25 Ind. 536 | Ind. | 1865
Robinson, assignee of Hill, sued the appellant in the court below upon an oral contract to insure.
The complaint alleges that Hill was the owner of a saw and planing mill and its contents, located on Hast street, in the city of Indianapolis, of the value of $5,000, and that one Dunlop was the appellant’s local agent at Indianapolis; that Hill made a written application to the company, through said agent, to insure for him the building and its contents against loss by fire, stating the amount of insurance desired; that Hill then proposed to pay the company a premium of five per cent, for the insurance; that the proposition was forwarded to, and “to insure for $1,000” accepted by the company; that, in consideration of this, the company promised and agreed with Hill to insure the building and contents for one year, against loss by fire, to the extent of $1,000, and it was then agreed that the premium should be paid by Hill five days thereafter; that when the contract was entered into the company had, and still have, in their possession printed policies, duly signed by their president and countersigned by their secretary, which policies are in this form issued by the company to their local agents, to be by them filled up in accordance with, the terms of the contract with the person desiring to insure, which policies are issued to and held by said agents - for the mutual benefit,
Wq think the complaint shows a complete contract to insure; that the facts averred show that the terms of the agreement were fully settled between the contracting parties, including the time when the premium was to be paid. The policy of insurance, which the company agreed to issue, was not the foundation of the action, and a copy thereof was not, under 'the code, required to be filed with the complaint. The company having refused to issue the policy, it was not necessary that the complaint should be special, and show the conditions complied with. Tayloe v.
It is urged in argument that the complaint is bad for not showing a compliance by the local agent of the company with the requirements of the “ act respecting foreign corporations and their agents in this State.” 1 Gr. & H. 272. It is contended that under this law all contracts of foreign corporations are void, and that the exception to the rule is where they comply with its provisions, and that the complaint must therefore show such compliance. "We do not so regard that statute. The object of the legislature was to protect our citizens in their dealings with such corporations, by requiring the agents, before entering upon their duty, to deposit in the clerk’s office of the county where they propose doing business the power of attorney or other authority under or by virtue of which they act as agents, together with a duly authenticated order, or other sufficient authority of the board of directors or managers of such corporation, authorizing citizens or residents of' this State, having a claim or demand'against such corporation, arising out of any transaction in this State with such agents, to sue for and maintain an action in respect to the same in any court of this State of competent jurisdiction, and further authorizing service of process in such action on the agent to be valid service on the corporation, and that such service shall authorize judgment and all other proceedings against such corporation. §§ 1, 2. Section 4 provides that “ such foreign corporations shall not enforce in any court of this State, any contracts made by their agents, or persons assuming to act as their agents, before a compliance by such agents, or persons acting as such, with the provisions of sections 2 and 2 of this act.”
Section 7 provides that “ any person acting as agent of foreign corporations as aforesaid, neglecting or refusing to comply with the foregoing provisions as to agents, shall,
In Deming v. The State ex rel Miller, 23 Ind. 416, this court held that the general rule is that the courts will not enforce contracts prohibited by statute, nor allow the recovery of money paid in pursuance of them, but the parties will be . left without remedy, whenever they are in pari delicto. Rut this rule is not applicable where the contract is prohibited for the mere protection of one of the parties, against an undue advantage which the other party is supposed to possess over him. It would seem to follow that the contract of a foreign corporation, made in violation of a statute designed for the protection of our citizens, would not, as to the latter, be void. Moreover, this view is strengthened by the fact that the act itself provides what shall be the effect of such violation on the contract. But, in The Rising Sun Insurance Co. v. Slaughter et al., 20 Ind. 520, this court held that contracts made in contravention of this statute are void, and we do not feel called upon in the case in judgment to review that case. Wq are clear that it is not the duty of the court to presume, in favor of the defendants, a violation of the statute. The fact that the defendant submitted to the jurisdiction of the courts of the State is some evidence that the statute was in fact complied with.
The question of the most importance, however, in the case at bar, and one argued with marked ability by counsel, arises on the ruling of the court below in sustaining a demurrer to the fourth paragraph of the answer. That paragraph alleges that the appellant is a corporation created by a resolution of the Connecticut legislature, which resolution is the company’s charter, and contains the power to make insurances; that by the 6th section all policies and all assurances and other contracts made by the company are required to be in writing, and signed by the president and countersigned by the secretary; and that no policy or other assurance or contract in writing was ever granted to Ilill, signed by the president and countersigned by the secretary.
“ Said corporation may make insurance against the loss by fire on all kinds of real, mixed and personal property of every description, * * ,* and said corporation shall be liable to make good, and to pay to the several persons who may or shall be insured by said corporation for, all losses they may sustain in the subject matter insured, in accordance with the terms of insurance and the form of the policies issued by said company; which said policies, and all other contracts of said company, may be made with or without the common seal of said company, and shall be signed by the president, or vice president, and countersigned by the secretary, and being so signed and executed, shall be obligatory on said company.”
It is contended that the company, under its charter, could not contract in any other manner than that specified in this section; that their charter, being the enabling act which alone authorized them to contract, and the 6th section having specified the mode of making ’contracts of insurance and other contracts, all other modes and forms of making or agreeing to make insurance are necessarily excluded, and hence the parol agreement alleged to have been entered into with Hill was unauthorized and void. ’. It is well settled that corporations must act within the powers conferred by the organic laws under which they are created. This rule isjaot inconsistent with another, which is that corporations, along with the express and substantive powers conferred by their charters, take by implication all the reasonable modes of execution which a natural person may adopt in the exercise of similar powers. The business of insurance, for example, is not in its nature a corporate franchise. Any person may engage in it, unless forbidden by law, and his contracts of that nature, whether by parol or in writing, will be valid. So, when a general authority to engage in that business is given to a corporation in express terms, and there are no special restraints in its charter, it takes the power as a
The judgment is affirmed, with costs, and five per cent, damages.
Note. — The following oases which were examined by Chief Justice Erazer iu the consideration of the case of Hynds v. Hays, ante p. 31, will he of interest to such of the profession as may desire to trace the course of the adjudications on the subject of illegal contracts: 4 Wash. C. C. R. 297; 11 Wheat 258; 4 Denio 63; Chit. Con. 657; 4 Comst. 449; 9 Wend. 175; 7 Taunt. 246; 2 Bing. N. C. 796; 2 C. M. & R. 311; 1 Caines 104; 6 Ohio 21; 4 id. 400; 7 id. 76; 11 Serg. & R. 164; 4 Pick. 314; Cowp. 343; 9 Vt. 310; 10 id. 338; 1 S. & M. 45; 4 N. H. 285; 1 McLean 300; 2 id. 277; 8 Dana 71; 7 Paige 616; 6 Dana 91; 11 Vt. 592; 9 id. 23; 8 Johns 253; 5 N. H. 196; 6 id. 225; 1 Hoff. 479; 5 C. & P. 19; 1 Moo. & R. 100; 2 Bing. N. C. 646; 3 Scott 59; 4 M. & W. 654; 7 C.& P. 60; 7 Scott 317; Cro. Eliz. 199; Cro. Jac. 103; 2 Taunt. 226; 1 Bing. N. C. 662; 1 Scott 730; 5 Bing. N. C. 341; 15 Pick. 159 ; 3 N. H. 225; 5 Cow. 547; 13 Wend. 53; 5 Cow. 162; 7 T. R. 200; 6 id. 405; 2 B. & C. 661; 1 B. & A. 53; Yelv. 56; 8 Mass. 51; Sid. 38; 2 Kent Com. 467-8; 8 East 231; 13 id. 87; 15 id. 440; Hob. 14; 11 Co. 27 6; 5 Taunt. 727; Hugg, Adm. R. 176; 2 Wils. 351; 11 East 165; 3 Leon. 208; 1 Johns 362; 8 East. 231, and 8 T. R. 412; Com. on Cont. 26.