153 Ind. 100 | Ind. | 1899
Appellant is prosecuting this action to-secure a perpetual injunction against appellee’s issuance of certain contracts, and the payment of money on those already issued.
Appellant alleges in his complaint that appellee is an insurance company, organized and doing business under an act
Appellee answers the complaint in a single paragraph, in which it is averred that it has issued, and intends to continue the issuance of, said contracts, to the full limit of 1,000; and facts are set forth in detail by which appellee avers and seeks to show that the contracts complained of are contracts for services to be rendered the company, and in compliance with the law, and its charter and by-laws, and the most profitable and economical method of conducting the company’s business the directors have been able to devise. Appellant’s demurrer to the answer for insufficiency of facts was overruled. The Attorney-General has intervened and filed a brief. The Auditor of State has also filed a brief.
At the very threshold of the investigation we are met with the question, has the court jurisdiction of the subject-matter of this suit? A negative answer ends the inquiry. Appellant’s complaint discloses that he is a policy-holder and member of appellee, and that appellee is organized and doing business under the act of February 10, 1899 (Acts 1899, p. 30), the seventeenth section of which act provides as follows: “No order, judgment or decree, providing for an accounting or enjoining, restraining or interfering with the prosecution of the business of any insurance corporation, association or society, organized or doing business under the provisions of this act, or appointing a temporary or permanent receiver thereof, shall be made or granted otherwise than upon the application of the Attorney-General on his own motion, or after his approval of a request in writing therefor by the
Tbe question of jurisdiction was not raised in tbe court below, and it is insisted that it cannot be raised for the first time in this court, and must be deemed as waived by tbe appellee. This insistence must be accepted as true, if tbe court below bad authority to exercise its jurisdiction over tbe subject-matter of tbe suit; otherwise, denied.
A court is a creature of tbe law, instituted for tbe determination of questions of law and fact under defined restrictions and limitations. Tbe territorial limits of its power, tbe subjects and classes over which its power may be exercised, tbe terms upon which it may put its power into action, are as firmly and clearly established as tbe right to adjudicate when authorized to do so; and, though a court of general jurisdiction, it must proceed in tbe manner and upon tbe conditions imposed by tbe law, and an assumption of jurisdiction over a subject or a person, upon terms denied by tbe law, is as unwarranted and futile as tbe assumption of jurisdiction without its territorial limits. A departure from tbe limits and terms of jurisdiction is usurpation of power that imparts no validity whatever to its judgments and decrees. Works, §10, p. 28, and authorities cited. Hence, we have tbe generally accepted rule that, when a court proceeds without jurisdiction of tbe subject-matter, its judgment is wholly void; and, adopting as our own tbe words of tbe court in Sheldon v. Newton, 3 Ohio St., 494, on page 498, “It is equally unimportant bow technically correct, and precisely certain, in point of form, its record may appear; its judgment is void to every intent, and for every purpose, and must be so declared by every court in which it is presented.”
A void judgment implies no judgment at all, and its nonexistence may be declared upon collateral attack, upon suggestion of an amicus curiae, or by tbe court at any time upon its own motion. The rule is stated in 12 Enc. of Pl. and Prac., p. 190, as follows: “When it appears that tbe court
But the point is made that the question we have here does not relate to the subject-matter of the suit, but to the want of legal capacity in the plaintiff to bring the action. We think the question reaches further than the capacity of the plaintiff to sue. The mandate of the statute is “that no order, judgment or decree, enjoining or interfering with the business of an insurance company organized under the act, shall be made otherwise than upon the application of the Attorney-General.” Here we have very explicit language that a court shall have no power to enjoin or interfere with the business of an insurance company except upon the condition stated, namely, the application of the Attorney-General. That the Assembly had the power to fix terms to such suits cannot be doubted, and that it has provided that no one but the Attorney-General, either upon his own motion or upon the approved request of the Auditor of State, shall be plaintiff in such suit, is beyond controversy. This being true, we have before us a plaintiff who has no right to file a complaint,— who has no right or power to put in action the jurisdiction of the court, — and, in the absence of such right or power, we
It seems to us that the question now under consideration should be ruled by the case of Ryan v. Ray, 105 Ind. 101. In that case, the plaintiffs, being depositors in a savings bank, brought suit against the officers and trustees to charge them personally for mismanagement. The statute under which the bank was organized provided that such suits should be brought by the Auditor of State. At page 105 it is said: “Under the statute already referred to, the circumstances under which the officers and trustees are to be held personally accountable, and the manner of enforcing their liability, are prescribed. The legislature having provided a complete remedy through an officer of the State, who has been given a general supervision over the affairs of savings banks, no reason is apparent why the rule should not apply, that the
To the same effect is the case of Swan v. Mutual, etc., Assn., 155 N. Y. 9, 49 N. E. 258. The statute of New York relating to insurance companies (Sess. Laws 1890, C. 400), in terms the same as our §17, supra, provides that no order, judgment, or decree enjoining, restraining, or interfering with the prosecution of the business of any life insurance company shall be made or granted otherwise than upon the application of the Attorney-General, on his own motion, or after his approval of a request in writing of the superintendent of insurance.
The Swan case was an action by a policy-holder in a mutual insurance company, for himself and others, to compel the company to set aside certain sums for a reserve fund,
Likewise, we conclude that the Attorney-General of this State is the only person authorized by law to bring an action