Whitehead v. Farhers' Fire & Lightning Mutual Insurance

60 S.W.2d 65, 227 Mo. App. 891, 1933 Mo. App. LEXIS 40
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 3, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 60 S.W.2d 65 (Whitehead v. Farhers' Fire & Lightning Mutual Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whitehead v. Farhers' Fire & Lightning Mutual Insurance, 60 S.W.2d 65, 227 Mo. App. 891, 1933 Mo. App. LEXIS 40 (Mo. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

BLAND, J.

This is an action for an injunction. Plaintiff is a policyholder in the defendant, Farmers’ Fire & Lightning Mutual Insurance Company, of Macon county. The other defendants are officers and directors of that company. Plaintiff seeks to enjoin the transaction of insurance business by the defendant company outside of Macon county. The chancellor refused to issue a temporary restraining order and, on final hearing of the case, decreed that plaintiff was not entitled to any relief (except as to a matter not now material or in controversy). Plaintiff has appealed.

The facts show that defendant, Farmers’ Fire & Lightning Mutual Insurance Company, of Macon county, was incorporated on November 7, 1924, for a period of ninety-nine years, under the provisions of section 5909, Revised Statutes 1889, as amended (see Laws 1891, p. 165), governing the incorporation and business of Farmers’ Mutual Fire & Lightning Insurance Companies.

*893 Section 5909, Revised Statutes 1889, reads as follows:

“Hereafter all farmers’ mutual fire insurance companies organized in this State for the sole purpose of mutually insuring the property of the members, and for the purpose of paying any loss incurred by any members thereof, by assessment, as provided by their constitution and by-laws, are hereby exempt from the provisions of this chapter as applicable to general insurance companies, and nothing therein shall be so construed as to impair or in any manner interfere with any of the rights or privileges of any such companies doing a mutual insurance business in this State as herein provided: Provided, that such companies shall do business only in the counties in which they are organized; and provided further, that any member of any such company may sue such company the same as if he were not a member thereof; and any such mutual fire insurance companv may incorporate by filing a copy of its constitution, by-laws, and a sworn statement of the amount insured, with the assessed value thereof, with the Secretary of State, and paving the sum of ten dollars into the State treasury. (New Section.)”

Thus it will be seen that the law under which the company was incorporated provided that corporations organized under it “shall do business only in the county in which they are organized.” The statute was again amended (see Laws of 1919, p. 384) so as to read as follows: “That such companies shall do business only in counties in which they are organized and in adjoining counties; provided that no company now organized including only one county can come under the provisions of this act or insure property in an adjoining county. ’' (Italics ours.) In 1927 (see Laws of 1927, p. 282) the statute was again amended by the insertion of a provision permitting such companies to levy an assessment for anticipated losses for the year next following the date of the assessment, but remained and now remains unaltered in respect as to where such companies shall do business.

In 1927 the defendant company sought to come within the provisions of the amendment of 1919 (see also section 6464, R. S. 1919). At a meeting of the board of directors held on October 18th of that year the secretary of the company was authorized to proceed to Jefferson City with certain papers to be presented to the Secretary of State by which it was sought to obtain the power to insure property in adjoining counties. Upon these papers, the secretary procured from the Secretary of State a new charter. This charter was obtained upon papers which were a copy of the articles of incorporation and the by-laws already existing. They included the names of the nineteen original incorporators. Many of these persons were unknown to the present secretary, who was the same person who procured the new charter from the Secretary of State *894 in 1927. Presumably many of the original incorporators were dead in 1927, or had moved from the vicinity. The new articles of incorporation, being a copy of the original articles, did not provide, at least in terms, that the new company should have the power to insure property in adjoining counties to Macon. There is no evidence or claim that the new incorporation was made with the knowledge or consent of the policyholders, who, on account of this being a mutual company, were its stockholders.

After obtaining the new charter the company proceeded as before. There was no change in the method of doing business, except that insurance was written in adjoining counties to that of Maco.n; there was no change in the directors; there was no change in the language* of the policies issued except that the secretary thereafter placed upon them the words, “Re-Chartered-October 19, 1927, under section 6464, Article 17, Chapter 30, Laws of Missouri, 1927.” There was no liquidation of the old company and no transfer of its assets to the new company. In other words, the business of the company proceeded as formerly, except, as before stated, the company began to write insurance in adjoining counties.

On October 3, 1931, at the annual meeting of the stockholders the constitution and the by-laws of the company were amended, which amendments were approved at the meeting of the board of directors held on October 10, 1931. The new or amended constitution. and by-laws provided that the company should anticipate losses for the year next following the date of the assessment and that the company should have the right to do business in Macon county and “in adjoining countiesThis latter amendment consisted of the addition of the words “in adjoining counties.”

The facts further show that on October 12, 1931, at the time of the filing of this suit, plaintiff had been a member and policyholder in the company for a period of twenty-eight years, holding fire and lightning insurance policies upon his property located in Macon County, where he resided. As the maximum length of time that defendant wrote policies was five years, plaintiff was required to renew his policies at the expiration of such periods, which he did for twenty-eight years. The last policy that was issued to plaintiff was upon the 7th day of November, 1930, in the amount of $3800. It ran for a period of five years. The policy had stamped upon it the words: “ReChartered-October 19, 1927, under section 6464, Article 17, Chapter 30, Laws of Missouri, 1927.”

After its original incorporation the company prospered. A large amount of insurance was written in Macon County. A surplus -was built up out of which the defendant company acquired a general office building in the City of Macon.

*895 Plaintiff testified that he had knowledge that a Farmers’ Fire & Lightning Mutual Insurance Company was insuring property in adjoining counties to that of Macon, but that he did not know that this company was doing so until the annual meeting of the policy holders held on October 3, 1931. The evidence shows that the new or amended constitution and by-laws were adopted at this meeting by a vote of 35 for and 14 against, plaintiff’s vote being cast in the negative. The evidence further shows that plaintiff, while a member of the company, attended and participated in its stockholders’ or policy holders’ meetings.

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Bluebook (online)
60 S.W.2d 65, 227 Mo. App. 891, 1933 Mo. App. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitehead-v-farhers-fire-lightning-mutual-insurance-moctapp-1933.