Upon review of the judgment of a state court, when the record
before this Court does not adequately show the facts underlying the
state court's decision of a federal question, this Court may set
aside the judgment and remand the cause, to the end that those
facts may be presented either through amendment of the record or by
further proof as the state court may be advised. P.
299 U. S.
155.
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The case involved the question whether, in the liquidation in
New York of a New York surety company, which in the course of its
business had acted as insurance carrier for employees in relation
to claims under the workmen's compensation laws of New York and
other States, New York claims could, consistently with the Federal
Constitution, be preferred, as directed by the New York law, over
awards made in Minnesota. The record did not clearly reveal whether
the court below had determined that, upon a segregation, there
would be sufficient assets derived from the business done within
New York to pay the preferred claims, or whether that preference
was to be satisfied out of assets resulting from operations in
other States. Nor did it appear whether assets derived from
business in Minnesota would be sufficient to discharge the
Minnesota claims.
266 N.Y. 589, judgment vacated.
Appeal from a judgment which affirmed an order of the Supreme
Court of New York for the distribution of assets in a liquidation
proceeding.
See also 296 U.S. 544.
Page 299 U. S. 153
PER CURIAM.
The Southern Surety Company, an insurance company organized
under the laws of New York and doing business there and in other
States, is being liquidated by the state superintendent of
insurance. In the course of its business, the company acted as an
insurance carrier for employers in relation to claims under the
compensation laws of New York and other States. Upon his first
report, the liquidator sought the direction of the state court to
pay in full, as preferred under § 34 of the Workmen's
Compensation Law of New York, all compensation claimants who had
filed preferred claims under the New York law and whose claims the
liquidator had allowed.
Appellants are holders of awards of compensation against the
company under the laws of Minnesota. They appeared in the
proceedings for liquidation and objected to the preference of the
New York claimants. The Supreme Court of the State sustained the
preference and ordered distribution accordingly. The Court of
Appeals affirmed the order. 266 N.Y. 589, 195 N.E. 213, 214. Appeal
to this Court was dismissed.
Villa v. Van Schaick, 296
U.S. 544. The Court of Appeals amended its remittitur so as to
recite that a federal question was presented and necessarily passed
upon, in that the court held that § 34 of the Workmen's
Compensation Law of New York was not repugnant to § 2 of
article IV and § 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment of the
Constitution of the United States. The Court of Appeals thereupon
vacated the judgment
Page 299 U. S. 154
previously entered and directed the entry of a new judgment
which, after a further amendment of the remittitur, was entered on
April 1, 1936, and from which this appeal was taken within the time
allowed by law.
It appears from the record that the business had its origin with
the Southern Surety Company of Oklahoma, which was incorporated in
that State in 1907; that the Oklahoma company took over the
business of other companies in Missouri, Michigan, Indiana, and New
Mexico; that, in 1918, the Southern Surety Company of Iowa was
organized and took over the business of the Oklahoma company; that,
in 1928, the Southern Surety Company of New York was incorporated,
assuming the liabilities and receiving most of the assets of the
Iowa company; that the business of the New York company grew
rapidly, but that, in March, 1932, it was found to be insolvent,
and the liquidator took charge.
The Court of Appeals stated in its order that,
"In this case, the New York assets are concededly more than
sufficient for the payment of the preferences allowed.
(See
Clark v. Williard, 294 U. S. 211.) We pass on no
other situation."
The record discloses that, when the liquidator took possession
of the assets in March, 1932, the aggregate
"was sufficient to pay the New York compensation claims in full
without resorting to any assets received by the liquidator
thereafter from sources outside the New York,"
"but that the assets so taken over 'had been derived from the
general conduct of the insurance business during the preceding
years throughout the United States.'"
Appellants contend that "the New York assets" to which the Court
of Appeals referred were the commingled assets owned by the company
at the time the liquidator took possession and derived from the
operations of the company throughout the country, and not simply
assets which had been derived from the business of the company in
the New York. The liquidator apparently
Page 299 U. S. 155
contends that, while the preference does not apply to assets
from other States brought to New York after the liquidation
proceeding was instituted, it does apply to all the assets, however
derived, which were in the New York at the time of the liquidation
order, aside from the statutory deposit held in trust for the
policyholders under § 71 of the state insurance law.
The condensed statement in the record leaves doubt as to the
determination of the state court upon points bearing upon the
federal question which that court has decided in upholding the
preference. It does not clearly appear whether the court has
determined that, upon a segregation of assets, there would be
sufficient assets derived from the business done within the New
York to pay the preferred claims, or whether that preference is to
be satisfied out of assets resulting from operations in other
States. Nor does it appear whether assets derived from business in
Minnesota will be sufficient to discharge appellants' claims.
We express no opinion as to the merits of the federal question
and we think that the facts should be more fully elucidated before
that question is decided here. We have frequently said that, in the
exercise of our appellate jurisdiction, we have power not only to
correct errors in the judgment under review, but to make such
disposition of the case as justice requires. In determining what
justice does require, we have considered changes, either in fact or
law, supervening since the judgment was entered, and, in such
cases, we have set aside the judgment and remanded the cause so
that the state court might be free to act. We think that the
fundamental principle involved in such action applies as well to
cases where the record before us does not adequately show the facts
underlying the decision of the state court of the federal question
,and opportunity should be given for their appropriate presentation
either through amendment of the record or by further proof as the
state
Page 299 U. S. 156
court may be advised.
See Gulf, C. & S.F. R. Co. v.
Dennis, 224 U. S. 503,
224 U. S.
506-509;
Watts, Watts & Co. v. Unione
Austriaca, 248 U. S. 9,
248 U. S. 21;
Dorchy v. Kansas, 264 U. S. 286,
264 U. S. 289;
Missouri ex rel. Wabash R. Co. v. Public Service Comm'n,
273 U. S. 126,
273 U. S. 131;
Patterson v. Alabama, 294 U. S. 600,
294 U. S. 607.
To afford this opportunity, we vacate the judgment and remand the
cause for further proceedings.
It is so ordered.
MR. JUSTICE STONE took no part in the consideration or decision
of this case.