Stockmen's Insurance Agency, Inc. v. Guarantee Reserve Life Insurance Co. of Hammond

217 N.W.2d 455
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedApril 25, 1974
Docket8812
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 217 N.W.2d 455 (Stockmen's Insurance Agency, Inc. v. Guarantee Reserve Life Insurance Co. of Hammond) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stockmen's Insurance Agency, Inc. v. Guarantee Reserve Life Insurance Co. of Hammond, 217 N.W.2d 455 (N.D. 1974).

Opinion

DOUGLAS B. HEEN, District Judge.

The District Court sitting without a jury dismissed the plaintiff’s cause of action based upon an alleged contract for a management fee, but awarded the plaintiff a money judgment and ordered an accounting on a second cause of action for commission on renewal insurance premiums. The defendant has appealed, and the plaintiff has cross-appealed, from that part of the judgment adverse to such party.

Incorporated in North Dakota in May 1959, Stockmen’s Insurance Agency, Inc., (hereafter referred to as “Stockmen’s”), intended as its stated objective to sell a million dollars of its own stock which would serve as a financial footing for a subsidiary stock insurance company dealing in life, health and accident insurance. Formation and licensing of the subsidiary required an initial outlay of some $275,000, and Stockmen’s sales of its own stock were disappointing for by mid-April 1960 only $67,170 had been realized from this promotion.

Stockmen’s, because of its seriously limited finances, temporarily abandoned its original plan for a stock insurance company. Following this reappraisal, and in need of a source of income, Stockmen’s organized a subsidiary corporation, Stock-men’s Health Mutual Insurance Company (hereafter called “Mutual”), organization of which required substantially less financing than the original stock venture and was more in keeping with Stockmen’s available resources. The officers, directors and management personnel of Stock-men’s and Mutual were identical. Stock-men’s prospectus openly acknowledged that although a mutual would not return dividend income, nevertheless, Mutual would serve as an income-producing vehicle for Stockmen’s, the parent corporation. This was to be accomplished, according to Stockmen’s 1959 Prospectus, by a contemplated agreement under which Stockmen’s would in effect be Mutual’s general agent and agency director and would manage its affairs and finances. Remuneration for these services, however was not disclosed in this prospectus.

Such an executed management and general agency contract was not produced during the trial of this case. Whether such an agreement existed and, if it did, its terms, conditions and provisions, proved to be a critical issue in this case.

Stockmen’s minutes of the May 10, 1960, special meeting disclose only that its stockholders approved formation of a subsidiary mutual insurance company as an expedient source of income for Stockmen’s and as outlined in the notice of the special meeting, including the proposed plan’s further refinement calling “for an exclusive agency contract between the mutual company and Stockmen’s . . . which company will also manage the affairs and finances of the mutual company.” Following stockholder approval of this proposal, it was unanimously resolved

That the officers of Stockmen’s . . . prepare the necessary amendment to *458 the registration of the company with the States Securities Commission to effectuate the plan set forth in the notice of meeting and to proceed at once to make the necessary loan to the Mutual company to get the Mutual company in operation.

Apparently Stockmen’s directors had anticipated the favorable action by its stockholders on May 10, 1960, of the plan to form the mutual insurance company because Mutual then already was organized and had received its charter on May 3, 1960. Two days later, Mutual’s incorpora-tors and directors held their first meeting and Mutual’s actual operation commenced on June 7, 1960.

Mutual’s sales force was recruited by Robert Bryson who held the title of agency director. The evidence is far from clear as to whether Bryson was hired by Stock-men’s or by Mutual, but in any event Bry-son organized Mutual’s sales structure in North Dakota. Seven general agencies (Bryson’s testimony denotes the seven as such) were set up in various cities. Stock-men’s Prospectus of July 1, 1962, noted that the seven agencies “possess those powers entrusted to a general agency . ” Over a hundred writing agents were connected with the seven agencies. In enlisting sales personnel, it was understood by the agents, Mutual, and by Stock-men’s — there were no written agency contracts — that general agents were to receive 5% and the writing agent 10% of all renewal premiums paid on Mutual policies written by or through such agent. An additional unwritten inducement provided that if an agent terminated sales representation for Mutual, thereafter he would continue to receive similar commission for the number of years the agent had sold Mutual, which if five years or more, would vest the agent’s right to renewal commission for his lifetime. As stated, no written agency contracts, general or selling, embodying these compensation arrangements were executed. With this understanding, the sales force began solicitation and sale of Mutual policies.

Stockmen’s somber financial picture brightened somewhat and persisting in its original plan, Stockmen’s in December 1961 organized Stockmen’s Reserve Life Insurance Company (referred to hereafter as “Reserve”), and caused it to be licensed for North Dakota operation. Reserve, then, was Stockmen’s long desired subsidiary stock insurance company, and Reserve’s board of directors interlocked with those of Mutual and Stockmen’s.

In June 1962, Reserve commenced phasing out Mutual by assumption of the latter’s insurance contracts. From the time of its organization and licensing, and during the period of acquisition mentioned above, Reserve sold its own policies using the sales structure set up for Mutual, sales personnel continuing to operate without written agency contracts but under the same understanding of commission schedules as existed with Mutual.

Almost from its beginning, Reserve was plagued by financial difficulties. By late summer 1962, Reserve’s unpaid claims under policy coverage, the claims being in an amount of some $180,000, nearly equaled its legal reserve of $200,000 on deposit with the State Insurance Commissioner. Because of this fiscal imbalance, Reserve anticipated imminent issuance by the Commissioner of an order enjoining it from further policy sales until all outstanding claims were paid and its legal reserve, if resort to this fund was required for payment of claims, again was built up to the required $200,000.

At this juncture, Reserve urgently needing to extricate itself from its financial dilemma, did so by selling its book of business to Guarantee Reserve Life Insurance Company of Hammond, Indiana (denoted hereafter as “Guarantee”). Reserve’s policy liability, which included policies orginally issued by Mutual, was transferred to Guarantee by a written Contract of Rein *459 surance and Assumption, dated July 27, 1963, executed by Reserve and Guarantee as principals, and ratified by Mutual and Stockmen’s, the latter being the plaintiff in this action.

Under the terms of the assumption contract, Reserve was relieved of, and Guarantee assumed, all liability arising under policies issued by Reserve or by it accepted in acquiring Mutual’s policies.

In demanding an accounting and a money judgment from the defendant, the complaint of the plaintiff, Stockmen’s, in effect pleads two causes of action, both of which are concerned with liability assumed by defendant Guarantee under the terms of the Contract of Reinsurance and Assumption.

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