80 Iowa 56 | Iowa | 1890
II. It does not appear from the answer, nor from it and the petition, where the contract was made, premium paid, or policy delivered, nor where it is payable.'
III. The principle that contracts made in violation of law are void, is too well established to require citations. “The well-settled general rule is that, when a statute prohibits or attaches a penalty to the doing of an act, the act is void, and will not be enforced, nor will the law assist one to recover money or property which he has expended in the unlawful execution of it. Or, in other words, a penalty implies a prohibition, though there are no prohibitory words in the statute, and the prohibition makes the act illegal and void. * * * Rut, notwithstanding this general rule, it must be apparent to every legal mind that, when a statute annexes a penalty for the doing of an act, it does not always imply such a prohibition as will render the act void.” Pangborn v. Westlake, 36 Iowa 548. The law of' Pennsylvania, as set out, provides that no insurance company, not of that state, shall insure property therein, unless it has a certain amount of capital stock, has complied with certain requirements, and has obtained a certificate from the insurance commissioner that it is qualified to do business in that state,, and that any such company that shall do business in that state without having first qualified itself, and without first having received a certificate, as prescribed, from the insurance commissioner, “shall pay a fine and penalty for such offense.” The evident purpose of such a law is the protection of those paying for insurance upon property in that state. The prohibition and penalty is against the company only. No duty is required of the insured, and no act upon his part expressly prohibited. There is nothing in the law declaring what effect it shall have upon policies issued and accepted as this