69 Md. 248 | Md. | 1888
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This action was brought by a citizen of this State against the appellee, an insurance company incorporated under the law of the State of New York, hut licensed and doing business in this State. The case has never been brought to trial in the Court below; hut upon a summons issued out of the Circuit Court, and directed
On the part of the appellant it is insisted, that the service of the summons by the sheriff on Freeman, the local agent, was a sufficient service of process to bind the appellee, under the general incorporation law of this State, of 1868, chap. 411, sec. 211, which provides for service of process on corporations not incorporated by the laws of this State, but which do business in this State. This general incorporation law authorizes the service of process upon any agent of a foreign corporation ; and in case of service of process on an agent, not an officer of the corporation, “notice of such process shall be left at the principal office of said corporation, if there be such office in this State,” etc. It does not appear that there was any such principal office of the company in the State; and if this provision of the general incorporation law applies to the case of a foreign insurance company, Licensed by, and actually doing business in, this State, then the service of process on Freeman, the local agent, would seem to have been
It is shown that the appellee, before the institution of this action, had fully complied with the terms and conditions of the statute, and by power of attorney, duly executed and filed with the Insurance Commissioner, had appointed D. A. Clarke, Esq., of Baltimore City, its agent or attorney, upon whom all legal process might be served, as provided by the statute; and that power remains unrevoked, and Mr. Clarke continues to be the agent or attorney of the company specially appointed to receive service of process against the company, as required by law. Mr. Freeman, upon whom the summons was served by tlie sheriff, was a mere local soliciting agent, and was never authorized to receive service of process to hind the company.
It is clear, we think, that the provision in the Act of 1818, ch. 106, to which wc have referred, regirlates the whole subject-matter of the service of process on foreign insurance companies licensed to do business in this State, when sued in our Courts; and that such provision is exclusive in its nature, as no foreign iusurance'company is allowed to do business in this State, except upon compliance with the terms of the statute. The appointment of the agent or attorney to receive service of process is one of the essential and important terms and conditions upon which such companies are allowed to do business here; and good faith requires that the attorney thus selected and appointed for the purpose shall he served, and not a mere local agent who
We have thus exjuessed our opinion upon this subject to remove the doubt that seems to have existed in regard to an important matter of practice ; but there has been no such judgment rendered in this case as would justify an appeal. The case against the appellee is-still pending in the Court below, and the process may be renewed and properly served in accordance with the provision of the statute to which we have referred. The appeal must therefore be dismissed.
Appeal dismissed.