208 N.W. 659 | Minn. | 1926
Section 3315 authorizes mutual insurance companies to carry many lines of insurance. If this section stood alone it would perhaps be sufficient to give appellant the authority which it claims *200
thereunder. Relator has made no effort to provide itself with a guaranty fund as suggested in § 3545. In some respects it could hardly do so and retain the characteristics of a mutual company. Dwinnell v. M.F. M.M.I. Co.
"No company * * * shall transact any business in this state until it shall have satisfied the commissioner that it has complied with all the provisions of law relative to security prescribed for foreign life companies, so far as applicable, and obtained his certificate to that effect."
This section seems to have had its origin in L. 1895, p. 423, c. 175, § 56. This chapter also relates to mutual companies. We are forced to the conclusion that § 3710 is applicable to all companies writing surety bonds unless expressly excepted. The legislature has not seen fit to exclude mutual companies writing surety bonds from the requirements of § 3710. Section 3310 applies to all companies engaged in such business. Section 3711, subd. 2, relating to foreign insurance companies specifies that its deposits comply with those required of like domestic companies. Section 3319 requires domestic *201 life companies to have on deposit securities, the value of which shall never be less than $100,000. It perhaps has no application to such companies which are not engaged in this particular line of insurance. Before the relator could engage in such business it was therefore necessary for it to deposit the required securities with the commissioner of insurance and failure to do so justified his refusal to make the certificate required by § 3313. This result would follow whether the guaranty fund was provided or not.
There seems however to be a fundamental incompatibility involved in a mutual company writing surety bonds for public officials. A mutual company is distinguished from all other companies in that the policyholders are both the insurers and the insured. Losses are to be paid by assessments upon the policyholders as provided by statute. The policy so provides. Dwinnell v. M.F. M.M.I. Co. supra. The element of identity and mutuality between insurer and insured must exist in any business which such mutual company may transact. This is indispensable to mutual insurance. This element is present where the contract indemnifies against the loss of one's property, as in the case of fire insurance, or where it insures against loss by reason of one's own liability to another, as in the case of automobile accidents or malpractice. It may be present where the bond indemnifies an employer against embezzlement by an employe. Quinn-Shepherdson Co. v. U.S.F. G. Co.
Our attention has not been called to any authority granted to officers of the state or municipalities to enter into such contracts. It therefore seems impossible to have the necessary member mentioned in § 3547, subd. e, who is to care for "a contingent liability of the members at least equal to the premium." The incongruity becomes more prominent if we attempt to consider the officials themselves as members. In such case the indemnity or protection on such insurance must rest on the ability of payment by the persons Who have defaulted or who may default. But in this illustration the element of mutuality is absent because there is no identity of the insurer, the official, with the insured, the public. Take for further illustration the bond of a notary public. Is he the member or is the public? The notary is not indemnified. The insurer does not undertake to reimburse him for any loss that he may be obliged to pay by reason of his own default. It is hardly the state or the public for it does not insure. The persons for whose benefit the bond is given are not presently ascertainable. In these cases the net result seems to be that the insured and the insurer are not identical. If not, mutual insurance cannot exist. It is incompatible with such facts and if the language of the statute is susceptible to the construction that such companies could carry on such insurance we must regard it as an inadvertence.
Affirmed. *203