36 A.2d 544 | Md. | 1944
Suit was entered in the Superior Court of Baltimore City by Roy D. Keehn, receiver of Central Mutual Insurance Company of Chicago, in liquidation, against the defendant, Edward Kelch. The defendant was the holder of two policies issued by that company. One of these policies expired in 1935 and the other in 1936. A receiver was appointed in Illinois in 1937, and under the contingent liability clauses in the policies, the receiver on July 20, 1940, on one policy made a demand on the defendant for an assessment of $47.73, and on March 7, 1941, on the other policy made a demand for $62. Payment not having been made, the suit aforesaid was entered on March 19, 1943. The defendant filed general issue pleas, numbered one and two, and special pleas, numbered three, four, five, six and seven. The plaintiff joined issue on the general issue pleas and the seventh plea and demurred to the third, fourth, fifth and sixth pleas. The court sustained the demurrer to these pleas. The defendant then withdrew his first, second and seventh pleas and judgment was then entered for want of a plea in the amount of $105 with interest and costs. The defendant appeals to this court from that judgment.
The fourth plea was as follows: "That the defendant was not notified of any assessment or assessments within one year after the respective termination dates of the several policies alleged to have been issued to him, and this suit was not filed until more than one year after June 1, 1941, when the Act of 1941, Chap. 296, adding Section 155A to Article 48A of the Code of Public General Laws of Maryland, took effect."
Chapter 296 of the Act of 1941, Code, Article 48A, § 155A, supra, provides as follows: "No action or *143
court proceeding shall be brought against a member or policyholder of a domestic or foreign mutual insurance company, for the purpose of enforcing an assessment, more than one year after the termination of such policy unless the member or policyholder sought to be charged shall be notified of such assessment within one year after the termination of his policy." This Act took effect on June 1, 1941. Constitution of Maryland, Article XVI, Section 2. Taggart v. Mills,
The policies terminated in 1935 and 1936. The orders confirming the assessments made on the policies were dated July 1, 1940, and January 23, 1941. Demands were made on the defendant on July 20, 1940, and March 7, 1941. The effective date of the Act was June 1, 1941. Suit was not entered against the defendant until March 19, 1943, more than one year and nine months after the effective date of the Act.
The question raised by this fourth plea is whether this action begun on March 19, 1943, is barred by limitation by reason of Chapter 296 of the Act of 1941, supra, effective June 1, 1941.
Except for Chapter 296, supra, the period of limitation applicable would be three years from the date of the assessments, namely July 1, 1940, and January 23, 1941. Glenn v. Williams,
It has been frequently held by this court that, in the absence of a clear manifestation of a contrary intent or unless such construction would be inconsistent with the purpose and nature of the legislation, the operation of such a statute which adversely affects substantial rights would be assumed to be prospective rather than retrospective. Grinder Baugher v. Nelson, 9 Gill 299, 52 Am. Dec. 694; Williams v. Johnson,
In the case of Taggart v. Mills, supra, a reciprocal insurance exchange in liquidation, the order confirming the assessment was dated September 12, 1938. A notification of the assessment was never given and the suit was filed on September 2, 1941. Chapter 640 of the Acts of 1941, Section 171A, Code, Article 48A, § 171A, as to the time when action must be brought, is similar to Chapter 296, Act of 1941, supra, except that it applies to a reciprocal or inter-insurer instead of to a mutual insurance company. In that case the suit was filed on September 2, 1941, which was well within one year from June 1, 1941, the effective date of the statute. The defendant in that case contended that the statute was retroactive in effect and the suit should have been filed between May 2, 1941, the date of the enactment of the statute, and June 1, 1941, when it went into effect. There the question was not whether the suit should have been filed within one year from the effective date of the statute, but whether it should have been filed between May 2, 1941, and the effective date, June 1, 1941. In that case it was contended that the action should have been brought before the statute took effect, and therefore that case is not in point. This court, in holding that the intent of the statute was not that the cause of action should be filed before June 1, 1941, the date the statute took effect, said *147
in the first sentence of the concluding paragraph thereof [
In the case now before this Court, the exception provided for in Chapter 296 of the Acts of 1941, of course, cannot apply as notification of the assessment within one year after the termination of the policies was impossible on June 1, 1941, the effective date of that statute. The case not coming within the exception, there was ample time from June 1, 1941, to June 1, 1942, to bring the action. This was certainly a reasonable time and the plaintiff whose rights accrued before the passage of the Act had the same time of one year to bring his action as those whose rights accrued after the passage of the Act. This Act did not affect vested rights but only the mode of procedure for the enforcement of those vested rights and, under the law laid down in the case of Ireland v. Shipley, supra; Manning v.Carruthers, supra; Garrison v. Hill, supra; Maumeister v.Silver, supra, it is apparent that the Legislature intended that the rights existing at the time of the effective date of the Act on June 1, 1941, must be asserted within one year thereafter. The action in the *148 instant case therefore, not being brought within one year from the effective date of the statute, is barred, and the demurrer to the fourth plea should have been overruled. As this plea was a complete defense to the action, it is not necessary that we pass upon the other special pleas.
Judgment reversed, with costs, and case remanded.