delivered the opinion of the' Courl
This action was brought in a court of Minnesota. The plaintiffs below, petitioners here, are the receivers of the Employers’ Mutual'Insurance and Service Company, a Maryland 'corporation. The defendant, Buckbee, Mears.. Co., a Minnesota corporation, is a printing concérn with its plant and only place of business in that-State.' The action is brought for the amount of an assessment made upon the insured pursuant to a policy for “ strike insurance ” issued by the Company. The only defense relied upon below, or open here, is that the Company (and hence its receivers) cannot maintain a suit in a court of Minnesota, because it did not, before writing the policy, comply with the provisions of the Minnesota law .relating to foreign insurance companies doing business within the State. After proceedings which it is unnecessary to detail,
The statutes of Minnesota provide.that a foreign insurance company shall not do business within the State unless it secures a license so to do; and that to this end it must file a.copy of its charter and by-laws and a statement showing its financial condition; must appoint the Insurance Commissioner its attorney in fact upon-whom proofs of loss and process in any action may be served; and must make a deposit of securities (or its equivalent) for the protection of Minnesota policy holders, G. S. 1923, §§ 3313, 3318, 3319, 3711, 3713, 3716. The statutes further require that' all persons engaged in the solicitation of applications of insurance shall be licensed; and they declare specifically that it shall be unlawful for any person, *276 firm or corporation to solicit or make or aid in- the soliciting or making of any contract of insurance not authorized by the laws of the State, and that any person, firm or corporation not complying with the requirements, as to the licensing of agents and solicitors shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, G. S. 1923, §§ 3314, 3348, 3349, 3366.
It is stipulated that the Company did not comply with the requirements of the Minnesota law; and that the contract was effected by the Company’s sending a representative into the State who solicited the insurance there, by the defendant’s filling out in Minnesota one of the blank forms for application distributed by the Company’s agent there, and by the defendant’s then mailing it, together with a check for the first premium, to the Company’s office in Maryland, upon receipt of which the policy was signed by the Company in Maryland and mailed to the defendant.
The receivers rely upon
Allgeyer
v. Louisiana,
A contract of insurance, although made with a corpof ration having its office in a State other than that in which the insured resides and in which the interest insured is
*277
located, is not interstate commerce.
New York Life Insurance Co.
v.
Deer Lodge County,
But the contract was also in its terms obnoxious to the Minnesota law. It required the Company to perform, in Minnesota, acts which it was prohibited from doing there.
*278
The Company agreed to defend, on behalf of the insured, any suits or other legal proceedings brought by striking employees against the insured to enforce claims. arising out of any strike, and to pay any expenses incurred by the Company in so doing. This covenant necessarily involved performance in Minnesota, as suits against the insured would be' brought in that State, among other reasons, bécause it was a Minnesota corporation , and had no place of business elsewhere. The Company also covenanted to indemnify the insured for “ direct loss of average daily net profits and fixed charges” due to strikes. The contract did not specify the place where payment for. the loss should be made, so that under the common rule'the insurer would be required to make the payment in Minnesota, the domicile of the insured.
Pennsylvania Mutual Fire Insurance Co.
v.
Meyer,
Besides these acts which the Company bound itself to perform in Minnesota, the contract reserved to it the right to do, in Minnesota, and the Company .contemplated doing' there, others acts forbidden by its laws, namely, the right to inspect the plant and the books of account and papers of the business; and the right to interrogate persons connected with it. Moreover, the contract clearly contemplates that not only these examinations, but the appraisals and other acts provided to be done by the Company in the course of the adjustment'of losses, shall be done in Minnesota. All these things were activities of the insurance business which the Company was prohibited by. valid statutes from doing within the State.
Pennsylvania Lumbermen’s Mutual Fire Insurance Co.
v.
Meyer, supra,
pp. 414-5. Compare
Commercial Mutual Accident Co.
v.
Davis,
It is suggested that under a Maryland statute the petitioners are not mere equity receivers but quasi-assignees, and that this places them on a different footing from that which the insurance company would have occupied if the suit had been brought by it. In support of this contention, the full faith and credit clause of the Constitution and cases such as
Converse
v.
Hamilton,
Affirmed.'
