J. We hold in these consolidated cases that California can constitutionally regulate insurance transactions of foreign insurance companies which, although they have no agents in this state, solicit and negotiate such transactions with California residents exclusively by mail from offices outside this state. Additionally we conclude that foreign insurers engaging in such activities are subject to the provisions of section 700 of the Insurance Code
1
and, as a
The facts are not in dispute. Defendants United National Life Insurance Company (United), Pioneer Life Insurance Company (Pioneer) and National Liberty Life Insurance Company (National) were organized under the laws of other states 2 and have offices only in the respective states of their incorporation. Bach defendant is licensed by its home state to carry on the particular class of insurance business in which it is engaged. Generally speaking all three companies solicit insurance business exclusively by mail.
In the Pioneer and National cases the defendants solicit residents of California by mailing to the latter individually from their home offices (see fn. 2, ante) application forms and other material. These documents explain the particular policy being offered, set forth the premiums, emphasize the low cost of the coverage, and urge the California addressee to complete and return the application form, together with payment of the first premium, to the company at its home office. The policy is thereafter issued at the home office and mailed to the applicant. Payments of subsequent premiums are received from the California policyholder by mail.
In the case of United there is a difference in the method of operation. As part of its solicitation by mail, United issues a pre-indorsed policy and sends it to California residents who are parents of recently inducted members of the armed services, together with an “ownership application” and other material explaining the policy. The recipient is urged to complete and return the application, together with payment of the designated first premium. Unlike the policies of Pioneer and National which, as we have said, are issued by the company at its home office only after it has received the completed application and first premium, United’s policy is effective immediately upon deposit by the policyholder of the com
None of the three companies has offices or agents in California ; has any other representative within this state; or has at any time applied to the commissioner for, or received from him, a certificate of authority as provided in section 700. 3
These actions were brought by the commissioner in the name of the People pursuant to section 12928.6 4 to enjoin defendant companies "from engaging directly or indirectly, by mail or otherwise ’ ’ in the insurance business in California or “from transacting insurance in California as defined in section 35” unless and until a certificate of authority is obtained in compliance with section 700. In their respective answers, defendants in the main admitted their methods of solicitation by mail as alleged by the commissioner in his complaints and as described above, but denied that they had violated or would in the future violate any of the provisions of the California Insurance Code. The answers also set forth a number of affirmative defenses, which, it is sufficient to say at this point, asserted the lack of power or jurisdiction of the court to grant the relief prayed for by the commissioner and additionally the inapplicability of sections 35 and 700 to the particular insurance business being conducted by them. In each of the actions motions for summary judgment were filed by the plaintiff and by the respective defendant company. In each the court granted the defendant’s motion and denied plaintiff’s motion upon the ground that California could not constitutionally regulate the type of insurance business being conducted. 5 Judgments were entered accordingly. These appeals by the People followed.
We consider the first issue in an historical setting. In 1869 the United States Supreme Court held that policies of insurance ‘ ‘ are not articles of commerce in any proper meaning of the word . . . [and] are not inter-state transactions, though the parties may be domiciled in different States.”
(Paul
v.
Virginia
(1869)
To meet the threat to state regulation presented by the holding in
South-Eastern Underwriters
and to preserve state regulation from attacks based on the commerce clause, Congress in 1945 promptly passed the McCarran Act (15 U.S.C.A. §§ 1011-1015). This act expressly provided that the regulation and taxation of the business of insurance should be subject to the laws of the several states.
6
The Supreme Court in
Pruden
As the parties before us recognize, the McCarran Act, while validating state power to regulate and tax in respect to the commerce clause, did not purport to circumscribe such power in the light of the due process clause. It remained for the court’s decision in
State Board of Insurance
v.
Todd Shipyards Corp.
(1962)
Quoting from the House report and the Senate debate on the act,
7
the court said: “We need not decide
de novo
wheth
“The power of Congress to grant protection to interstate commerce against state regulation or taxation [citations] or to withhold it [citations] is so complete [fn. omitted] that its ideas of policy should prevail.
"Congress, of course, does not have the final say as to what constitutes due process under the Fourteenth Amendment. . . . But the policy announced by Congress in the McCarranFerguson Act was one on which the industry had reason to rely since 1897, when the Allgeyer decision was announced; . . . When, therefore, Congress has posited a regime of state regulation on the continuing validity of specific prior decisions [citation], we should be loath to change them.” (Pp. 456-457.)
“Here Congress tailored the new regulations for the insurance business with specific reference to our prior decisions. Since these earlier decisions are part of the arch on which the new structure rests, we refrain from disturbing them lest we change the design that Congress fashioned.” (P. 458.)
The several parties to the present controversy appear to agree that the first issue before us must be determined according to principles of due process found in the pre-Me Garran Act decisions. They are in dispute, however, as to the precise meaning and extent of these principles. We face the usual alignment and distinguishing of precedents on all sides. It is
In
AUgeyer,
the court struck down as violative of the due process clause a Louisiana statute imposing a fine on any person insuring, or doing any act to effect insurance on, property in the state with an insurance company that had not complied with Louisiana law. Defendants, exporters and residents of Louisiana, entered into an open contract of marine insurance in New York with an insurer that was organized in and doing business in the State of New York. The insurance covered bales of cotton shipped from New Orleans to foreign ports. The insurer had no agents in Louisiana and engaged in no activities of any kind within that state. The only act done in Louisiana was the mailing by the insured to the insurance company of a communication requesting coverage as to a particular shipment of goods. Premiums and losses under the contract were payable in New York. It was held that Louisiana could not regulate such a contract where it “was made beyond the territory of the State of Louisiana, and the only thing that the facts show was done within that State was the mailing of a letter of notification . . . which was done after the principal contract had been made.” (
In
St. Louis Cotton Compress,
a statute of Arkansas imposed a tax of five percent on gross premiums paid to companies not authorized to do business in that state, which was three percent more than the tax imposed on authorized companies. The cotton compress company, a Missouri corporation authorized to do business in Arkansas, contracted and paid for a policy of fire insurance in Missouri covering its property in Arkansas. Holding the statute, as applied to the particular facts, violative of due process, the court said: “This case is stronger than that of
Allgeyer
in that here no act was done within the State, whereas there a letter constituting a step in the contract was posted within the jurisdiction. It is true that the State may regulate the activities of foreign corporations within the State but it cannot regulate or interfere with what they do outside. ’ ’ (
In
Connecticut General,
the court also declared void under the due process clause a California statute imposing an annual tax on gross premiums as applied to certain contracts of reinsurance entered into by appellant, a Connecticut corporation licensed to do business in California, with other insurance companies also licensed to do business in this state.
At this point we turn to examine two other Supreme Court cases decided before the passage of the McCarran Act but after the trilogy of cases just discussed:
Osborn
v.
Ozlin
(1940)
In Osborn the court sustained the validity of a Virginia statute forbidding insurance companies authorized to do business in that state to make contracts of insurance or surety except through registered resident agents of such companies. Rejecting the claims of foreign insurers licensed in Virginia that the statute deprived them of rights protected by the Fourteenth Amendment, the court said: “Virginia has not sought to prohibit the making of contracts beyond her borders. She merely claims that her interest in the risks which these contracts are designed to prevent warrants the kind of control she has here imposed. This legislation is not to be judged by abstracting an isolated contract written in New York from the organic whole of the insurance business, the effect of that business on Virginia, and Virginia’s regulation of it.” (310 U.S. at pp. 62-63.) The court distinguished All-geyer stating that although some doubts had been cast upon that case (see also Note (1962) 76 Harv.L.Rev. 152, 153), the statute in Allgeyer “was thought to be directed not at the regulation of insurance within the state, but at the making of contracts without. ” (P. 67.)
In
Eoopeston,
the issue was whether reciprocal fire insurance associations whose attorneys-in-fact were located in Illinois could constitutionally be made subject to New York laws as a condition of insuring property in that state. Under the pertinent facts a canner or wholesale grocer in New York would sign an application to become a subscriber and send it to the attorney-in-fact, in Illinois. If the risk were accepted the applicant would sign and send to the attorney-in-fact a power of attorney and an application. The policy was then
It was urged that the statute as applied to the reciprocals was unconstitutional since the contracts of insurance were signed in Illinois and losses were paid by checks mailed from that state. Rejecting this contention, the court said that “the issue remains whether the insurance enterprise as a whole so affects New York interests as to give New York the power it claims.
“In determining the power of a state to apply its own regulatory laws to insurance business activities, the question in earlier eases became involved by coneeptualistic discussion of theories of the place of contracting or of performance. [Fn. citing Allgeyer.'] More recently it has been recognized that a state may have substantial interests in the business of insurance of its people or property regardless of these isolated factors. This interest may be measured by highly realistic considerations such as the protection of the citizen insured or the protection of the state from the incidents of loss. . . .
‘ ‘ The actual physical signing of contracts may be only one element in a broad range of business activities. ...” (318 U.S. at pp. 316-317.)
Distinguishing Allgeyer, 8 the court concluded that “in determining whether insurance business is done within a state for the purpose of deciding whether a state has power to regulate the business, considerations of the location of activity prior and subsequent to the making of the contract, Osborn v. Ozlin, supra, of the degree of interest of the regulating state in the object insured, and of the location of the property insured are separately and collectively of great weight.” (P. 319.)
Finally we return to
State Board of Insurance
v.
Todd Shipyards Corp., supra,
If, therefore, as seems required, we examine the pre-MeCarran decisions for guidelines of due process in this type of case, we discern two separate yet consistent trends of decision. The first, exemplified by the earlier trilogy of cases (Allgeyer,
St. Louis Cotton
and
Connecticut General)
emphasized the place of making the contract sought to be taxed or regulated and, having found all activities relevant to the making and carrying out of the contract to have occurred outside the regulating state, invalidated all efforts of the latter to control them. The second, exemplified by the later cases of
Osborn
and Hoopeston, laid emphasis on the contacts with the regulating state arising from the transactions involved and the interest of the state in such transactions consequent upon such relationship. Indeed, as we have already pointed out, the court itself in
Hoopeston
recognized such distinct philosophies expounding in the first instance a "conceptualistie discussion of theories of the place of contracting or of performance” and in the second the state’s “substantial interests in the business of insurance of its people or property
regardless of these isolated factors.”
(Italics added.) (
We have therefore concluded that within the framework of the MeCarran Act and in accordance with principles of due process prior thereto, interstate insurance transactions may properly be regulated when they have sufficient contacts with the regulating state so as to give the latter a substantial interest in the transactions. Such regulation, though predi
Our foregoing conclusion finds cogent support in
Ministers Life & Casualty Union
v.
Haase
(1966)
In the case of group insurance, the group-prospect in Wisconsin would select a group leader who would negotiate with the insurer for the policy and would receive the literature and necessary forms. The group leader enrolled the members, received the master policy and premium notices for the group, and collected and remitted the premiums, individual members received a certificate of insurance. In respect to some group insurance, each member received from the insurer by mail individual policies and premium notices. Group leaders were not compensated and did not handle claims.
After reviewing the McCarran Act and the pertinent decisions on due process announced prior thereto, the Wisconsin
Ministers’ appeal to the United States Supreme Court was dismissed by that court for want of a substantial federal question.
(Ministers Life
&
Casualty Union
v.
Haase
(1966)
Nor are we impelled to abandon or modify our conclusions as to the applicable criteria of due process in these cases because of the decision in
Minnesota Commercial Men’s Assn.
v.
Benn
(1923)
Defendants herein argue that
Benn
is applicable to the cases at bench “a fortiori” for two reasons: (a) Since
Benn
denied
service of process
jurisdiction over a foreign direct mail insurer, it constitutes even more persuasive authority against jurisdiction to
regulate
where more substantial contacts with the regulating state are required (citing
Jeter
v.
Austin Trailer Equipment Co.
(1953)
Unfortunately for defendants both “a fortiori” arguments depend upon the continued validity and acceptance of the holding in
Benn
and must succumb to the same fate which
Benn
has met in later decisions. A complete answer to any claim for the validity of
Benn
is found in the following language of the Wisconsin Supreme Court in
Ministers-. “Benn’s
‘presence concept’ of doing business may be conceded to no longer have vitality in the field of jurisdiction for service of process in view of
International Shoe Co.
v.
State of Washington
(1945)
Applying due process criteria which give recognition to the substantial interest of the regulating state in the insurance transactions involved, we are satisfied that in the eireum
In short, these defendants have “ ‘realistically entered the state looking for and obtaining business’ ”
(Ministers Life & Casualty Union
v.
Haase, supra,
The cases before us are easily distinguishable from
Allgeyer, St. Louis Cotton
and
Connecticut General
where
Having concluded that California may constitutionally regulate these transactions, we turn to consider whether they fall within the regulatory reach of section 700. 11 As appears below, under this statute a person shall not transact any class of insurance business in this state without first obtaining a certificate of authority from the commissioner. Section 35 provides: “' Transact’ as applied to insurance includes any of the following: (a) Solicitation, (b) Negotiations preliminary to execution, (c) Execution of a contract of insurance, (d) Transaction of matters subsequent to execution of the contract and arising out of it. ’ ’
Defendants contend that section 700 was never intended to apply to insurance transactions negotiated by mail across state lines. However, the statute is cast in broad language and in our view indicates a legislative intent to exercise a plenary power of regulation over insurance transactions in this state, howsoever effectuated. It is settled that “the business of insurance is affected with a public interest”
(Carpenter
v.
Pacific Mut. Life Ins. Co.
(1937)
Defendants urge however that “long continued administrative construction” impels our conclusion that section 700 is inapplicable. They invoke the rule that “' [T]he contemporaneous administrative construction of the enactment by those charged with its enforcement and interpretation is entitled to great weight, and courts generally will not depart from such interpretation unless it is clearly erroneous or unauthorized.’ [Citations.]”
(Richfield Oil Corp.
v.
Crawford
(1952)
In support of their position defendants direct our attention to a letter emanating in 1961 from the Compliance and Legal Division of the Department of Insurance stating in substance that California did not and could not constitutionally regulate the transaction of insurance by mail. 12 In reply, the Attorney General directs our attention to an opinion of his predecessor (Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. No. 6386) rendered in 1928 at the request of the commissioner which interpreted Political Code section 596 (the predecessor statute of § 700) as being applicable to insurance business solicited by mail addressed to California residents from outside this state. Defendants on the other hand argue that for almost thirty years neither the Department of Insurance nor the Attorney General attempted to regulate transactions such as those now presented or to apply section 700 to them.
Assuming these conditions existed, nevertheless, while recognizing the weight to which they may be entitled, we are not persuaded that they should prevail over the clear broad reach of the statute as construed in the light of its objectives. It is manifest that in 1928 the Attorney General
was
of the
Defendants also contend that since “every statute should be construed with reference to the whole system of law of which it is a part”
(Stafford
v.
Realty Bond Service Corp.
(1952)
We find no merit in the point. Both acts are service of process statutes. Sections 1610-1620 provide that specified acts “by mail or otherwise, by a foreign or alien insurer” not admitted to do business in this state shall constitute an appointment by such insurer of the Insurance Commissioner as attorney for the service of process. As the act expressly declares,
13
its purpose was to provide, in addition to existing
Defendants advance a further argument grounded on section 1616 which prohibits the filing of any pleading by any nonadmitted foreign or alien insurer unless it either (1) procures a certificate of authority or (2) deposits cash or securities or files a bond to secure payment of any final judgment. Defendants ’ point here is that since the foreign insurer has the option of either alternative it can in fact appear in the litigation without procuring a certificate of authority at all and that therefore we must conclude that section 700, which requires such certificate, was not intended to be applicable. We do not agree. In our view, section 1616 merely offers the above alternatives to all such insurers, not only those who complied with section 700 by obtaining a certificate, but also to those who failed to comply with that section.
The second group of sections (§§ 1620.1-1620.7) referred to by defendants appears to have been enacted with the same general purpose
14
and can be explained in the same way. Like the sections first considered, these provide for an additional method of substituted service of process. However, defendants
For the foregoing reasons we have concluded that section 700 applies to the transactions involved in the cases before us. Our previous discussion herein of the MeCarran Act and the events leading up to its enactment should set at rest any question of conflict between section 700 and any federal statute.
Finally defendants express some concern as to the impact of our conclusions on their present California policyholders. The interests of those who currently hold policies contracted for with heretofore unauthorized insurance companies were considered in reaching this decision, and we have concluded that they will not be adversely affected. Some few jurisdictions hold such policies to be unenforceable by insured persons (e.g.,
Jackson
v.
Mutual Fire Ins. Assn.
(1922) 154
The insurance industry is regulated primarily for the benefit of those who make use of the services the industry offers. Penalties are imposed on those members of the industry who violate the regulatory scheme (e.g., §§ 761, 779.22, 782, 790.07), but the Insurance Code places no penalties, or even duties, on insured persons. In fact, no practical method exists for a member of the protected class of insureds to ascertain whether his insurer has complied with the applicable regulations. We reject imposition of the minority rule that would allow an insurer who has issued policies and collected premiums in violation of the law to avoid obligations to the detriment of innocent members of the protected class.
(McConnell
v.
Underwriters at Lloyds of London
(1961)
The judgments are reversed and the causes are remanded to the trial court for further proceedings in conformity with the views herein expressed.
Traynor, C. J., McComb, J., Peters, J., Tobriner, J., and Burke, J., concurred.
Notes
Hereafter, unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Insurance Code.
TTnited was incorporated in Arizona; Pioneer in Illinois; and National in Pennsylvania.
See fn. 11, infra.
Seetion 12928.6 provides: ‘ ‘ Whenever the commissioner believes, from evidence satisfactory to him, that any person is violating or about to violate any provisions of this code or any order or requirement of the commissioner issued or promulgated pursuant to authority expressly granted the commissioner by any provision of this code or by law, the commissioner may bring an action in the name of the people of the State of California in the superior court of the State of California against such person to enjoin such person from continuing such violation or engaging therein or doing any act in furtherance thereof. In such action an order or judgment may be entered awarding such preliminary or final injunction as is proper. ’ ’
The memorandum of decision states in pertinent part: ‘ ‘ Constitutionally, the State of California is without power to regulate this type of mail-order insurance business, where defendant has no offices, employees, or agents in California, and deals with California residents only through the mail from its offices ’ ’ in another state.
15 U.S.C.A., § 1012, so far as is here pertinent provides: “(a) The business of insurance, and every person engaged therein, shall be subject to the laws of the several States which relate to the regulation or taxation of such business.
“
(b) No Act of Congress shall be construed to invalidate, impair, or supersede any law enacted by any State for the purpose of regulating
The court quoted from the House report as follows: “ ‘It is not the intention of Congress in the enactment of this legislation to clothe the States with any power to regulate or tax the business of insurance beyond that which they had -been held to possess prior to the decision of the United States Supreme Court in the
Southeastern Underwriters Associar
The court also quoted the following statement made by Senator Mc-Carran during the Senate debate after reading the above excerpt from the House report: . we give to the States no more powers than those they previously had, and we take none from them. ’ ” (P, 456.)
Allgeyer was distinguished as inapplicable to situations where the business of insurance sought to be regulated had many actual contacts with the regulating state. The comment has been made that Hoopeston thus limited Allgeyer to its facts. (See Note (1963) 61 Mich. L. Rev. 1171, 1173.)
9The court continued: “We need not consider group leaders as agents but even Ministers should admit they are significant contacts which were encouraged to work for Ministers’ benefit and which were relied upon as a method of doing business.” (P. 295.)
Without derogating from the People’s eases against Pioneer and National, this circumstance constitutes an additional contact in the ease against United. We are not persuaded by the claim of United’s counsel at oral argument that this is a factor without significance in the United case.
Section 700 provides in relevant part: “A person shall not transact any class of insurance business in this State without first being admitted for such class. Such admission is secured by procuring a certificate of authority from the commissioner. Such certificate shall not be granted until the applicant conforms to the requirements of this code and of the laws of this State prerequisite to its issue. After such issue the holder shall continue to comply with the requirements as,to its business set forth in this code and in the laws of this State. ...”
The letter elated April 19, 1961, by J. N. Andrews, assistant chief of said division and addressed to a person in the State of Pennsylvania states: “The laws of this State do not and it is our understanding that they could not constitutionally regulate the transaction of insurance through the United States mails.”
Section 1 of the act (Stats. 1949, ch. 495, § 1) states: “The purpose of this act is to subject certain insurers to the jurisdiction of courts of this State in suits by or on behalf of insured or beneficiaries under insurance contracts. The Legislature declares that it is a subject of concern that nonadmitted insurers have issued policies of insurance to residents of this State physically present herein at the time of such issu
In this instance we find in section 1620.1 a declaration of purpose substantially the same as that set forth for sections 1610-1620. Subdivision (a) of section 1620.1 provides: ‘
‘
The purpose of this article is to subject to the jurisdiction of the commissioner and to the jurisdiction of the courts of this State, insurers not authorized to transact business in this State which place in or send into this State any false advertising designed to induce residents of this State to purchase from insurers not authorized to transact business in this State. The Legislature declares it is in the interest of the citizens of this State who purchase insurance from insurers which solicit insurance business in this State in the manner set forth in the preceding sentence that such insurers be subject to the provisions of this article. In furtherance of such state interest, the Legislature in this article provides a method of substituted service of process upon such insurers and declares that in so doing, it exercises its power to protect its residents and also exercises powers and privileges available to the State by virtue of Public Law 15, 79th Congress of the
Political Code section 596, the predecessor to section 700, contained the following provision until 1917: “ All policies and other contracts of insurance, issued without full compliance by all parties concerned with the laws of this state, shall be null and void.” In 1917 that language was repealed and was replaced with: “Nothing in this section shall be construed to deprive any citizen of this state of the right to negotiate and effect insurance on his own property.” (Stats. 1917, ch. 106, p. 150.) Upon the enactment of the Insurance Code in 1935 section 700 incorporated much of the substance of Political Code section 596. However, it contained no reference to the validity of an “ illegal ’ ’ policy.
