103 Tex. 195 | Tex. | 1910
Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court.
The relator asks for a mandamus to require respondent to issue to it a certificate of authority to do a fire insurance business. The respondent has refused to issue the certificate for the reason that relator has not furnished the bonds, which, according to respondent’s contention, .are required by the Act of March 20, 1909. (Laws 31st Leg., 182.)
The controversy is as to the true construction of the provisions of that Act concerning the bonds exacted of fire insurance companies. The first point of difference is as to the number of bonds required, respondent demanding two upon the contention that one is required by the first section and another by the third section of the statute, while relator insists that the two sections require only one bond, the amount' of the penalty of which depends upon the varying conditions prescribed.
While the two sections give color to the insistence of respondent, in that each provides for a bond without express reference to, or limitation upon the other, a close examination of the provisions, in connection with the account given of their passage through the legislature, convinces us of the correctness of relator’s position.' In the first place no sensible reason can be- given for the requirement of two such bonds as would be produced if one were taken under each of the sections. The first section prescribes a bond in a sum equal to twenty-five percent of premiums collected during the preceding year, not to exceed $50,000 nor to be less than $10,000, conditioned “that said company will pay all its lawful obligations to citizens of this State.” The third section, in substance, provides that before any company shall issue any policy, etc., it “shall first have filed . . . during the calendar year in which such policy may issue ... a bond . . . in a sum not less than ten thousand dollars, conditioned for the payment of all lawful obligations to citizens of this State arising out of any policies or contracts issued by such fire insurance company,” and makes it a penal offense for any company to issue policies, etc., without having given this bond. It is thus seen that the condition is the same in the two sections except that the last adds the restrictive language, “arising out of any policies or contracts issued by such fire insurance company.” If this should be regarded as requiring anything less than the first section, a question to which we shall recur, it is nevertheless true that a bond in the language of the first section would comprehend all that is provided for bv the third, and, hence, if two bonds are contemplated, they would be for the same purpose, which requirement would appear to be senseless.
Further, we observe that section three names no payee and prescribes no rule by which the amount of the penalty is to be ascertained, except that it is to be “not less than” an amount named. This at once suggests the thought that some other part' of the Act
Another contention of the relator is that it is not now required to give a bond at all, for the reason that it gave one in full compliance with section one of the Act, within ninety clays after it took effect as required by section two, which will continue in force and meet the purposes of the law after the issuance of the new certificate applied for. To this we do not agree. Certificates of authority must, under other statutory provisions, be obtained annually. Section one of this Act requires that “every fire insurance company, etc., applying for a certificate of authority, etc., shall, before obtaining such certificate” file the preseibed bond. Ho business can be done without the annual certificate and no certificate can be obtained without the bond. It necessarily follows that the bond must be given whenever application is made for a certificate. The condition of the bond corresponds. It is that the company will pay all its lawful obligations, etc.; which plainly contemplates the accrual of liabilities which the company becomes bound to pay, and it is for this the bond is security. The obligation therefore is one to pay those sums for which the company becomes liable during -the year covered by the bond; and for this reason, annual but not cumulative bonds are required. A good reason for this is the fact that the amount of insurance done by companies is liable to increase or diminsh from year to year, and the amount of the security intended -by this bond would correspondingly vary. The requirement of an annual bond preserves the proportion between ■the volume of the business and the security. Indeed the contention, which we have sustained, that sections one and three relate to one and the same bond, necessitates this construction; for the bond referred to in section three is to be filed during the calendar year in which the business is done, and therefore business can not be done in one year under a bond given for another year.
The relator, however, tendered and is still ready to file a new bond such as we hold it was bound to give, and the contention just discussed is therefore not made essential to the remedy sought. We observe that the condition of the bond thus tendered is worded as in the third section of the statute. This we think is proper. From the construction that sections one and three refer to the same bond the conclusion results that but one condition was in view, which is ascertained by taking all the language together. Indeed the language added by section three to the condition might be implied in that of section one, since it is the doing of insurance business that is regulated, and not all the affairs and obligations of insurance companies, such as- the payment of salaries, rents and other expenses or debts incurred. We are thoroughly satisfied that the purpose of this statute was only to require a bond, as its caption states, to secure the payment of liabilities accruing on contracts of insurance, including that created by the Act itself for the cost of reinsurance, which purpose is effected by the provisions of all the three sections relating to that one bond.
The relator is entitled to the relief sought upon filing the bond mentioned in paragraph six of the petition. ¡Respondent was right,
Writ awarded.
Rehearing
ON MOTION EOB BEHEABING.
In his motion for rehearing respondent asks for further expression as to the character of the bond to be filed by relator and as to the time at which it is to be filed.
We think the difficulty in determining such questions will be overcome by keeping in mind and following what we have already decided—that only one bond is required, and that the several statutory provisions in question relate to it. The bond must, of course, comply with section one and contain the clause relating to reinsurance. The language of that section, expressing the condition to "pay all its lawful obligations to citizens of this State,” unexplained by anything else in the statute and taken literally, might be held to require payment of all other obligations to such citizens, as well as those arising out of policies or contracts issued by the company. But section three also states this part, of the condition, adding words to those contained in section one, and should, we think, be taken.as explanatory and not contradictory of the latter. Thus viewed the added words of section three serve further to define the kind of obligations meant by section one. It follows that a bond containing everything else required by the statute and expressing the condition in the language of either section is sufficient, since both sections; in this particular, provide for the same thing, and the language of section three, explaining that of section one, would prevent a condition expressed in the language of the latter from being more onerous than required. The further trouble experienced seems to arise out of the language of section three which prohibits the issuing of policies until the bond shall have been filed “during the calendar year” of such issuance. Our holding was that the bond is only required by the statute to be filed before the issuance of the certificate of authority, as a prerequisite» thereto. The difficulty suggested, as we understand it, is that the certificate is not issued on the first of January and does not correspond in duration with the calendar year. We understand that this had merely been a matter of practice with the department prior to 1909, but another statute was passed in that year under which certificates are issued on or about the first of March and continue in force until the same date in the next year. Hence it is urged that there is an interval between the first of January and the first of March which is covered by the certificate of authority, but during which the issuance of policies by the company would not be preceded by a bond “filed during the calendar year” of such issuance, as provided in section three. This law may be literally true; but we think it should be apparent that this statute, like very many others, can not be taken literally at every point without funning it into absurdities. It has an obvious and simple purpose to accomplish and apparent inconsistencies and incongruities in its minor provisions should be so explained as to bring them into harmony with other provisions and with that purpose, which is merely to require a bond to secure
As we said in our originad opinion the words, “during the calendar year,” were probably used because it was assumed that the certificate, in connection with which the bond was to be given, ran during the calendar year, and that the bond would correspond. But are the provisions of section one, in which the purpose of the law is clearly expressed and which we have construed in accordance with respondent’s contention, to require a new bond whenever an annual certificate is to be issued, to be subordinated entirely to those few words of section three? Clearly not. But one bond is required and it takes effect contemporaneously with the taking effect of the certificate to obtain which it is given and continues effective during the life of that certificate, covering the entire year for which the latter is issued. This is the scheme of the statute, as reflected in section one. Section three is intended, not to alter, but to help out that scheme and should he accordingly construed and applied. Nothing more is needed to bring the provisions into harmony and carry out fully the object in view than to understand that, by “calendar year,” the year during which the certificate of authority is to operate was intended, and that those words were used because it was supposed that the certificate ran with the calendar year. This construction is amply justified by a comparison' of the different provisions.
Motion overruled.