Stanton v. Occidental Life Insurance

261 P. 620, 81 Mont. 44, 1927 Mont. LEXIS 8
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 23, 1927
DocketNo. 6,103.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 261 P. 620 (Stanton v. Occidental Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stanton v. Occidental Life Insurance, 261 P. 620, 81 Mont. 44, 1927 Mont. LEXIS 8 (Mo. 1927).

Opinions

*50 MR. JUSTICE STARK

delivered the opinion of the court.

As stated by the plaintiff and appellant in his brief filed herein: “This action was brought to enforce a contract of release and satisfaction entered into between appellant and respondent State Life Insurance Company on the 6th of October, 1924.”

In order to understand the contentions of the parties, it is necessary to recite somewhat in detail the facts leading up to the contract alleged by plaintiff and which he seeks to have enforced.

The Stanton Trust & Savings Bank, a Montana corporation, was, during the time involved down to July 9, 1923, engaged in a general banking business at Great Falls in this state. The State Life Company was a corporation under the laws of this state, engaged in the life insurance business, with its principal office at Great Falls. The plaintiff owned a majority of the stock of the above-mentioned bank and was its president. He was also a large owner of shares of stock in the State Life Company and was its president. F. E. Beaty was the secretary and general manager of the State Life Company, and W. S. Hosking was its treasurer. The State Life Company kept money on deposit with the Stanton bank.

Prior to July 9, 1923, the Stanton bank, as principal, and the plaintiff, with others, as sureties, had executed and delivered to the State Life Company two bonds to secure the payment of these deposits. These bonds were required by the regulations of the insurance company and the insurance department of the state of Montana, and without them the funds of the State *51 Life Company could not have been carried as deposits in the Stanton bank. On July 9, 1923, the Stanton bank closed its doors and went into voluntary liquidation. Immediately thereafter, on the tenth day of July, 1923, at the request of Beaty, secretary and manager of the State Life Company, the plaintiff delivered to the State Life Company certain securities to secure the payment of his obligations upon the two bonds above referred to. Amongst these securities were 1,506% shares of the capital stock of the State Life Company. The money of the State Life Company on deposit in the Stanton bank had to be counted as an admitted asset of the insurance company in order to keep its deposit with the state insurance department and its reserve fund up to the required amount. The state insurance department having challenged the deposit and the form of the security therefor, it was agreed between the plaintiff, the executive committee of the State Life Company acting under the advice of its consulting actuary, and the state insurance department that plaintiff’s obligation upon the two bonds should be put in the form of a promissory note and that the securities theretofore held as collateral to his liability on said bonds should be pledged for its payment. On February 13, 1924, the amount of the plaintiff’s liability on the bonds was ascertained to be $58,861.24, and pursuant to the arrangement above mentioned, the plaintiff on that date executed the note in question, which was thereupon deposited with the state insurance department as a part of the reserve of the State Life Company for the protection of its policy holders. The situation of the plaintiff and the State Life Company remained in the condition above indicated down to the early part of the month of October, 1924.

According to the allegations of the complaint, about that time the defendant Occidental Life Insurance Company, a California corporation (hereafter called the Occidental Company), entered into negotiations with the plaintiff and certain other stockholders and officers of the State Life Company, the purpose of which was to effect a merger of the business and assets of the State Life Company with the Occidental Com *52 pany; that to bring about this result it was necessary for the Occidental Company to acquire, by purchase, a majority of the issued and outstanding stock of the State Life Company; that this result could not be attained unless the Occidental Company could purchase the 1,506% shares of stock in the State Life Company owned by plaintiff and which were pledged as security for the payment of plaintiff’s note, and that to accomplish this result the defendants, on the sixth day of October, 1924, submitted to the plaintiff an offer that if he would sell or authorize the State Life Company to sell for him, to the Occidental Company at the price of $24 per share, the said 1,506% shares of stock so pledged, and apply the proceeds from such sale as a payment on said promissory note, and would further sell at the same price to the Occidental Company an additional 203% shares of said stock then owned by him and apply the proceeds from the sale of said last-mentioned stock to a further payment on said promissory note, and in addition thereto would pay to the defendants the further sum v of $4,254.24, they would release him from further liability on said promissory note and return the same to him fully satisfied and discharged, and also would return to him the other collateral held as security for its payment. It is further alleged that the plaintiff unconditionally accepted this offer and that on October 8, 1924, he joined with certain other shareholders of the State Life Company in making a contract with the Occidental Company for a sale of their stock in the State Life Company to the .Occidental Company at the stipulated price of $24 per share; that in pursuance of said offer and acceptance and of such agreement, the plaintiff promptly delivered to F. E. Beaty, the secretary and general manager of the State Life Company, the said 203% shares of stock, and the same, together with the 1,506% shares of hypothecated stock, were by him forwarded to the Occidental Company at its office in Los Angeles; and that about the twenty-second day of October, 1924, the State Life Company received $41,032 as the proceeds of the sale of plaintiff’s shares of stock, and on the twenty-third day of October, 1924, the plaintiff, in writing, authorized *53 the State Life Company to apply this amount upon his note, and at the same time delivered to said State Life Company his bankable cheek for the sum of #4,254.24 in compliance with the terms of said agreement; that the defendants received said sums of money in full satisfaction of said note and as a complete release of plaintiff from any further liability or obligation thereon; that the plaintiff demanded of the defendants the cancellation of said note and the delivery to him of the remaining collateral described therein, but that the defendants refused to cancel or surrender said note or to deliver such collateral to him. The plaintiff asked a judgment of the court directing the cancellation and surrender of said promissory note and the immediate surrender of all the remaining collateral deposited as security for its payment.

The defendant Occidental Company filed a separate answer in which it admitted that it entered into the written contract of October 8, 1924; that pursuant thereto it had purchased more than two-thirds of the issued and outstanding capital stock of the State Life Company, but denied that it ever participated in any offer or proposal to plaintiff as set forth in the complaint, or that it ever had any agreement or understanding with the plaintiff other than the written agreement of October 8, 1924.

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Bluebook (online)
261 P. 620, 81 Mont. 44, 1927 Mont. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stanton-v-occidental-life-insurance-mont-1927.