170 Ky. 633 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1916
Opinion op the Court by
Reversing in each case.
These actions involve the same questions and hence will he heard together. Each of the appellants filed a petition in equity in the Franklin circuit court against the Insurance Commissioner of Kentucky, and each alleged that it was a corporation which had been organized under the laws of the state of Kentucky, and particularly under the provisions of the act of the general assembly, which became a law on the 24th day of March, 1906, and which is entitled, “An act to regulate burial associations, corporations and companies doing business in the state of Kentucky,” as amended by an act, which became a law on the 27th day of March, 1908, and which act as amended now constitutes section 199a of the Kentucky statutes and its subsections. Each further alleged that it had fully complied with the provisions of the law relating to its incorporation and the conduct of its business since its incorporation. Each, further, alleged that it was now engaged in the business of insuring and guaranteeing the burial expenses of persons, and that it was a corporation which did not have any capital stock, nor paid any salaries or commissions to its officers, and that all of its resources, except necessary expenses, are devoted to paying funeral expenses of its members, but that the appellee, as Insurance Commissioner of the state of Kentucky, was threatening to revoke its license, unless it should organize under and comply with the provisions of subdivision 3, article 4, chapter 32, Kentucky Statutes, which is composed of and embraces sections 660 to 681a, inclusive, of Kentucky Statutes, ,and prayed that the commissioner be enjoined from re-
A general demurrer was sustained to each of the petitions and the petitions dismissed, and hence this appeal.
Subdivision 3, article 4, chapter 32, of the Kentucky Statutes, embraces the statute laws which control and regulate corporations, associations, and individuals, which engage in the business of life and casualty- insurance upon the assessment and co-operative plan. Section 664, of the above named subdivision, article and chapter, defines the corporations, associations and societies, which are deemed under that statute to be engaged in life insurance upon the assessment or co-operative plan, as follows:
“Any corporation, association or society which issues any certificate, policy, or other evidence of interest to, or makes any promise or agreement with its members, whereby, upon the decease of a member, any money or other benefit, charity, relief or aid is to be paid, provided or rendered by such corporation, association or society to the legal representative of such member or to the beneficiary designated by such member, which money, benefit, charity, relief or aid is derived from the voluntary donation, or from admission fees, dues and assessments, or any of them collected or to be collected from the members thereof or members of a class therein, and interests and accretions thereon, or rebates from amounts payable to the beneficiaries or heirs, and wherein the paying, providing, or rendering of such money, or other benefit, charity, relief or aid is conditional upon the same being realized in the manner aforesaid, and wherein the money or other benefit, charity, relief or aid so realized is applied to the uses and purposes of such corporation, association or society, and the expenses of the management and prosecution of its business, shall be deemed to be engaged in the business of life insurance upon, the co-operative or assessment plan, and shall be subject only to the provisions of this subdivision.” * . * *
Section 665, of the same subdivision,, article and chapter, and in substance the same language as 664, supra, defines the corporations, associations and companies, which shall be deemed to be engaged in casualty
Without adverting to the various provisions of subdivision 3, article 4, chapter 32, supra, relating to casualty or life insurance upon the assessment or co-operative plan, it is required of every association, corporation or company undertaking to do business under that subdivision, article and chapter, to effect its organization by first having at least two hundred persons, who have subscribed in writing, to be insured therein in an aggregate amount of at least $200,000.00, and to have each paid in five per centum of the amount of the insurance subscribed for by them, in cash, to be invested in securities, in which insurance companies are allowed by law to invest their capital, and deposited with the Treasurer of the state in trust for the beneficiaries. Also, it is required to provide an emergency fund consisting of two per centum of the fees and dues collected and the investment of this in securities as a trust fund for the payment of death and disability claims; that, after the filing of satisfactory proof of the death of any policyholder, whose claim is not disputed on account of fraud or want of validity, and the emergency fund is not sufficient to pay the claim, unless the officers levy an assessment to provide for it within sixty days, that they become personally liable to the beneficiary of the policy or certificate; that on or before the first day of March, of each year, it shall file with the Commissioner of Insurance a report of its affairs and its operations during the year ending on the 31st day of December, immediately preceding.
By an amendment to this subdivision, article, and chapter, a company engaged in doing life and casualty insurance business or both upon the co-operative or assessment plan, before beginning business is required to have a guarantee fund of $100,000.00, which shall be invested in securities and deposited with the Treasurer of the Commonwealth, to be held in trust for- the benefit and protection of the members or policyholders of such corporation. The many other provisions of subdivision 3, article 4, chapter 32, supra, are not necessary to be .adverted to.
It is very evident that the legislature, by the enactment of this law, intended to provide and did provide a system of regulation and control applying to burial corporations, other and different from what was intended to apply to other insurance companies doing business in the state of Kentucky.
Thereafter, on the 27th day of March, 1908, an act of the general assembly went into effect, the title of which was as follows:
“An act to amend section 2, of an act entitled, ‘An act to regulate burial associations, corporations and companies doing business in the state of Kentucky,’ which became a law March 24th, 1906, without the approval of the Governor.”
“Section 1. That section 2 of an act entitled, ‘An act to regulate burial associations, corporations and companies doing business in the state of Kentucky,’ be amended so as to read.” Section 2, as amended, requires the corporations, associations, companies or individuals, who are described and doing business as set out in section 1 of the original act, to deposit with the Treasurer of the Commonwealth, double the amount of the aggregate face value of the policies, bonds or certificates issued by such corporations, associations, companies or individuals, and that such funds shall be invested in such securities as insurance companies are allowed by law to invest their capital in, which shall be deposited in trust with the Treasurer of the state. The remainder of the section as amended relates to the proceedings which shall take place for the dissolution of the corporation, and the application of its assets to the payment of its indebtedness and its distribution in the event of its discontinuance in business, or when a judgment against it shall remain unsatisfied for sixty days. It also provides a penalty to be incurred by such corporation or company, which shall fail to comply with the provisions of the act. This amendatory act, also, contains, at its end, the following proviso:
“Provided, however, that the provisions of this act shall not apply to corporations, associations or companies that have no capital stock, that pay no salaries or commissions to officers, and whose sole resources, except necessary expenses, are devoted to paying funeral expenses of its members.”
The contention upon this appeal is whether the proviso embraced in the amendatory act of March 27th, 1908, applies to the second'section of the act relating to burial corporations or associations only; or whether it applies to and qualifies all of the sections of the burial association act. In other words, it is contended for the appellee, that the proviso relates to and qualifies all the sections of the act and for that reason, that corporations, companies or associations, which are engaged in the business of insuring or guaranteeing burial expenses of its members, and which have no capital stock, pay no salaries nor commissions to its officers, and whose sole resources, except
If the contention of the appellee is sound, it means that corporations, associations and companies, who are engaged in the business of insuring or guaranteeing bur-' ial or burial expenses for persons, and which corporations, associations or companies have capital stock and pay salaries or commissions to their officers, and whose resources, except necessary expenses, are not devoted solely to the payment of the funeral expenses of its members, may organize and conduct their business under the provisions of section 199a and its subsections, of Kentucky Statutes, which we will call the burial association statute, but a corporation or company or association engaged in the business of insuring or guaranteeing burial or burial expenses of its members, and which has no capital stock and pays neither salaries nor commissions to its officers, and devotes its entire resources, except necessary expenses, to the payment of the funeral expenses of its members, is excluded and not entitled to the benefits nor .subject to the pains of the burial association statute, but must, if it exists, do so under the conditions and in compliance with the laws regulating and controlling the organization and conduct of life insurance companies, upon the assessment or co-operative plan as provided in subdivision 3, article 4, chapter 32, supra.
The portion of section 664, supra, in which the legislative intent was declared as to what should be deemed life insurance upon the co-operative or assessment plan, was enacted previous to 1906, but was amended by the latter clause of the section, and which does not affect the point of contention here, at the legislative session of 1906, and as amended was re-enacted. The fact, that at the same legislative session and upon the same day, the' burial association act was enacted, renders it conclusive,
The prime purpose in the construction of all statutes is to determine what the legislative intent, in enacting a statute or an amendment, was. Grigsby v. Lexington & E. Ry. Co., 152 Ky. 164; City of Covington v. Cincinnati G. & R. Ry. Co., 144 Ky. 646; Grinstead v. Kirby, 110 S. W. 247. It will be observed that the statutes relating to life insurance upon the assessment and co-operative plan, being the sections embraced in subdivision 3, article IV, chapter 32, Kentucky statutes, and the -statutes relating to burial corporations or associations, and embraced in section 199a and its subsections, are not- repugnant to each other, although they deal to some extent with matters pertaining to the same subject matter, and being capable of enforcement consistently with the provisions of each, it becomes the duty of the court to uphold and to enforce the provisions of each. Brown v. Miller, 4 J. J. M. 474; 36 Cyc. 1077; Willson v. Haken, 131 Ky. 444; Nazareth L. & B. Inst. v. Commonwealth, 14 B. M. 266; Lambert, etc. v. Board of Trustees of Public Library, 151 Ky. 725. As heretofore stated, the general assembly, by the enactment of the burial association act, declared its purpose to place corporations, companies, associations and individuals, who engage in the business of guaranteeing or insuring burial and burial expenses for persons into a class and to prescribe rules for their organization and the conduct of their
Hence, the judgments in each of the cases is reversed, and the causes remanded for proceedings which are consistent with this opinion.