10 N.W.2d 125 | Wis. | 1943
It was stipulated in open court that the entire record in the circuit court in the matter of the liquidation of the Wisconsin Mutual Insurance Company be considered as evidence in the action. Plaintiff appeals.
In order to understand the controversy presented by this appeal some comment should be made upon the peculiar procedural aspects of the case. These are two more or less unrelated lawsuits tried as one. One is against Morvin Duel, as commissioner of insurance, and the other is against Duel as liquidator of the Wisconsin Mutual Insurance Company. Plaintiff seeks injunctional and declaratory relief and alleges that, by reason of the net effect upon it of two proposed courses of action by Duel in separate capacities, its general credit and business prospects are seriously affected. Upon this appeal defendant submits two wholly separate *409
briefs, prepared by different attorneys, and each limiting itself to contentions bearing on the particular capacity in which the respective attorneys represent the defendant. Generally speaking, the controversies arise out of, (1) the insistence of Duel as insurance commissioner that plaintiff maintain a surplus of $50,000 in claimed response to the calls of sec.
Since these controversies, except for the circumstances just mentioned, are separate and distinct, we find it convenient to deal with them separately, at least at the outset.
With respect to the question as to the proper construction of sec.
Plaintiff was organized in 1935 as a casualty insurance company and is engaged in writing liability and automobile insurance. In 1941 the legislature, by ch. 127, Laws of 1941, entitled an act to amend sec.
"It shall have not less than four hundred bona fide applications for insurance on property or risks located in this state from not less than four hundred persons and upon not less than four hundred separate risks in this state on which the cash premiums, which shall be paid in full by each of the fourhundred applicants with their applications, plus cash contributions shall amount to at least $50,000, which shall have been actually paid in, in cash, by the applicants and contributors,provided that such minimum amount shall be $25,000 in thecase of a company organized to write only the coverage authorizedby subsection (1) of section
Sec.
"It shall be examined by the commissioner and he shall certify that the company has complied with all requirements of law and that it has on hand in cash or invested as permitted by law, the premiums and contributions amounting to saidminimum amount."
The portions above italicized were added by amendment. Sec.
201.03 (9), Stats., provides:
"Any mutual insurance company after January 1, 1943, transacting automobile insurance authorized by subsection (15) of section
This subsection is an entirely new enactment.
The question is whether sub. (9), sec.
It is asserted that since by the terms of sec.
We are of the opinion that these contentions are not sound. In the first place, the language of sub. (9), sec.
"Any mutual insurance corporation which has been or may be organized. . . ." *412
Subs. (6) and (7), sec.
This was the situation at the time ch. 127, Laws of 1941, was enacted. Thus, the assertion that sec.
We are of the view that making January 1, 1943, the date after which a surplus must be maintained was for the purpose of giving all insurance companies, whether organized before or after the enactment of ch. 127, Laws of 1941, an opportunity to build up the required surplus. Since all companies organized after 1943 must come into being with the surplus requirement satisfied, there would seem to be no particular reason why the statute should, if intended to apply only to newly organized companies, defer the surplus requirement at all.
From all of this we conclude that plaintiff's position is not well taken; that the position of defendant is sound and that sec.
The next question is whether defendant, in his capacity as liquidator of the Wisconsin Mutual Insurance Company, may assess plaintiff upon a policy of reinsurance by the terms of which Wisconsin Mutual for a specified premium reinsured certain risks of the plaintiff under a policy of reinsurance. We have held with respect to the first branch of this controversy that plaintiff was entitled to declaratory judgment. There is a serious question, whether upon the second branch of the *414 controversy plaintiff has any right to a declaratory judgment, and whether the trial court abused its discretion in declining to give such relief. This is a point of some difficulty and of great importance in the procedural field. It is perfectly clear that courts ordinarily should not interfere with liquidation proceedings at the behest of one of several hundred persons against whom a claim is asserted and for separate consideration lift the merits of this claim out of proceedings designed for the very purpose of their determination. This is true, even though it may be useful to one of the claimants to find out in advance of the litigation of his claim what his legal rights and duties are with respect to it. The purpose of the declaratory-judgments law, sec. 269.56, Stats., was to expedite justice and to avoid long and complicated litigation — not to interrupt the orderly process of liquidation or other legal proceedings presently in operation. We think that it would be a grave perversion of the principles of the act and constitute an abuse of discretion for courts to apply it in such a situation.
The circumstance in this case that is urged as warranting departure from this general rule is that we are here dealing with the activities of a single public official acting in two capacities with respect to this plaintiff. Plaintiff asserts that this is not a mere question which it would like to have answered because of some ordinary concern over its solvency and a desire to know in advance of action upon the claim in the liquidation proceedings how it is going to fare in those proceedings. Rather, plaintiff asserts that it is a case where defendant as commissioner is insisting that plaintiff presently maintain a surplus of $50,000 in accordance with the terms of sec.
After careful consideration, we are of the view that this is not a case for declaratory relief, and in any event, that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in refusing a declaration. Proceedings are pending in which the question submitted for declaration may be fully and finally determined, and the fact that plaintiff's peculiar position and necessities make it desirable from its viewpoint to have a declaration is not a sufficient ground for disturbing the ordinary processes of liquidation. To yield to such considerations would inject innumerable and unwarranted interruptions into a proceeding which, as we can attest, has sufficient difficulties without such complications. In connection with this, see 135 A.L.R. 934, for a review of the authorities. While noting a conflict of authority on the point, the general rule is stated to be that "jurisdiction of a declaratory-judgment action will not be entertained if there is pending, at the time of the commencement of the declaratory action, another action or proceeding to which the same persons are parties, in which are involved and may be adjudicated the same identical issues that are involved in the declaratory action. (This rule is sometimes predicated on the power of the court, as a matter of judicial discretion, to refuse to entertain jurisdiction of the declaratory action, and sometimes on complete lack of jurisdiction.)" See also in this connection, Borchard, Declaratory Judgments (2d ed.), p. 657.
By the Court. — The order of the circuit court is modified to order the following declaratory judgment and to delete such portions of the order as deny such a declaration: The provisions of sec.