Welch v. Union Casualty Ins.

238 F. 968, 1917 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1478
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 1, 1917
DocketNo. 1655
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 238 F. 968 (Welch v. Union Casualty Ins.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Welch v. Union Casualty Ins., 238 F. 968, 1917 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1478 (E.D. Pa. 1917).

Opinion

> THOMPSON, District Judge.

The plaintiffs, Homer G. Welch, a > citizen of New Jersey, and the Consolidated Investment Company, a citizen of Delaware, filed their bill' against the Union Casualty Insurance Company, of Philadelphia, a citizen of the state of Pennsylvania. The following facts are set out in the bill:

The plaintiffs are stockholders of the defendant, a corporation organized under the laws of Pennsylvania, authorized to transact a general casualty and liability insurance business, with a capital stock of $100,000, all issued and full paid, and invested in real estate in Philadelphia, the equipment of its offices, and other lawful investments. The company was incorporated in 1909 and continued its business until 1916. During that period it conducted a large business in nine different states of the United States.

In February, 1916, the management of the business was taken over by H. G. Welch, one of the plaintiffs, F. D. Wood, and other individuals, for the purpose of placing thé company on a thorough working and business basis, and for that purpose a substantial amount was invested in the purchase of its capital stock. An investigation resulted in the discovery that the company’s business had been grossly and fraudulently mismanaged by its former officers and managers, and its books falsified by them, for the purpose of deceiving the public and the various state insurance departments in the jurisdictions in which it was operating, by writing into its books .fictitious insurance for the purpose of increasing its apparent assets from premiums [970]*970to be collected, by fictitious cancellation on the books of a large portion of its actual outstanding insurance for the purpose of decreasing its apparent reserve liability, by writing into the books fictitious excess premiums presumably due by reason of pay roll audits under its liability policies, and by suppression and concealment of a large amount of outstanding liability which had accrued under its policies.

Through the improper and fraudulent conduct of the company’s business, it had become financially involved, and as soon as the condition was ascertained it stopped the issuing of additional policies, canceled a large ’portion of the- remaining business, and within a short time thereafter reinsured and transferred to another insurance company its outstanding policies, and no new insurance has since then been written. Numerotis suits have been instituted against the company and are now pending, and it is embarrassed by threatened proceedings in the different states where it has operated.

It is alleged that, if creditors who have sued and others who have threatened suit are permitted to obtain judgment and issue execution, its assets will be sacrificed, its business ruined, and its creditors and stockholders injured. It is alleged that, although the defendant has no available funds at this time to. meet its obligations, it is solvent, and, if a reasonable time is permitted to liquidate its business, its creditors will receive the full amount due them, and its stockholders the full value of their holdings, and the business may be rehabilitated, but if suits are permitted to continue, and the assets disposed of through forced sale or otherwise, they will be sacrificed at but a small part of their real value. In order to preserve and administer the assets, and prevent their being sacrificed and destroyed, the bill prays for the appointment of a receiver and for general relief,

The bill was filed December 18, 1916. On the same day an answer was filed by the defendant company, admitting the allegations in the bill, and joining in the prayer for the appointment of a receiver. Thereupon, on the same day, a decree was entered appointing Samuel W. Cooper, Esq., temporary receiver, with leave to the plaintiffs to move for the appointment of a permanent receiver on January 2, 1917, upon 10 days’ notice to all known creditors and parties in interest.

On December 20, 1916, J. Denny O’Neil, insurance commissioner, and Francis Shunk Brown, Attorney General, of Pennsylvania, presented a petition to vacate the appointment of the receiver, representing that on November 15, 1916, the Attorney General, at the relation of the insurance commissioner, 'had'filed in the court of common pleas of Dauphin county his- suggestion against the Union Casualty Insurance .Company, giving the court to understand that the company was insolvent and that its further transaction of business would be hazardous to its policy holders, to its creditors, and to the public. Thereupon the Dauphin county court granted a rule upon the company to show cause on November 29, 1916, why the insurance commissioner should not take possession of its property, and why the court should not order the liquidation of the business of the company and the dissolution of the corporation, and enjoining the company, [971]*971its officers, agents, and employés, from transacting any business of the company or disposing of any if its property.

On November 29, 1916, the company filed an answer to the suggestion, setting forth that, since its incorporation, it had transacted a casualty insurance business in Philadelphia up to May 1, 1916, since which time it has written no new insurance in this state or elsewhere. It denied 'that it was insolvent, and that a further transaction of business would be hazardous to its policy holders, its creditors, and- to the public, and denied any necessity for the appointment of a receiver. On November 27, 1916, the company appeared, by its counsel, in the Dauphin county court, and in open court agreed that December 19th, at 10 o’clpck a. m. should be fixed as the time for a hearing.

On December 19th (the day after the entry of the decree appointing the receiver in this case), the Dauphin county court, having taken jurisdiction on November 15, 1916, proceeded to a-hearing, and, after full hearing, entered, on the same day, a formal decree, in which it finds that the company is' insolvent, and that its further transaction of business will be hazardous to its policy holders, its creditors, and the public, and ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the company — ■

“be and tbie same is hereby dissolved, and its corporate existence ended, and the liquidation of the business of said corporation is hereby ordered, said liquidation to be made by and under the' direction of the insurance commissioner of the commonwealth and in accordance with the provisions of the act of June 1, 1911 (P. L- 599); and it is hereby further ordered that the said dissolution of said corporation shall take effect upon the entry of certified copy of this order in the office of the prothonotary of Philadelphia county.”

The petition alleges that a copy of the decree of the Dauphin county court has been filed as provided by law in the prothonotary’s office of Philadelphia county.- The proceedings in the Dauphin county court were had and the decree entered under the provisions of the act of assembly of Pennsylvania of June 1, 1911 (P. L. 599), providing for dissolution of insurance companies and the liquidation of their assets, under the supervision of the insurance commissioner of Pennsylvania.

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Related

Mitchell v. Maurer
69 F.2d 233 (Ninth Circuit, 1934)
O'Neil v. Welch
245 F. 261 (Third Circuit, 1917)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
238 F. 968, 1917 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1478, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/welch-v-union-casualty-ins-paed-1917.