire Insurance

199 S.E. 69, 120 W. Va. 459, 1938 W. Va. LEXIS 113
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 4, 1938
Docket8783
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 199 S.E. 69 (Sims v. Homeseekers Fire Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sims v. Homeseekers Fire Insurance, 199 S.E. 69, 120 W. Va. 459, 1938 W. Va. LEXIS 113 (W. Va. 1938).

Opinion

Fox, Judge:

In December, 1934, the insurance commissioner of this state caused an audit to be made of the affairs of the Homeseekers Fire Insurance Company, whose principal place of business was in Ohio County, and found a condition of affairs which, in his judgment, called for certain corrections. Joseph H. Reass was a director of and active in the management of the insurance company, as well as the Wheeling Savings & Loan Association and the Real Estate Finance Company, whose affairs were inextricably mixed with those of the insurance company, in that there were deposited with the loan association funds of the insurance company to the amount of approximately $116,000.00; and real estate loans were held by the finance company for the insurance company to a face amount of approximately $111,000.00, neither of which investments were liquid, and by reason whereof the insurance company did not, in the opinion of the insurance commissioner, have sufficient cash or liquid assets available to make certain the payment of its ex *461 pected outstanding policy losses as they matured. In this situation certain demands were made by the insurance commissioner with respect to creating a liquid fund of $25,000.00 and the re-insurance of all new business and certain outstanding policies; premises to comply with these demands were made by the company and not kept. Upon this development, meetings of interested parties were held in which the situation was fully discussed. The insurance commissioner demanded the resignation of Joseph H. Reass from the positions held by him in the three companies mentioned above, and Reass indicated his intention to resign, and it is contended that he did resign about February, 1935. The final meeting of the directors of the insurance company, so far as the insurance commissioner was involved, occurred on the night of April 5, 1935, and while the record is not entirely clear on the point, it seems reasonably certain that all directors except Joseph H. Reass were present. At this meeting, an informal motion, not reduced to writing nor entered on the minutes, was unanimously adopted, requesting the insurance commissioner to take steps to secure the appointment of a special receiver for the insurance company. On the next day this suit was instituted in the circuit court of Ohio County and, upon the bill filed, a special receiver for the insurance company was applied for and named, who promptly qualified, took possession of its assets and made a report thereon June 22, 1935. On July 23, the insurance company, represented by E. L. Hogsett, attorney, the appellant herein, filed its demurrer and answer to the plaintiff’s bill, the attorney acting under the alleged authority of his informal employment as counsel by some of the directors on July 17, 1935. On July 27th following, at a directors’ meeting at which five directors, namely, Joseph H. Reass, Joseph L. Reass, C. J. Bertschy, Alec Bolton and W. J. Gompers, were present, and three directors, R. B. Nay-lor, T. F. Bayha and W. H. Klieves, absent, a resolution was adopted over the protest of Gompers, by which the secretary, who was Joseph L. Reass, a son of Joseph H. *462 Reass, was “empowered and directed to employ counsel and to take such action, in the interest of the Company, as by counsel advice in the suit now pending in the Circuit Court of the Ohio County, and the action of Director in signing all papers, is approved.” The suit referred to is the suit at bar. Under this resolution the appellant was employed and rendered the services and incurred the expenses for which he claims compensation and reimbursement. These services consisted of preparing the demurrer and answer above mentioned and representing the insurance company at a hearing on same; resisting a motion of the plaintiff to strike such papers from the record on grounds of lack of authority to file the same; and in prosecuting an appeal to this court from an ordei of the trial court overruling the demurrer, based upon the contention that the circuit court of Ohio County did not have jurisdiction of the suit in which the special receiver was appointed, and that the circuit court of Ka-nawha County alone had jurisdiction. The contention of lack of authority to file the demurrer and answer of the insurance company seems to have been impliedly overruled, inasmuch as the court passed on the demurrer and overruled the same. This court sustained the ruling of the circuit court, both as to its action in permitting the demurrer and answer to be filed and in overruling the demurrer. 117 W. Va. 84, 183 S. E. 869.

In January, 1938, appellant filed in the circuit court his petition seeking an allowance for attorney’s fees and expenses out of the fund in the hands of the special receiver. The prayer of the petition was, upon full hearing, denied, from which action of the trial court this appeal is prosecuted.

The question presented is simplified by the admissions that the services for which compensation is sought were rendered by the appellant in good faith, and that the demand both as to the fee and expenses is reasonable in amount. The defense made to the claim was that the directors did not act in good faith in employing the appellant to resist the receivership, and that by reason *463 thereof the claims of the appellant are obligations of the directors who employed him and not a charge against the fund in the hands, of the special receiver.

We find no serious conflict in the authorities on the subject. The law is well stated in Watson v. Johnson, 174 Wash. 12, 24 Pac. (2d) 592, 89 A. L. R. 1527, and the annotation following the report of that case, wherein it is stated:

“It is a general rule that where an application has been made for the appointment of a receiver for a corporation, attorney’s fees and expenses in resisting such application, if made in good faith and upon reasonable grounds, may become a valid claim against the receiver. Whether such attorney’s fees and expenses are to be allowed rests, in the sound discretion of the court, in view of all the facts and circumstances.”

Support for this statement of the law is found in Barnes v. Newcomb, 89 N. Y. 108; Wolbrette v. New Orleans Drug Co., 149 La. 434, 89 So. 406; Esarey v. Pierson, 84 Ind. App. 109, 141 N. E. 87.

But the matter is one in which wide discretion is vested in the trial court. Furthermore, such resistance to a receivership must be made in a good faith effort to protect the interest of the 'company and its creditors, and not merely to protect the interests of individuals in a controversy respecting management. 1 Clark on Receivers, p. 899, Section 642 (b); Witherspoon v. Hornbein, 70 Colo. 1, 196 Pac. 865; Esarey v. Pierson, supra; People v. Commercial Alliance Life Ins. Company, 148 N. Y. 563, 42 N. E. 1044; Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company v. United Motor Car Supply Company, 89 N. J. Eq. 108, 102 Atl. 471.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
199 S.E. 69, 120 W. Va. 459, 1938 W. Va. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sims-v-homeseekers-fire-insurance-wva-1938.