Hagan v. Kentucky Mutual Life Insurance
Hagan v. Kentucky Mutual Life Insurance
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
The appellant, Noble, and others, are asserting an indebtedness to them by the Kentucky Mutual Life Insurance Company, and seek to subject certain real estate to the payment of their debts alleged to be a part of the assets of the company, and also ask that the assets of the company be ascertained, as well as the creditors of the corporation, and a distribution of the same between them. The only plaintiffs in the original petition, or any other pleading connected with the cause, are the appellants, John C. Noble and wife, who prefer not only to sue for themselves, but' for all others interested.
Noble and wife claim to be creditors only of the company, to the amount of $98, and if their claim is legal or equitable under the pleadings they were entitled to a judgment against the company; but how a mere creditor can go into a court of equity and ask to have- the corporate affairs of the company settled and a distribution of assets is difficult to perceive. He disclaims in this case to be a policy holder, failed to pay the annual premiums as they became due, and seeks to recover back the sum of $98 that is alleged was obtained from him by fraud. The gist of this action is to make the company pay back money obtained by the fraud of its officers, with the additional allegation that others participated in the fraud, and that certain real estate claimed by them constituted a part of the assets of the company.
The action is well conceived as to the appellants, Noble and wife, but we are aware of no rule of law -or equity that permits such an action to be instituted for others, or for all those who may see proper to assert claims against the debtor: A stockholder might institute such an action, or the creditor upon a return of no property found could file his bill to subject the equitable assets to the payment of his debt; but being a mere creditor he cannot claim more than to have a judgment for his debt and the property of the corporation sold to pay it.
When he obtains his judgment it can be levied on the assets, or
The conduct of the chief officer was fraudulent from the inception of the enterprise. He was, or seemed to be, the sole manager of what funds the company had, and at no time after the insurance of the appellant had been affected had the company the means to enable it to comply with the terms of the policy. The inducements held out to policy holders were: “We have a large capital stock, with many thousand dollars paid in,” when in fact they never had exceeding $90 at any one time, and the balance of stock and capital was made up of mortgages executed upon lands almost worthless, or of but little value. This was done for the express purpose of deceiving those who were interested to insure in the company.
The appellants had the right the moment they paid the money to institute the action to recover it back. It was a fraud practiced for the purpose of deceiving those who were invited to insure in the company; and in refusing'to pay any additional premiums and claiming back the money paid, the appellants are asserting an undoubted right.
The company may have paid one policyholder, but this is not sufficient to overcome the actual fraud contemplated by Peck and actually practiced on confiding policyholders. The proof indicates that many prominent men, innocent of the fraudulent purposes of the. company’s chief officer, were induced to take stock and their names afterwards used by Peck to accomplish his fraudulent designs. As
In this view of the case the judgment in favor of the creditors for $1,000 costs, to be paid the attorney, in so far as it affects appellants, must be reversed; and "the original judgment in favor of the creditors, Moore and wife, and against the heirs of James Rice and against John Rice, Gahup and Brown, subjecting the land alleged to be claimed by them, is also reversed for the reason that there is no cause of action against them, and for the additional reason that the chancellor of Campbell county, upon the face of this record, had no power to sell land in Boyd county. In the appeal of Noble and wife and others, the judgment is reversed, so far as it affects Noble and wife, and affirmed as to the other appellants. The court will render a judgment against-the company for the debt, interest and costs, in favor of Noble 'and wife. The costs will not include the commissioner’s settlement and reference. Cause remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.