72 A.D.2d 713 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1979
Judgment, Supreme Court, New York County, entered March 15, 1979, which denied plaintiff’s request for a permanent injunction and dismissed the complaint, unanimously reversed, on the law, with costs and disbursements, and the plaintiff is granted a permanent injunction enjoining the defendant from engaging in the business of insurance without a license from the Department of Insurance of the State of New York. Subdivision 1 of section 41 of the Insurance Law provides: "The term 'insurance contract’ * * * shall * * * be deemed to include any agreement or other transaction whereby one party, herein called the insurer, is obligated to confer benefit of pecuniary value upon another party, herein called the insured or the beneficiary, dependent upon the happening of a fortuitous event in which the insured or beneficiary has, or is expected to have at the time of such
"Most important, plans like these presented and to be operated by benevolent or charitable organizations * * * provide a natural limitation on those who might present such plans in order to mask an out-and-out insurance or indemnity scheme. This is further evidence that plans like these fall outside the spirit and purpose of the existing provisions of the Insurance Law” (Matter of Feinstein, 36 NY2d 199, 209.)