Texas Fidelity & Bonding Co. v. City of Austin

246 S.W. 1026, 112 Tex. 229, 1922 Tex. LEXIS 120
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 20, 1922
DocketNo. 3390.
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 246 S.W. 1026 (Texas Fidelity & Bonding Co. v. City of Austin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Texas Fidelity & Bonding Co. v. City of Austin, 246 S.W. 1026, 112 Tex. 229, 1922 Tex. LEXIS 120 (Tex. 1922).

Opinion

Me. Chief Justice CURETON

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff in error, the Texas Fidelity & Bonding Company, is a private corporation, chartered on April 20, 1910, under Chapter 127, General Laws of the Twenty-eighth Legislature (1903), which became Subdivision 37, Article 1121, and also Article 4928, Chapter 13, Title 71, Revised Statutes 1911. The home office of the Company is, and has always been, at Waco, McLennan County, Texas. The objects and purposes of the Company as originally set forth in its charter, in general terms, were those of a fidelity and surety business. All the powers granted in the statute were included in the purpose clause of the charter.

*232 The -charter was amended on September 21, 1912, and to the objects before stated were added others, which authorized the Company to transact casualty and other classes of insurance named in Chapter 117, Acts of 1911, permitting the incorporation of casualty insurance companies. Whether or not such an amendment was permissible under the law, is not an issue here, and under our view of the case is immaterial. The petition alleges in its initial paragraph that plaintiff was “duly incorporated and organized and licensed under and by virtue of the laws of the State of Texas for the purpose of doing a surety, fidelity, bonding, and casualty insurance business.”

The defendant in error, the City of Austin, a municipal corporation, filed this suit against plaintiff in error in Travis County on April 14, 1917, for the purpose of recovering certain ad valorem taxes alleged to be due the City for the years 1911 to 1916, both inclusive, the amounts for each year being separately specified. The claim was that the taxes sought to be collected were due on securities denosited by the plaintiff in error with the State Treasurer at Austin under the laws of the State.

The original deposit consisted of municipal bojids of the City of Midland, aggregating $50,000.00, which were in the hands of the Treasurer on the first day of January, 1911. The deposit was changed some time after January 1, 1915, so that on January 1, 1916, the deposit consisted of the City of Midland bonds, of the aggregate amount of $46,000.00, and three promissory notes in the total sum of $4500. The deposit of securities was originally made under the Shrety and Fidelity Company Act, but were continued after plaintiff in error’s charter was amended under the Casualty Insurance Law, Chapter 117, Acts 1911. All the securities were those in which the capital stock of plaintiff in error had been invested. It is against these se-. eurities for each of the years 1911 to 1916 that the taxes are claimed, and for which judgment was rendered by the trial court on December 20, 1917. Upon appeal by plaintiff in error the judgment was affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals on April 16, 1919. The case is before.us on writ of error.

We will first discuss the liability of plaintiff in error for the taxes claimed on the securities in the hands of the Treasurer on January 1, 1911.

While we have sustained the constitutionality of Rev. Stats., Article 4749, originally enacted in 1909, (Great Southern Life Ins. Co. v. City of Austin, 112 Texas, 1, 243 S. W., 778) ; which fixes the situs for taxation of deposits such as these at the home office of the depositing company, yet that Article of the Code, which was Section 38, Acts of 1909, was not applicable generally to other than life-, health, and accident insurance companies, until Section 55 of that Chapter was incorporated in the Revised Statutes of 1911 as Article *233 4955, which we have held was constitutional and effective from September 1, 1911. American Indemnity Co. v. City of Austin, not yet published (112 Texas, 239, 246 S. W., 1019.

On January 1, 1911, there was no law applicable to plaintiff in error which fixed the situs of securities deposited by it with the State Treasurer at its home' office. The question of the situs of this property must then be determined by laws in existence January 1, 1911. The statutes applicable to plaintiff in error at that time were Subdivision 37, Article 1121, Revised Statutes, and others which will be noted.

The Subdivision of the statute from which the purpose clause of plaintiff in error’s charter was taken, among other provisions, contains the following:

“Provided, the guaranty and fidelity companies organized under the provisions of this article shall have a paid up capital stock of not less than one hundred thousand dollars, and shall keep on deposit with the state treasurer money, bonds, or other securities, in an amount not less than fifty thousand dollars, said securities to be approved by the commissioner of agriculture, insurance, statistics and history (commissioner of insurance and banking), and that this amount be kept intact at all times.” Rev. Stats., Articles 4928, 1121.

In addition to the foregoing, the legislative act of 1897, which became Articles 4929 to 4940, Revised Statutes of 1911, was also applieable to plaintiff in error, and may be looked to for ascertaining the purpose of the deposit and its legal status.

The Act related to both foreign and domestic insurance companies. Article 4930 expressly provided that the securities deposited with the Treasurer were to remain with him in trust to answer any default of the company upon its obligations, when established by final judgment. The Treasurer and his successors in office were required to receive and retain the deposit in trust for the purposes stated. The depositing company was given the right to collect interest, dividends, and profits from the deposit, and from time to time to withdraw the securities and substitute others of equally good character and value. The securities deposited were not to be subject to levy under writ or process of attachment. The depositing company could have the securities returned to it only upon its ceasing to transact business and filing with the Treasurer a bond equal to its whole liability in this State, if any liability existed.

Article 4935 prescribed the remedy in the event the despositing company made default on its obligations. It declared:

“Should any company of the character named or enumerated in this chapter fail or refuse to pay any loss by it incurred in this state within sixty days after its liability thereupon shall have been by suit finally determined, upon satisfactory proof, to the treasurer of *234 this -state, of such liability and of its non-payment, said treasurer shall, out of the deposits so made with him, as by this chapter provided, pay said loss, and, when he shall have done so, he shall, at once, certify to the commissioner of insurance and banking the fact of such default on the part of said company; whereupon said commissioner shall forthwith cancel and annul the certificate of authority of such company to do business in this state; provided, that such payment shall not operate to release the company from payment of any balance which it still may owe after such payment by the treasurer of this state has been made.” ,

It is unnecessary to refer to other Articles by which plaintiff in error was governed. These suffice to show that the securities deposited with the State Treásurer were so deposited with him as trustee for the use and benefit of the holders of the company’s obligations.

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Bluebook (online)
246 S.W. 1026, 112 Tex. 229, 1922 Tex. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-fidelity-bonding-co-v-city-of-austin-tex-1922.