Commonwealth Mutual Fire Insurance v. Hayden Bros.

Sullivan, J.

The Commonwealth Mutual Fire Insurance Company, a Massachusetts corporation, issued two fire insurance policies to Hayden Bros., insuring property owned by them and in their possession at Omaha, in this state. After one of the policies had expired, but while the other was in force, the company became insolvent and passed into the hands of a receiver, who brought this action to recover assessments made against the defendants for the purpose of paying losses and liabilities incurred. The district court held, on demurrer to the petition, that the facts pleaded did not constitute a cause of action, and gave judgment accordingly. Counsel for plaintiff contends for two propositions: (1) That the contracts were made in Massachusetts; that they are valid in that state, and therefore enforceable in this. (2) That the assessments were made by a court of general jurisdiction in the domicile of the corporation, and that the amounts charged against defendants and their obligation to pay the same are established by a valid adjudication.

Nothwithstahding the recitals of the policies indicating that they were issued by the company’s Omaha agency, we think it clear that the averment of the petition, that they were executed in Massachusetts, must be taken as true. The recitals are not contractual elements, and consequently are not conclusive upon the plaintiff. It has, in effect, alleged that they are false, and no reason *638is perceived why that allegation may not be sustained by proof. 1 Greenleaf, Evidence [15th ed.], sec. 285. But whether these contracts were made in Massachusetts or Nebraska, they contravene the policy of this state and could not be enforced by action in our courts. The statute prescribing the conditions upon which foreign insurance companies may do business here is a police regulation designed to protect our people against irresponsible insurers. It forbids them to do any insurance business, directly or indirectly, in this state until they have complied with its terms; and the principle of judicial comity does not require our courts to actively aid in the enforcement of contracts which interfere with, and tend to frustrate, the policy established by the legislature. Rose v. Kimberly & Clark Co., 89 Wis., 545; Cowan v. London Assurance Corporation, 73 Miss., 321; Seamans v. Temple Co., 105 Mich., 400; Seamans v. Zimmerman, 91 Ia, 363; Chicago, B. & Q. R. Co. v. Gardiner, 51 Nebr., 70, 78. The company having engaged in business in this state without authority and in defiance of the policy of our laws, is not now in a position to insist that our courts should, as an exercise of comity, give effect to its con- • tracts. The defendants agreed to pay all lawful assessments made against them. This agreement was valid in Massachusetts, but will not support an action here. These remarks dispose of plaintiff’s first contention.

The claim that the amounts of the assessments and the liability of the defendants to pay them are unalterably fixed by the decree and orders of the supreme judicial court of Massachusetts raises a question of jurisdiction which will be now considered. In Hawkins v. Glenn, 131 U. S., 319, 329, it was held: “The stockholder is bound by a decree of a court of equity against the corporation in enforcement of a corporate duty, although not a party as an individual, but only through representation by the company. A stockholder is so far an integral part of a corporation that, in view of the law, he is privy to the proceedings touching the body of which *639he is a member.” The rule thus laid down by the supreme court of the United States has been generally adopted by other courts (Glenn v. Williams, 60 Md., 93; Mutual Fire Ins. Co. v. Phœnix Furniture Co., 108 Mich., 170; Lycoming Fire Ins. Co. v. Langley, 62 Md., 196; Langworthy v. Garding, 74 Minn., 325; Parker v. Stoughton Mill Co., 91 Wis., 174; Howard v. Glenn, 85 Ga., 238), and is not questioned by the learned counsel for defendants. He concedes that the Massachusetts court had authority to make an adjudication binding upon the stockholders of the company without service of summons or other jurisdictional process upon them; but he insists that his clients were not stockholders when the assessments were made, nor at the time the liabilities were incurred upon which the assessments are founded. The petition shows that the policies issued to Hayden Bros, had expired before the assessments in question were made by the directors or confirmed by- the court; and it fails to show that such assessments were made to meet losses or expenses incurred during the life of either policy. The allegations with respect to the assessments and the purposes for which they were made are as follows:

“6. And the plaintiffs aver that not being possessed of cash funds sufficient for the payment of incurred losses and expenses, and in pursurance of . the decree of the supreme judicial court for the county of Suffolk, commonwealth of Massachusetts sitting in equity, in accordance with sections 47 and 49 of chapter 522 of the Acts of 1894 of the commonwealth of Massachusetts, on the 7th day of March, 1896, the directors ordered and made an assessment of $250,000 upon its members liable to assessment, which said assessment wasi subsequently ratified, confirmed and established by decree of said court, dated March 25, 1896; that afterward said assessment was computed and made up against those who had taken policies from said plaintiff company who were liable thereto, including said defendant, and was further ratified, confirmed and established as so computed and *640made up upon the persons and for the amounts as appear in the schedule annexed to the decree of said court dated December 9, 1896, by which it appears that defendant was assessed upon said policy for the amount of $105.55, the same being the portion of its assessment on said policy.

“7. Said decree was duly rendered, and said orders were duly made by said supreme judicial court in said action, in which George S. Merrill was complainant, and said plaintiff company was defendant, said supreme judicial court having jurisdiction both of the parties and the subject-matter of said action. Said decree remains in full force and effect, and the assessment against said defendant so ratified by said decree remains unpaid.”

The theory upon which a stockholder is held to be concluded by a judgment rendered against him in a suit brought to enforce a corporate obligation is that, although not personally served with process, he is before the court as an integral part of the corporation; that the corporation represents him, and that he is, as was said in Hawkins v. Glenn, supra, “'privy to the proceedings touching the body of which he is a member.” Assuming that the Massachusetts laws in regard to mutual insurance companies are like our own, it seems clear that membership in such a company ceases with the expiration of the member’s policy and the payment of his share of the liabilities incurred while the policy was in force. If the member owes nothing on account of his policy and the policy has expired, the corporation is no longer authorized to represent him in court. Jurisdiction of the corporation does not include jurisdiction of ex-members who are not in fact indebted on account of the policies which they once held. And it seems equally plain that a court, in such case, can not invest itself with jurisdiction by declaring that it has it, or by finding jurisdictional facts which do not actually exist. The Massachusetts court could not make a conclusive adjudication by finding that the assessments which it ratified were based on *641losses or expenses incurred during the time defendants were policy-holders. That would be concluding them by an adverse decision upon an issue which they had no opportunity to contest. The conclusiveness of the judgment depends upon the correctness of one of the findings upon which it rests. But while there can be no doubt about the right of defendants in this action to show that the assessments were not based on liabilities incurred during the period of their membership, and that the judgment pleaded is, therefore, void for want of personal jurisdiction, we think the petition is not defective for failing to allege the facts showing that the court acted within the limits of its authority. It was not for the plaintiff! to show the existence of the jurisdictional facts; they should be presumed; it was for the defendants to show their non-existence. Savin v. Bond, 57 Md., 228; Lowe v. Lowe, 40 Ia., 220; Bissell v. Wheelock, 11 Cush. [Mass.], 277; Leach v. Linde, 70 Hun [N. Y.], 145, affirmed in 142 N. Y., 628. In Council Bluffs Savings Bank v. Griswold, 50 Nebr., 753, 757, it is said: “It will, upon reason and authority, be presumed, in the absence of proof to the contrary, that courts of general jurisdiction of other states possess the authority they assume to exercise, and that the methods of procedure pursued by them, although differing from the established practice in this state, are authorized by the laws of the states in which they act.”

The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings.

Reversed and remanded.