Henderson v. McMaster, Insurance Commissioner
Henderson v. McMaster, Insurance Commissioner
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This is a case of very great importance. It is also a case in which there is great popular interest. The case demands prompt decision. It should not be decided hastily, but without unnecessary delay. In view of the fact that there is such popular interest, the decision should be couched in such terms that the people who are not trained lawyers can understand the reason of the decision, without unnecessary citation of authority. Fundamental principles are sufficient. . The legislature of this State, at its recent session (1916), passed an act, entitled “An act to prevent fire insurance companies or associations or partnerships doing a fire insurance business in this State to enter into any compact or combination with any other fire insurance companies, associations or partnerships.”
This act gives the insurance commissioner of this State power to “review” rates of insurance, and provides punishment for false affidavits therein required. The petitioner comes- into this Court in its original jurisdiction, and alleges *272 that he is a citizen of this State; that prior to the enactment of this statute he was doing an insurance business in this State, as the agent of the Liverpool and London and Globe Insurance Company of Liverpool, England, and that by reason of the passage of this statute, the said insurance company was compelled, by reason of the provisions of said act, to cease to do business in this State; that the petitioner has, by reason thereof, been deprived of his business; that he knows no other business. He asks that the insurance commissioner be enjoined from proceeding to carry out the provisions of the act. The petitioner alleges that the act is unconstitutional in certain particulars. The insurance commissioner and Attorney General, who álso has some duties to perform under the act and is a party hereto, demur to the petition. That is to say, these State officers come into this Court and allege that, even admitting all the facts pleaded in the petition, still the petitioner has not shown that he is entitled to the injunction asked for. A copy of the act is set out in the case. It is not certified to, but is assumed to be a true copy of the act. The statute is alleged to be unconstitutional :
(a) It is said that there is nothing in the title to indicate that the commissioner is to be given power to review rates. *274 It is not the function of the title to set out the entire act, but to declare the “subject.” The details are in the act. The prevention of unlawful combinations, by requiring rates to be submitted to a commissioner or commissioners for review, is well recognized in both Federal and State legislation. It is the well recognized method by which unjust and discriminatory rates are prevented. No one should claim that the body of the act, which provides the details, contains a surprise when the legislature has adopted the usual method.
The petition is dismissed, and the injunction refused.
Footnote. — As to fire insurance being a business affected with a public interest, see notes in — L. R. A. 1915c, 1189.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- HENDERSON v. McMASTER, INSURANCE COMMISSIONER, ET AL.
- Cited By
- 16 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Pleading — Demurrer—Effect.—A demurrer admits facts, but not construction of statutes or conclusions of law or fact. 2. Statutes — Construction — General Words. — General words in a statute will be construed to apply only to the subject treated of. 3. Constitutional Law — Insurance—Eciual Protection — Regulation —Statutes—Validity.—Act March 2, 1916, sec. 7, exempting the State Warehouse Commissioner from its operation as to discriminatory rates for insurance on property, • applies only to that taken in his business as commissioner, and is not invalid as denying equal protection to other insurers. 4. Constitutional Law — Class Legislation. — It is not unlawful to classify business and provide different rules for different classes. 6. Constitutional Law — Insurance — Euual Protection of Laws.— Act March 2, 1916, sec. 8, exempting mill mutuals and factory insurance from its operation, is not therefore unconstitutional classification; there being a valid distinction between mutual insurance and ordinary insurance. 6. Statutes — Partial Invalidity — Effect.—If only an exception to operation of a statute is unconstitutional, it alone is invalid, but the statute itself is valid. 7. Constitutional Law — Insurance—Confusion of Powers — Powers of Commissioner. — Act March 2, 1916, sec. 6, authorizing the insurance commissioner to review rates, is not unconstitutional as confering legislative and judicial duties on the commissioner, but his duties are ministerial only. 8. Statutes — Validity — Suejects and Titles. — Act March 2, 1916, authorizing the insurance commissioner to review rates, is not unconstitutional under Const., art. Ill, sec. 17, requiring the subject to be expressed in the title, because the title fails to state his authority; the general purpose and subject of preventing unlawful combinations being expressed. 9. Statutes — Validity-—Subjects and Titles. — Act March 2, 1916, prohibiting combinations of insurers and providing a penalty, is not unconstitutional under Const., art. Ill, sec. 17, requiring the subject to be expressed in the title, because the title fails to mention a penalty, since a prohibition and penalty necessarily go hand in hand. 10. Monopolies— Combinations — Penalty — Validity. — Act March 2, 1916, prohibiting combinations of insurers, and requiring affidavits of rates, etc., is not invalid as providing a penalty for false swearing in excess of the Criminal Code provision as to perjury; it being competent to make such penalty heavier under certain circumstances, and Cr. Code 1912, sec. 344, allowing an additional penalty. 11. Constitutional Law — Vested Rights- — -Contracts With Foreign Corporations. — A citizen can acquire no vested right under a contract with a foreign corporation for his services, since the foreign corporation enters the State on sufferance, and can be excluded at the will of the State. 12. Constitutional Law — Obligation of Contracts — Insurance.—The State cannot impair the obligation of an insurance contract, though the insurer be a foreign corporation 13. Pleading — Demurrer—Matters Admitted — Conclusion of Fact. — - The allegation that by reason of enactment of a statute a foreign insurer was compelled to withdraw from the State is a conclusion of fact, and is not admitted by demurrer. 14. Constitutional Law — Raising Constitutional Questions — Foreign Corporations. — That a statute requires certain acts to be done by a foreign corporation a year hence is no ground for its withdrawal from the State on the enactment of the statute, and it cannot complain of loss of business during the year. 15. Injunction — Petition — Sufficiency. — Petition for injunction to restrain the insurance commissioner from carrying out the provisions of Act of March 2, 1916, regulating insurance rates, held insufficient to sustain the sole grounds on which the writ could issue. 16. Constitutional Law — -Judicial Functions — Public Welfare — Who Determines. — Under Const., art. IX, sec. 13, requiring the legislature to enact laws to prevent agreements against the public welfare, it is primarily for the legislature to determine what agreements are against public welfare.