38 P.2d 610 | Wyo. | 1934
In this case, the defendant school district undertook to insure its buildings with the defendant fire insurance companies, which were mutual companies. It *465 agreed to pay an annual cash premium of $48.50, for a policy of $5000, and assumed a contingent liability of an assessment for an equal and additional amount, the policy providing, among other things, that:
"The contingent mutual liability of each member of this company for the payment of losses and expenses not provided for by the cash fund shall be a sum equal to and in addition to the amount of one annual premium."
The sole question argued herein is as to whether or not the contract in question is in violation of Section 6 of Article 16 of the Constitution of this state, which, in so far as applicable here, reads as follows:
"Neither the state nor any county, city, township, town, school district, or any other political subdivision shall loan or give its credit or make donations to or in aid of any individual, association or corporation, except for necessary support of the poor, nor subscribe to or become the owner of the capital stock of any association or corporation."
The trial court held that this provision was not violated in the case at bar.
It may be inadvisable for a school district to insure its property in a mutual company when it is subject to an assessment in addition to the fixed premium provided for in the policy. But that point is not in controversy here. And it may be conceded that, when the contingent liability of the district is in an unlimited amount under a contract of insurance, the constitutional provision above quoted is violated. It has been so held. School District No. 8 v. Twin Falls County Mutual Fire Insurance Company,
"By becoming a member of a mutual insurance company a municipality does not become the owner of any stock or bonds of the company in violation of a constitutional provision prohibiting any municipality from owning any stock or bonds of any association or corporation; and by giving premium notes for the payment of assessments to meet losses incurred by such an insurance company, the municipality does not loan its credit to the company in violation of a constitutional provision against doing so."
In Downing v. Erie School District, supra, it appears that the contingent liability of the insured was limited to five times the initial payment. The question before us was discussed at great length, the court, among other things, saying:
"Our constitutional provision was designed to prevent municipal corporations from joining as stockholders in hazardous business ventures, loaning its credit for such purposes, or granting gratuities to persons or associations where not in pursuit of some governmental purpose. Taking of insurance in a mutual company with limited liability is not within the inhibition, for the district does not become strictly a stockholder, nor is it loaning its credit. It agrees to pay a fixed sum, and can be called upon for the total only in case of some unusual catastrophe causing great loss. Until this contingency arises, it is required to advance but a small portion of the maximum, and is, in effect, loaned credit as to a possible future demand by the company for the balance which may become payable. By the terms of the policy the district did not assume responsibility for losses of others insured, except as to a named and limited amount." *467
In French v. City of Millville, supra, the contingent liability was limited, the extent of which does not appear. The court among other things said:
"The scheme of mutual insurance in such associations does not fasten upon the members any liability which municipal corporations may not, with reasonable safety, assume, for the limit of obligation is always fixed at the time the insurance is obtained, and is rarely enforced beyond what would be charged for insurance on the nonmutual plan. By giving its premium notes, the city did not loan its credit to the company. Its promises were made for a consideration, of value beneficial to itself, and, like other assets of the company, they were purchased, not borrowed; nor did the so-called `membership' of the insured render the city in any sense the owner of the stock or bonds which belonged to the company, or a holder of stock in the company, within the fair import of the constitutional prohibition. The right to share in a limited part of the profits of business is essentially different from the ownership of corporate stock, which represents a proportionate part of all the property of the corporation."
A contrary opinion was expressed in the case of City of Tyler v. Texas Employers' Insurance Association, (Tex.Civ.App.)
In Johnson v. School District,
Affirmed.
KIMBALL, Ch. J., and RINER, J., concur. *469