Smith v. Hopkins

38 P. 854, 10 Wash. 77, 1894 Wash. LEXIS 162
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 10, 1894
DocketNo. 1427
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 38 P. 854 (Smith v. Hopkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Hopkins, 38 P. 854, 10 Wash. 77, 1894 Wash. LEXIS 162 (Wash. 1894).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Hoyt, J.

This action was brought by respondent to recover from the defendants certain notes and property, which it was alleged were a part of the assets of the Farmers’ Insurance Company, of which the respondent as receiver was entitled to the possession, and to enjoin said defendants and each of them from in any manner disposing of the same. Answers were put in by all of the defendants who were served with process, and upon the issues thus made the cause was tried and findings of fact and law filed and judgment rendered against defendants, substantially as prayed for in the complaint.

Nearly all the errors assigned grow out of the findings of fact. It is claimed on the part of the appellants, and elaborately argued by their counsel, that nearly all of such findings were unwarranted by the proofs. Only one legal proposition is presented which could have had any influence upon the court in the determination of the facts, and that is founded upon the claim that the proceedings by which the affairs of the insurance company were placed in the hands of. a receiver for the purpose of being wound up were insufficient for that purpose. This contention was based upon two .grounds ; one that the court erred in its conclusion that the company was insolvent or in such a condition as to warrant the placing of its affairs in the hands of a receiver ; the other [79]*79that the suit for that purpose should have been prosecuted in the name of the state and not in the name of the insurance commissioner.

This latter proposition is too technical to receive any consideration at our hands. Under our liberal system it is results that are sought, and it is sufficient in any proceeding if the parties are fairly informed of the nature thereof and of the facts relied upon as the grounds for the relief asked. It could make no difference to the defendants whether the suit was brought in the name of the state or in that of the insurance commissioner, or whether it was entitled at all. The facts set out in the complaint were what they were called upon to answer, and unless the question of misnomer of the plaintiff was specially raised by a plea or otherwise, at the earliest possible moment, it could not thereafter be made available. We see no reason, however, for holding that the suit should be brought in the name of the state rather than that of the insurance commissioner. But it is not necessarj’ to decide as to that as the question is immaterial.

The other objection is not available to the defendants in this action. The court found the necessary facts and made its order placing the company in the hands of a receiver; and its action in so doing, however erroneous, could not be attacked in this proceeding. If the court had jurisdiction, its judgment unappealed from is final as between the parties, however erroneous it may have been. The court, therefore, did not determine the facts in this case upon any erroneous opinion as to the law, and its determination in regard thereto will not be set aside, unless an examination of the proofs satisfies us that his conclusions derived therefrom were clearly erroneous. From such an examination we are not only not satisfied that the facts were wrongly found, but, on the contrary, are of the opinion that such proofs are sufficient to support every finding of fact made by the lower court.

The principal question remaining is as to the rightfulness of the court’s conclusions of law from the facts found. It is strongty urged on the part of the appellants that the property having been delivered to them in payment of claims which [80]*80they had against the corporation, they became bona fide owners thereof, and that it was no longer a part of its assets. In support of this proposition numerous authorities have been cited and three or four cases decided by this court are relied upon ; but, in our opinion, none of the cases go to the extent of sustaining transfers made in payment of the debts of a corporation under the circumstances disclosed by this record.

Under the findings of fact the company had been insolvent for a long time, and had been a subject of special'examinations on the part of the insurance department, and was no-longer, in any proper sense of the term, a going concern. For while it is true that it appeared from the proofs that it was still receiving an occasional application for insurance,, this circumstance could have little weight in view of the nature of an insurance company’s business, and the fact that its condition might not be known in all localities where it had agents. Not only was the company thus insolvent and practically out of business at the time of its attempted transfer of a portion of its assets to these defendants, but the circumstances surrounding the action of the company which,, from the relation which the defendants bore to it, must have been known to them, were such as to arouse the suspicions of a reasonably prudent man as to the bona fides of the transaction. The entire proceedings relating to the transfer in question were taken with full knowledge of the desperate condition of the company and of the fact that its available assets were entirely insufficient to meet its liabilities, present and prospective, and were so taken with the evident intent to prefer those creditors who were either officers of the corporation or intimately connected therewith, over all others.

We do not question the authority of the cases cited by appellants, but hold that they do not apply to this case, for the reason that the corporations as to which those cases related were, at the time of the transactions in question, going concerns, in a fair and reasonable application of that term, even although they might not have had sufficient assets to have at once discharged their liabilities ; while this insurance com[81]*81pany, as we have already said, was not only in failing circumstances, but had to all intents and purposes actually failed, to the knowledge of these defendants at the date of the transaction in question. We therefore agree with the conclusions of law drawn from the facts by the trial court, to the effect that the defendants were not the holders in good faith of the notes and property sought to be recovered, and that they were as much a part of the assets of the corporation, to the possession of which the receiver was entitled, as though there had been no attempted transfer thereof.

Another important proposition has been argued, growing out of the alleged fact that the stock notes of the defendants were not binding upon them, for the reason that they were executed upon certain conditions which had not come to pass. It is claimed that the notes were signed and delivered to the company upon condition that they should only become binding if approved by the insurance commissioner and passed by him as a part of the assets of the corporation, and that he had never so approved and passed them, and for that reason the notes were not binding upon the makers.

There is no doubt but that conditional subscriptions to the stock of corporations may be made and payment therefor depend upon the performance of the conditions ; but in our opinion this can only be done at the time of the organization oí the company and before such organization has become complete; and it is doubtful whether these notes were made under such conditions as to make their violation a defense, even if the conditions were legal and such as could be properly made as between the subscribers and the corporation.

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Related

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507 P.2d 144 (Washington Supreme Court, 1973)

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Bluebook (online)
38 P. 854, 10 Wash. 77, 1894 Wash. LEXIS 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-hopkins-wash-1894.