89 Wis. 545 | Wis. | 1895
The insurance contracts in question were made outside of this state upon property within the state, by a foreign company which had not complied with the laws of Wisconsin and was thus debarred from doing business within the state. The question arising is not whether these contracts can be enforced in the courts of Illinois where they were made. It might well be that, were this action pending before an Illinois court, the contracts being Illinois contracts, and there being nothing in the statutes or policy of that state prohibiting them, they would be held valid and binding. Such, in substance, was tl^e ruling of this court in the case of Seamans v. Knapp-Stout & Co. Company, ante, p. 171, where a contract made in Wisconsin insuring property in Missouri by a Wisconsin insurance? company which had no license to transact business in Missouri was upheld. But it is obvious that that decision does not reach or control this case. The question here presented is whether the courts of this state will enforce a contract plainly and squarely opposed to the public policy and laws of the state.
Doubtless the general rule of law is that a contract valid where made is valid everywhere, but this rule is not without exception. The provisions of our statutes which prescribe the conditions upon which alone foreign insurance companies may do business within this state are very stringent and sweeping. S. & B. Ann. Stats, secs. 1915-1919. They
Now, it will be observed that the legislature was not content with providing that no unlicensed company should make \a contract of insurance within this state, but provided that no such company should, directly or indirectly, take risks or transact any business of insurance in this state. The writing of a policy of insurance upon property situated within this state would seem pretty clearly to be, in some degree at least, the transaction of insurance- business in this
These views necesitate reversal of the judgment.
By the Cowrt.— Judgment reversed, and action remanded with directions to enter judgment for the defendant in accordance with this opinion.