Welliver, Rec. v. Coate
Welliver, Rec. v. Coate
Opinion of the Court
Appellant, as receiver of the Indiana State Fire Insurance Company, brought this action *198 against appellees, Alvin T. Coate, John H. Furnas, Russel T. Byers and Joseph L. Ebner, to recover $18,717.23, as money belonging to the insurance company, and alleged to have been wrongfully expended by appellees as officers and directors.’ A trial by the court resulted in a judgment that appellant take nothing and that appellees recover costs. The substantial questions arise on exceptions reserved to conclusions of law stated on a special finding. The correctness of the finding is not challenged.
While the finding covers seventy-five pages of the record, its material part is substantially as follows: Prior to October 16, 1906, appellees with others were contemplating the organization of a Mutual Fire Insurance Company, under the act of 1852 and acts amendatory and supplemental thereto. §§4601, 4647 et seq. Burns 1908, §§3708, 3745 R. S. 1881. Appellee Byers, being an attorney, thereupon drafted proposed articles of association to be used in the organization of the company. Article 6 as proposed by Byers was as fo1lows:
“This corporation shall not issue policies of insurance or otherwise obligate itself upon any policy of insurance, until applications therefor approved by the board of directors shall have been made, in which there shall be taken not less than $100,000 in bona fide premium notes, and $20,000 in cash premiums.”
Article 6 was based upon §4651 Burns 1914, Acts 1889 p. 346, which is in part as follows: “When application for insurance in which there shall be taken not less than a hundred thousand dollars, in bona fide premium notes and $20,000 in cash by any such company, and of which it shall be at the time possessed, and proof of the same is furnished to the auditor of state, the books containing the same verified by the secretary of the company, and examined and approved by him, as evi *199 -denced by his certificate, such company may issue policies of insurance and renewals, on the same, for a term not exceeding seven years, against loss or damage by fire,” etc. Byers being inexperienced in the organization of insurance companies, submitted his draft of the articles of association to Coate, who was experienced in such matters, whereupon the latter stated respecting article 6 that it was difficult if not impossible to procure applicants for insurance to make cash payments on premiums prior to the organization of the company, and that the practice had been for certain of the promoters to advance the requisite cash, in order that a license might issue, the money so advanced to be the property of the company for all legitimate purposes, but to be refunded as the financial condition of the company safely permitted. Byers thereupon submitted the articles as prepared by him to the deputy auditor of state, in charge of the insurance department, who in substance confirmed Coate’s statements. Byers, however, called the deputy auditor’s attention to the language of §4651, supra, and stated to him that he was not clear whether the suggested plan was in harmony with its terms, whereupon the deputy auditor stated that he would take the opinion of the Attorney-General on the subject. Subsequently at a meeting of the proposed organizers of the company, attended by and participated in by appellees, Byers presented his draft of articles and submitted the foregoing information, and suggested that if the opinion of the Attorney-General concurred with that of the deputy auditor, the proposed plan should be followed, otherwise that §6 should be complied with. Thereafter, October 27, 1906, the Attorney-General gave to the auditor of state, in response to a request to that end, his opinion in writing, to the effect that the statute, supra, required that such a company 1be possessed of the $20,000 mentioned, not *200 as evidence of the bona fides of the enterprise or the good faith of those who had applied for insurance, “but only as evidence of the present financial responsibility of the organization”; that the statute did not require that such money be paid by those who had executed premium notes, but if possessed in good faith by the company, its source was not material, and that “in view of the fact that the main, if not the sole purpose of the requirement of $20,000 in cash, is to secure immediately available security for policy-holders, and considering that the proof of good faith on the part of the promoters and of the substantial character of the proposed business is adequately supplied by the possession of bona fide premium notes aggregating $100,000, I am of the opinion that the officers of a mutual fire insurance company, after securing the latter amount in premium notes, may themselves pay to the company $20,-000 in cash, though none of it is received from those who execute premium notes.” The proposed organizers of the company, including appellees, believing that the opinion of the Attorney-General was a fair interpretation of the statute, supra, appellees thereupon agreed that they would advance such sum of $20,000, and that it should be the property of said corporation when organized, and be used by it for all legitimate purposes of said corporation, to be repaid from time to time as in the opinion of the executive committee of said corporation, when the same should be organized, its financial condition would safely permit, and that such agreement should be made a part of the records of such corporation after its organization. Thereafter, May 13, 1907, appellees executed to the American National Bank of Indianapolis their sixty-day five per cent, note for $20,000, the proceeds of which in said sum were at the request of said Indiana State Fire Insurance Company, deposited to its credit and subject to its check. On the *201 same day, appellee Coate having been elected secretary of the company, as such filed in the office of the auditor of state his written affirmation that pursuant to notice duly given, the company had received applications for insurance on which it had taken bona fide premium notes aggregating $108,165.90 and that it had on deposit in said bank $20,000. The next day appellees Ebner, Byers and Coate, president, attorney and secretary of the company respectively, filed with the auditor of state their affidavit in support of such affirmation and to the effect, among other things, that they constituted a majority of the board of directors of the company, that they believed the facts stated in such affirmation to be true, and that on the delivery of the policies mentioned therein there would be paid on said premium notes the sum of $20,606. Annexed to the affidavit and verified by it was a schedule containing the names of 804 persons who had applied for insurance aggregating $885,000. On May 15, 1907, appellees presented to the auditor of state articles of association for the incorporation of the company, prepared under the act of June 17, 1852, and acts amendatory and supplemental thereto (§§4601 and 4647 et seq. Burns 1908), and duly signed and acknowledged. Thereupon the auditor of state with knowledge of the facts and of the arrangement under which said sum of $20,000 had been advanced by appellees and procured by the company, licensed the company to issue policies and certified its articles of association to the secretary of state. The company during its existence issued policies on the mutual plan, the members executing premium notes payable in mstallments as the board of directors might assess, and the liability of members being limited to the cash premiums and premium notes. Until August, 1909, it also issued policies on the stock plan. Each appellee was an incorporator of the com *202 pany, and at all times a member of the board of directors, except Ebner who ceased to be a director January 11, 1910. The by-laws provided for the selection of an executive committee of three by the board of directors from their own number. Coate was a member of the executive committee after October, 1907, and secretary of the company at all times. Byers was at all times a member of the executive committee and attorney for the company until November 17, 1910. Ebner was president until January 11, 1910, and Furnas was treasurer until January 12, 1910. The sum of $20,000, procured and deposited as aforesaid, became the absolute property of the company on its organization, to be used by it for all legitimate purposes. Said sum, however, was to be repaid to appellees by the company in accordance with the agreement aforesaid, when in the opinion of the executive committee it could be safely done without impairing the financial condition of the company. At the time of executing said note and each renewal thereof for the balance after payments made, the makers thereof intended that the several notes should be, and the same were, their personal obligations, and the company was in nowise liable for the payment thereof. On October 5, 1907, at the first formal meeting of the board of directors, the members of which were appellees and one Fredericks, the board by unanimous vote adopted a resolution approving the action of appellees in negotiating said loan for the benefit of the company in accordance with the agreement aforesaid, and resolving that such sum should be repaid when in the opinion of the executive committee the funds of the company would justify. At a subsequent meeting of the board, of which Coate, Byers and Furnas constituted a majority, held May 19, 1910, the board by unanimous vote adopted, and ordered spread of record, a resolution to the effect that the said notes *203 executed by appellees represented their individual indebtedness and created no liability against the company, but that it was the original intent of the resolution of October 5, 1907, that as the funds of the company justified, the amount so placed to the credit of the company by appellees, with such interest as might accrue, should be returned to them. The court specifically finds that the facts embodied in the resolution of May 19, 1910, were true. Said sum of $20,000, deposited as aforesaid, was carried on the ledger of the company in an account designated as the "guarantee fund account.” The board of directors, on the advice of the executive committee, made payments to the bank out of the assets of the company, which payments were credited by the bank on said note and its renewals as follows: December 26, 1907, $5,000; July 15, 1908, $5,000; September 15, 1908, $5,000; May 19, 1909, $2,500. Also interest amounting to $1,217.73. On such payments being made, a credit was entered on the books of the company to the effect that that amount of the guarantee fund had been returned. When the company made each of the payments, appellees executed to the bank a substituted renewal note for the unpaid balance. The last renewal, however, given May 19, 1909, for $2,500, was executed- only by Coate, Furnas and Byers. When each of such payments, principal and interest, was made, Coate, Ebner and Byers constituted the executive committee and also a majority of the board of directors. The executive committee and the board of directors and appellees in good faith believed at the time that such payments could be safely made without impairing the ability of the insurance company to pay all losses that might reasonably be anticipated. Appellees at all times intended that said note and the renewals thereof should be and the same were the personal obligations of appellees, and not the *204 liabilities of the company. Certain specific financial reports to the company, the policy-holders, and the board of directors were made by appellees and at their instance as officers and directors. The earliest of these reports was made January 28, 1908, and the last one January 11, 1910. The respective reports are set out either specifically or substantially in the finding. The sum of $20,000, advanced by appellees, appears in each of these reports in the sense that it augments the assets. Its source, however, is not revealed. The reports disclose the payments made on said note and its renewals being designated in each case as made “for refund of guaranty deposit.” The report dated January 11, 1910, was made to the company by Coate as secretary, and approved by the other appellees as directors. A printed copy was mailed on or about said day to each member and policy-holder. This report contained an explanation of the origin of the fund of $20,000, and a statement to the effect that the company was entitled to return such fund in such installments and at such times as its finances would reasonably permit, and that the company had returned $17,500 of such fund. The company made and filed with the auditor of state three reports disclosing its assets and liabilities and its income and expenditures for the respective periods covered, dated respectively January 29, 1908, February 23, 1909, and April 7, 1910. The first two were verified by Coate and Ebner, the last by Coate and Furnas. The court finds each of such reports to have been a correct statement of the assets, liabilities, income and expenditures of the company for the period covered by it. These reports are included in full in the finding. They cover twenty-two pages of the transcript. In each of them also the fund of $20,000 augments the assets, there being, however, no explanation of its origin. These reports set out the amounts *205 of the respective payments made on said note and its renewals, designated in the respective reports as follows: Return of the organization fund, $5,000; payment guarantee fund, $10,000; payment return guaranty fund $2,500. Neither in the reports made to the auditor of state, nor in those made to the company and policy-holders, is the obligation to repay listed as a liability, except as set out in the report of January 11, 1910, as aforesaid. Before making and filing the first of the reports to the auditor of state above mentioned, Coate, as secretary of the company, consulted the deputy auditor of state in charge of the insurance department, as to whether under the facts surrounding the transaction as herein set out, the receipt and retention of said sum of $20,000, designated on the books of the company as a guarantee fund, should be shown in the report as a liability of the company. The deputy auditor advised Coate that such obligation, under the circumstances, should not be listed as a liability. As above set out, 304 persons applied for insurance in the prospective company, and with their applications executed premium notes aggregating $103,165.90, before license was issued by the auditor of state. Such applications and notes were procured by agents and canvassers employed for that purpose. The organizers of the company, including appellees, directed such agents and canvassers, in soliciting such applications and in taking premium notes, to explain fully to the persons solicited the facts respecting the advancing of the $20,000, and the time when and the circumstances under which it was to be repaid. These instructions as a general rule were followed, and the facts respecting the advancing of said sum and the arrangement for its repayment were generally made known and explained to such applicants. In some particular instances, however, the instructions Were not followed. Also, after *206 license was issued, canvassers in soliciting insurance in behalf of the company continued in a general way, except in some particular instances, to inform persons solicited both respecting the plan pursued in procuring said $20,000, and the arrangement for .its repayment as above set out. At no time prior to the appointment of the receiver, as hereinafter set out, had any policyholder objected to the conduct of appellees or the board of directors, in advancing or procuring said sum, in executing the notes and the renewals therefor, or in repaying such sum in part as above set out. Appellees, at all times prior to the appointment of the receiver, believed that their acts and conduct with reference to such transaction were consented to and approved by the members and policy-holders. Appellees at no time attempted to conceal the fact that said sum of $20,000 was to be repaid as the financial condition of the company would permit, or that payments had been or were being made thereon. The company paid dividends to its policy-holders, from time to time, aggregating $8,866.16, no part of which has been returned.
Appellees in advancing the $20,000 did not contract for, nor expect to receive, and they have not received, any profit therefor other than as enjoyed proportionately by every other member of the company. All said sum was expended by the company for the benefit of all the members and policy-holders. The remaining sum of $2,500 which has not been returned to appellees (by being paid to the bank or otherwise), has been paid to the bank by Coate, Furnas and Byers, who executed the renewal note therefor as above set out. Such sum has not been repaid to them, and on January 17, 1911, they filed with the receiver a waiver of any right to such repayment. The court includes in the finding certain statements of the assets and liabilities of the com *207 pany on December 31, 1907, July 31, 1908, September 30, 1908, and May 31, 1909, respectively, being at the close of the respective months in which the payments aggregating $17,500 for application on the note and its renewals held by the bank and executed by appellees were made. These statements indicate that at each of such times the company was apparently in sound financial condition. The court finds that the financial condition of the company immediately after making such payments was substantially the same as on the dates of such statements respectively. Early in 1910 serious dissension arose among the officers and directors. Each party sent communications to the policy-holders in advocacy of the merits of the controversy from its standpoint. As a result a large and unusual number of the members surrendered their policies, which were canceled, and the unearned premiums thereon returned in cash, aggregating about $16,000, in a period of ninety days after April 1, 1910. Mutual policies were issued for periods of from one to five years. On November 17, 1910, the company was adjudged insolvent and appellant appointed receiver. At that time there were unpaid fire loss claims aggregating $17,525.21. There were also miscellaneous liabilities other than claims based on premiums paid, but unearned, aggregating $889.95. The total assets of the company, exclusive of the contingent liability of its members on premium notes given, amounted to $6,-736.84. In order that the fire losses and expenses of the receivership might be paid, the receiver, by order of court, levied and collected from all the assessable members an annual premium on the premium notes held by the company. From such source the receiver realized $14,589.02, collected from 440 members. Five hundred of the policy-holders had previously prepaid their premiums for a year beyond November 17, 1910, *208 aggregating $11,723.22. In levying such assessments, the receiver took account of such prepaid premiums and adjusted them by. making proper credits on the involved assessments, leaving, however, a balance of prepaid premiums not restored to certain policy-holders. Drawing on the fund arising from the assets that came into his hands and the sum realized from such assessment, the receiver has paid all the liabilities of the company, except the cost of the receivership, the costs and expenses incident to the prosecution of this suit, and claims based on such unearned premiums not restored. He has in his hands an unexpended balance of $4,916. The receiver has not repaid to the assessed members any part of the sums collected from them respectively through such assessment, and the balance remaining in his hands is not sufficient to that end. No part of the sum aggregating $18,717.73, including interest, paid by the company on said note, and the renewals thereof, executed by appellees to the bank, has been repaid to the company or to the receiver.
On the facts so found, the court stated five conclusions of law to the effect that the law is with the appellees, and that appellant is not entitled to .recover; .that certain members and policy-holders are estopped from maintaining the action, and that certain members are so estopped by reason of their knowledge and acquiescence in the facts attending the advancing and use of said sum of $20,000, and its repayment in part, and that as a consequence, the receiver is not entitled to maintain the action for their benefit, and not being entitled to recover for all the members and policy-holders, he cannot recover for the benefit of any of them; that anpellees are entitled to recover costs. If the conclusions to the effect that by reason of the principle of estoppel operating against certain members and policy-holders the receiver is not entitled to maintain *209 this action are correctly stated on the finding, it follows that the general conclusions that the law is with appellees and that they are entitled to recover costs are correctly stated also. We proceed to consider the conclusions.
The promoters of the Indiana State Fire Insurance Company in considering its organization were confronted by a statute providing in substance that such a' company might be authorized to issue policies of insurance against loss by fire, etc., “when applications for insurance in which there shall be taken not less than a hundred thousand dollars, in bona fide premium notes and $20,000 in cash by any such company, and of which it shall be at the time possessed.” §4651 Burns 1908, 1914, supra.
From time to time the company in harmony with the original understanding discharged its conditional obligation in part by paying money to the bank for application on the note and its renewals, until $17,500 of the principal and $1,217.73 of the interest, or a total of $18,717.73 had been paid. Facts are found to the effect that when each of the payments was made, the financial condition of the company was apparently such as to justify an honest belief that it could be safely done. This action is predicated on the fact of such payments. The receiver sues to recover back the amount paid, with interest.
It appears from the finding that the policy-holders and members of the insurance corporation are financially interested in this litigation, if at all, in their capacity as creditors based on the fact of the assessments paid and advanced by them. From the conclusions of law, it is apparent that the decision in favor of appellees was based on estoppel operating against certain policyholders and members who claim to be creditors, by reason of assessments paid and advanced. It is appellant’s contention, however, that the cause of action on which the receiver sued was that of the corporation, rather than that of the individual policy-holders, and hence that estoppel operating against certain of the latter did not defeat the action. Respecting the title of a receiver, and the basis of his right to bring and maintain actions, we quote the following from Marion Trust Co. v. Blish (1908), 170 Ind. 686, 691, 84 N. E. 814, 85 N. E. 344, 18 L. R. A. (N. S.) 347: “There can be no doubt of the proposition that it is the general ’"ule that in the ordinary receivership which is extended *212 over the affairs of an insolvent corporation, the receiver can only sue in the right of the corporation, and that he is subject to all of the equities which would have been available against it. This rule is subject to the exception that the receiver so far represents the general creditors that he may avoid transactions in fraud of their rights. ‘Since the appointment of a receiver in limine does not affect any questions of right involved in the action, and does not change any contract relations or rights of action existing between parties, it follows as a general rule that in ordinary actions brought by a receiver in his official capacity, to recover upon an obligation or demand due to the person or estate which has passed under the receiver’s control, the defendant may avail himself of any matter of defense which he might have urged had the action been brought by the original party instead of by his receiver.’ High, Receivers (3d ed.), §245. In a subsequent section of the same work the author says: “While the receiver of an insolvent corporation is thus treated as the representative of both creditors "and shareholders, so far as any beneficial interest is concerned, yet, for the purpose of determining the nature and extent of his title, he is regarded as representing only the corporate body itself, and not its creditors or shareholders, being vested by law with the estate of the corporation, and deriving his own title under and through it. For purposes of litigation, therefore, he takes only the rights of the corporation, such as could be asserted in its own name, and upon that basis only can he litigate for the benefit of either shareholders or creditors, except when acts have been done in fraud of the rights of the latter, but which are valid as against the corporation itself, in which case he holds adversely to the corporation.’ High, Receivers (3d ed.), §315.”
Considering the cause of action as the corporation’s, *213 and that appellant acquired from it his right to bring and maintain the action, we are confronted with the following situation: Appellees, actuated solely by a purpose to further the interests of the company, and with no hope or expectation of benefit to themselves, except such as they would enjoy in common with all the members, in perfect good faith advanced the money involved. The corporation at the time of receiving it, and in consideration of its advancement, through its board of directors, acting by unanimous vote, agreed to repay it when and as the financial condition of the company permitted. The corporation used the money for its own purposes, and kept its agreement to the extent of repaying $17,500 and interest. From the beginning of the transaction to the end, appellees were not guilty of fraud, bad faith or neglect. This action is brought to recover the sum paid. The mere statement of the facts is apparently convincing that had no receiver been appointed, the corporation could not have maintained the action and consequently that the receiver, if suing in its right, cannot maintain it. There are other arguments and facts, however, that must be considered.
Other questions presented are disposed of by our discussion of the conclusions of law. Judgment affirmed.
Note. — Reported in 114 N. E. 775. See under (2) 36 Cyc 1140; (3) 10 Cyc 1101; (4-7) 22 Cyc 1414, 1415.
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