64 Pa. Super. 343 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1916
Opinion- by
The defendant is a foreign corporation, duly registered under the Act of June 1, 1911, P. L. 607, and appointed, as provided by the act, the insurance commissioner as its attorney and authorized agent upon whom service of process might be made. Plaintiff’s summons was served in the following manner: “Served the within writ and copy of plaintiff’s statement- February 17, 1915, by handing a true and attested copy thereof-to R. A. S. Pollock, assistant manager. The .¿Etna Accident and Liability Company, a corporation, defendant, and making known to him the contents personally.” It was held by the court below that the section of the Act of 1911, providing for the service of process, was unconstitutional, and that the service was good under the Act of April 22,1909, P. L. 120..
Section 5, Article XVI, of the Constitution of 1874, provides that “no foreign corporation can do any business in this State without having one or more known places of business and an authorized agent or agents in the same upon whom process may be served.” The Act of 1911, in requiring the insurance commissioner to be named as the authorized agent upon whom service could be made, carries into effect this constitutional provision. It has been held that the appointment of the secretary of the Commonwealth as the authorized agent for a foreign corporation, which had a place of business established in
Thé title of the Act of 1911 reads: “An act to establish an insurance department, authorizing the appointment of an insurance commissioner, and prescribing his powers and duties; also providing for the......regulation and dissolution of insurance and surety companies ......and repealing all existing acts.” Doés the title violate Section 3, Article III, of the Constitution? “Foreign insurance companies, licensed to transact business in this StáteJ have always been considered and' aré in fact essentially a distinct class of corporations, justify-. ing and requiring legislation appropriate to thé class itself”: Kennedy v. Insurance Co., 165 Pa. 179. An insurance department was first created by the Act of April 4, 1873, P. L. 20. This act was améndéd by the Act of
Prior to the Act of 1911, excluding the Act of 1909, service on foreign insurance companies must be made under the Acts of 1873 and 1883. The legislature placed
The purpose of the act and the regulation contemplated by the Act of 1911 was regulation for all purposes affecting these companies. The notice given that all existing acts were repealed should immediately convey to the reader the thought that prior insurance acts, relative to service of process on foreign insurance companies, had been repealed and an investigation of the act would show that a method had been provided for service on such companies. We feel, therefore, considering' the subject of the legislation, the terms under which these concerns may transact business, and the laws that existed concerning service before the Act of 1911, that the
The decree of the court below is reversed and the judgment of the county court is reinstated at the cost of the appellee.