after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.
In
State
v.
Ackerman,
In the present case the Supreme Court of Ohio sustained the constitutionality of section 3625 of the Revised Statutes, which was in force at the time this policy was issued, upon the ground that the State had a right “ to prescribe the terms and conditions upon which it grants such franchise, and the insurance company, having accepted the franchise with its terms and conditions, is bound thereby, and must accept the burdens with the benefits.” The legal effect was held to be the same “ as if the section was copied into and made a part of the policy.” And it was said that the statute had .also been held constitutional in
National Life Insurance Co.
v. Brobst,
“ The section in question applies to all life insurance companies doing business in the State of Ohio, and the State can certainly *76 do with foreign corporations what it may do with corporations of its own creation.
In
Orient Insurance Company
v.
Daggs,
In
Waters-Pierce Oil Company
v. Texas,
It was for the legislature of Ohio to define the public policy *77 of that State in respect of life insurance, and to impose such conditions on the transaction of business by life insurance companies within the State as was deemed best. We do not perceive any arbitrary classification or unlawful discrimination in this legislation, but, at all events, we cannot say that the Federal Constitution has been violated in the exercise in this regard by the State of its undoubted power over corporations.
Judgment affirmed.
