71 Neb. 320 | Neb. | 1904
Lead Opinion
In 1873 the legislature passed a law relating to the business of insurance .entitled “An act regulating insurance companies.” Compiled Statutes, 1901, ch. 43. The law took effect and was in force from and after June first of that year. By section 32 of tin act it was provided that certain fees therein enumerated should be paid by every company doing business in this state to which the act applied. These fees were for services by the state auditor for filing, and making an examination of the first application; issuing certificates of license; filing annual statements; issuing certificates of authority; for copying papers and certifying to the same;, etc. Section 33 of the act is set forth in full in the following language:
“Whenever the existing or future laws of any other state of the United States shall require of insurance companies incorporated by or organized under the laws of this state, having agencies in such other state, or of the agents thereof, any deposit of securities in such state, for the protection of policy-holders, or otherwise, or any payment for taxes, fines, penalties, certificates of authority,*323 license fees, or otherwise, greater tlian the amount required for such purposes, from similar companies of other states, by the then existing laws of this state, then, and in every such case, all companies of such states establishing, or having theretofore established an agency or agencies in this state, shall be and are hereby required to make the same deposit, for a like purpose, with the auditor of this state, and to pay said auditor for taxes, fines, penalties, certificates of authority, license fees, or otherwise, an amount equal to the amount of such charges and payments imposed upon or required by the laws of such state, of the companies of this state, or the agents thereof.”
In the case at bar, the state prosecutes an action to recover of the defendant insurance company, under the provisions of the section quoted, two per cent, of the amount of the gross premiums received by the defendant company in this state during the year 1902. The petition alleged, in substance, that while domestic insurance companies are by the laws of Pennsylvania, the domicile of the defendant, required to pay but eight mills on the dollar upon the amount of the gross premiums received, insurance companies of other states and countries are required to pay into the treasury of said state two per cent, on the amount of the gross premiums received by them respectively, and prays a recovery of a like percentage of the gross premiums collected in this state by virtue of the provisions of said section 33. By the answer filed, the validity of the section quoted and the legality of the demand made by the state are challenged on three different grounds. It is alleged that the attempted imposition of the amount sought to be collected is contrary to section 1, article IX of the constitution, providing for the levying of a tax by valuation and uniformity of taxation, and which section reads as follows:
“The legislature shall provide such revenue as may be needful, by levying a tax by valuation, so that every person and corporation shall pay a tax in proportion to the value of his, her or its property and franchise's, the value*324 to be ascertained in such manner as the legislature shall direct, and it shall have power to tax peddlers, auctioneers, brokers, hawkers, commission merchants, showmen, jugglers, inn-lceepers, liquor dealers, toll bridges, ferries, insurance, telegraph and express interests or business, venders of patents, in such manner as it shall direct by general law, uniform as to the class upon which it operates.”. It is also alleged that the section quoted is repealed by implication by the revenue law of 1879 (section 38, chapter 77, Compiled Statutes), and the amendatory section as enacted by the legislature in 1887. It is further alleged that the imposition of the tax sought to be collected is unauthorized, because no insurande company organized under the laws of Nebraska has ever had any agent or agency in the state of Pennsylvania, and has never been admitted to do business therein, and that companies created under the laws of Nebraska have never been able to comply with the laws of Pennsylvania with respect to the admission of insurance companies to transact business in said state. It is regarded as neither advisable nor proper to attempt a discussion or consideration of that part of the answer of the defendant last above referred to,’ and the same will not be further noticed in the further consideration of the case. The state has filed a demurrer to the answer of the defendant, raising thereby issues of law only in respect of the defenses interposed of which we have just made mention.
Section 33 of the act of 1873 may be euphemistically called by some a reciprocal provision in the insurance law; while counsel for defendant insists on its being more properly denominated by the more harsh appellation of a retaliatory measure. Whatever may be the proper designation of the act as to its nature and characteristics, such legislation seems to be generally regarded as eminently just and fair, and based upon acknowledged sound, legal principles. Such an act asserts only the self-respect and dignity of a sovereign state, justly maintained in its business relations and dealings with other commonwealths.
“The principle that a state may impose on a foreign cor•poration, as a condition of coming into or doing business within its territory, any terms,, conditions and restrictions it may think proper, that are not repugnant to the constitution or laws of the United States, is firmly established by the decisions of the supreme court of the United States. Bank of Augusta v. Earle, 13 Pet. (U. S.) *519; Lafayette Ins. Co. v. French, 18 How. (U. S.) 404; Paul v. Virginia, 8 Wall. (U. S.) 168; Ducat v. Chicago, 10 Wall. (U. S.) 410; Doyle v. Continental Ins. Co., 94 U. S. 535.”
The authority and power of a state, by proper legislation, to impose additional burdens and conditions upon an insurance company of another state, where the laws of the state of its creation discriminate in favor of such company and against those of other states and countries, such as is sought to be done by the provisions of section 33, heretofore quoted, are recognized, approved and upheld by the supreme court of the United States and the supreme courts of several of the different states of the Union. With but one exception, in so far as our investigation of the matter
It is contended, however, by counsel for defendant that, while the legislature may have the power to levy a tax on foreign insurance companies by way of a license or privilege tax, such power has not been exercised by the provisions of section 33, and that the exaction therein provided for is purely a tax for revenue purposes, and the test of its validity is to be determined by the application of the same principles as those governing the levying and collection of a property tax. It is argued that the license* fees, authorizing the defendant to do business in this state, are* provided by section 32, of which mention has been made, and that the company having once entered the state 1o engage in business must then be placed upon the same plane as all other companies engaged in a like business, and that the enforcement of the tax sought to be recovered violates the rule of uniformity required by section 1, article IX of the constitution. We find ourselves unable to
“Moneys which have or may become due to the state from any foreign insurance company, under the provisions of the retaliatory section of our statutes regulating foreign*328 insurance companies doing business in this state,are or will be due and payable as a part of the terms or conditions of its entering this state and transacting business within its limits. Such retaliatory section of our foreign insurance company statutes, therefore, is not within our constitutional restrictions in relation to taxation.”
In relation to a tax upon the gross earnings of insurance companies doing business in this state which, on principle, is of the same nature as the imposition sought to be enforced in the case at bar, in the very recent case of State v. Fleming, 70 Neb. 523, it is said:
“Relating to the provisions of sections 59 and 60, it is plain that the tax of 2 per cent, upon the gross earnings of the companies mentioned in these sections is a tax imposed, not upon their property, but upon their privilege of doing business in this state.”
Such a tax, say this court, is not in any sense a tax upon the property of these corporations, but a privilege tax and, as such, is Avholly unobjectionable.
There remains to be considered another feature of the provisions of section 33 in this same connection. It is urged that the selection, for the purposes of the exactions of the nature sought to be imposed in the present case, of those companies only having their domicile in another state, the laws of which discriminate against outside companies, is an arbitrary and unreasonable classification, not at all warranted under the second clause of section 1, article IX of the constitution, and that, because of such attempt at arbitrary classification, the act can not stand. As it occurs to us, a sufficient answer to this contention is that, when the principle underlying the right to levy a tax or exaction such as'we are discussing is admitted or is established, there is included in the proposition the idea of reasonableness, and an acknowledgment of the propriety of the classification. In order to make the operation of an act of this nature effective, there must be a classification both as to states and the character of the burden. The principle would be of no utility, and there
“It matters not whether this charge upon the plaintiff is to be regarded in the nature of taxation, or a license. In neither case is it justly obnoxious to the charge of inequality in the sense that would make it unconstitutional. The legislature may classify for the purposes of taxation or license, and when the classification is in its nature not arbitrary, but just and fair, there can be no constitutional objection to it. * * * Here foreign insurance corporations are classified by the state from which they come, and when Ave consider the purposes of such classification it can not be held that there is anything arbitrary or unjust therein.”
The rule announced in Rosenbloom v. State, 64 Neb. 342, on the subject of classification under the second clause of section 1, article IX, obviously gives warrant for the vieAvs expressed herein regarding the same matter.
The more serious problem to consider and determine in disposing of the present case, as we view the subject, is regarding the contention that section 33, chapter 43, or at least that portion thereof referring to the imposition and enforcement of a reciprocal tax, such as is herein sought to be recovered, is repealed by the enactment of the general revenue law of 1879 known as chapter 77, article I, of the Compiled Statutes, 1901, and especially section 38 thereof. The act is entitled “An act to provide a system of revenue.” It, in express terms, repeals “all acts and parts'
But, by the amendment of 1887 of section 38 of the
“In the case of the Town of Ottawa v. La Salle, 12 Ill. 339, it is said that It is a maxim in the construction of statutes that the Jaw does not favor a repeal by implication. The earliest statute continues in force unless the two are clearly inconsistent with, and repugnant to each other, or unless in the latest statute some express notice is taken of the former, plainly indicating an intention to repeal it. And Avhen two acts are simply repugnant, they should, if possible, be so construed that the later may not operate as a re])eal of the former by implication.” Citing Ewarris, Statutes, 674; Bacon’s Abridgment, title Stat. D; Bowen v. Lease, 5 Hill (N. Y.), 221; Planters Bank v. State of Mississippi, 6 Smed. & M. (Miss.) 628; Hirn v. State of Ohio, 1 Ohio St. 15.
In State v. McCaig, 8 Neb. 215, it is held that, where statutes or parts of the same statute are so repugnant to each other that both can not be executed, the latter is always deemed a repeal of the earlier. It is said in the opinion, quoting approvingly from Brown v. County Commissioners, 21 Pa. St. 37:
“Where two statutes are so flatly repugnant that both can not be executed, ánd we arc; obliged to choose between them, the later is always deemed, a repeal of the earlier. This rule applies with equal force to a case of absolute*334 and irreconcilable conflict between different sections or parts of the same statute. The last words stand, and the others which can not stand with them go to the ground.” See also White v. City of Lincoln, 5 Neb. 505, 514; Lawson v. Gibson, 18 Neb. 137; State v. Bemis, 45 Neb. 724; State v. Moore, 48 Neb. 870; State v. Magney, 52 Neb. 508.
The attorney general, as we understand his presentation of the case, concedes that section 38, chapter 77, as amended does repeal by implication that part of section 33 under which a recovery is sought, if the amended section be held valid. But it is argued by him that such section is unconstitutional and, for that reason, can not have the effect of repealing section 33 of chapter 43 or any part thereof. It is urged in support of the contention, that the attempted legislation found in the original section and the amendment thereto is in direct violation of section 1, article IX of the constitution, providing for the raising of needful revenue by levying a tax by valuation, so that every person and corporation shall pay a tax in proportion to his, her or its property and franchises, and that, because personal property of insurance companies is attempted by this section to be exempted from taxation, the fundamental law is violated. We are quiff; well satisfied that the attempted exemption from taxation of personal property is in direct contravention of the fundamental law. But, if such be the case, does it necessarily or legally follow that the entire section must be held invalid? We think not. The rule ordinarily is that a statute repugnant to some constitutional provision will yield to the extent of the repugnancy and no further. Scott v. Flowers, 61 Neb. 620; State v. Karr, 64 Neb. 514; State v. Fleming, 70 Neb. 523. The principle deducible from these several cases is of peculiar force and special application to section 38. The act is complete in all respects and is capable of enforcement. The unconstitutional feature is of a negative rather than of a positive character. The exemption from other taxes can not (extend to personal property without conflicting with con
Rehearing
The following opinion on rehearing was filed June 30, 1904. Demurrer to answer sustained:
Section 38, article I, chapter 77 of the revenue law, as it existed prior to the 1903 enactment, provided that every insurance company transacting business in this state should be taxed upon the excess of premiums received over losses and ordinary expenses incurred within the state, during the year previous, and at the same rate that
“Insurance companies shall he subject to no other tax, fees or licenses under the laws of this state, except taxes on real estate and the fees imposed by section 32 of an act regulating insurance companies, passed February 25, 1873.”
In the opinion handed down in this case, it is held that the provision quoted, in so far as it purported to exempt insurance companies from the payment of taxes on personal property, is in contravention of section 1, article IX of the constitution, x>roviding for the raising of needful revenues, by levying a tax by valuation, so that every person and corporation shall pay a tax in proportion to his, her or its property and franchises, and it is also held that, notwithstanding the unconstitutional feature referred to, yet, the section as a whole would yield only to the extent of the repugnancy, and otherwise would be enforceable, and that the effect of the part of the section quoted, notwithstanding its invalidity in so far as it attempted to exempt personal property from taxation, was to repeal by implication the reciprocal tax feature found in section 33, chapter 43, Fompiled Statutes. In arriving at the conclusion announced in the former opinion, the mind of the writer was centered‘especially on the exception clause contained in the sentence Avherein certain exactions were excepted from the exemption generally of all other forms of taxation or other exactions; and, by applying the familiar rule that a statute will yield only to-the extent of the repugnancy, it was believed that the legal effect was to add personal property to the exception clause, and that the section otherwise would remain-a valid enactment and operate as a repeal by implication, as therein announced. Further consideration of the matter leads to the conclusion that the latter provisions of the section referred to, dominating the unconstitutional part, were incorrectly construed. We are satisfied with the holding that the purported exemption of personal
Having reached the conclusion just announced, it becomes necessary to consider one further point in the case, which ivas only mentioned, but not discussed or passed on in the former opinion. It is contended by counsel for the defense that the retaliatory law of this state can not be enforced against the defendant, a company incorporated under the laAArs of Pennsylvania, because no Nebraska company is incorporated, or can be incorporated, pursuant to the laws of this state, Avhich does or can conform to the requirements made by the state of Pennsylvania of all insurance companies doing business therein. The argument in support of the proposition is predicated on the theory that a larger reserve is required of fire insurance companies doing business in Pennsylvania, by the laAvs of that state, than is required by companies organized and doing business under the laws of this state. It is said, companies created under the laws of this state do not maintain any such reserve, and are required to keep only a less percentage of their premiums, and that they may pay out the excess in dividends without violating any provisions of laAV. There is nothing in the argument which even remotely suggests the inability of Nebraska companies to fully, and in all respects, comply with the laAV and requirements of the state of Pennsylvania. The fact that they may operate upon a different plan or Avith a smaller reserve, under the laAvs of this state, than is required by the state of Pennsylvania, does not argue that they can not and do not measure up to the standard set by the laAvs of the latter state, and may not enter into that state, and engage in business therein, along with the domestic companies, or those organized under the laws of other states. If all are on common ground, in a fair field, with
Judgment accoedingly.
Rehearing
The following opinions on motion for rehearing were filed March 23, 1905. Reheariny denied:
It is contended that the reciprocal tax law is repealed by implication. If the law is in fact repealed hy implication, it must he upon the ground that another valid, law exists, the enforcement of which is necessarily so inconsistent and repugnant as that both laws can not stand; the former, in such a case, being held to be by implication repealed. This method of repealing is not, of course, favored by the courts, and such a repeal is never effected, save there is a subsequent valid .enactment wholly repugnant to the older law. If there is no valid haw, there can be no repeal, and no law can be held to effect a repeal by implication where it has no other purpose'to subserve than that of repealing the prior enactment. That can only be accomplished by an express repealing statute. The act (Compiled Statutes, 1901, ch. 77, art. I, sec. 38) providing for taxing the net premiums of insurance companies says: “Insurance companies shall be subject to no other tax, fees or licenses, under the laws of this state.” The
The question is not of exemption of property that might be exempted, but of repeal by implication of an otherwise valid and enforceable statute. When this court said that an unconstitutional act is as ineffectual as though it had never been passed (Boales v. Ferguson, 55 Neb. 565), it stated what I conceive to be a truism, applicable to every word and syllable of an act held unconstitutional, whether it be a section, a part- of a section, a sentence or a clause, which is found by the court to be in conflict with some higher law. What the courts have said in the way of what may be termed modifications, qualifications or exceptions to the rule, does not lessen the force of the proposition. An unconstitutional law is for all purposes as though it had never been passed. Finders v. Bodle, 58 Neb. 57. An Ohio case, Treasurer of Fayette County v. Peoples & Drovers Bank, 47 Ohio St. 503, 10 L. R. A. 196, holds that one part of a section may be void without affecting the validity of the remainder, unless both parts are so interwoven as to be inseparable. This is but an extension of the rule that one section may be upheld and another condemned. The point is not whether the parts are contained in the same section — for the distribution into sec
“Obviously,” say the court, “the provisions of this section are directly opposed to those of the constitution * * * and therefore can not have the force of law, and are void. * * * For like reasons, section 3197, relating to change of venue, is void, and ineffectual for any purpose.”
And in Steed v. Harvey, 38 Utah, 367, 72 Am. St. Rep. 789, the rule that a part of an act, or of the same section, not dependent on another, may be held void, and the other valid, is recognized; but the same provision or section can not be held both void and valid. It seems to me that this undoubtedly announces the only rule that could be adopted with any degree of safety, or which could be intelligently applied in all cases where the question of the validity of a statute and its effect are to be considered and determined. In a United States supreme court case, Supervisors v. Stanley, 105 U. S. 305, a state statute on the assessment of the shares of bank stock conflicted in part with the United States statute authorizing deduction of debts, where that was the general rule in the state as to all other personal taxable property. The court held that the state statute was valid up to the point where it came in conflict with the congressional act, and that the taxation of bank stocks, without the allowance of deduction of debts, would render the taxes levied invalid only in so far as the tax debtor was entitled to deductions by virtue of the provisions of the act of congress. This, as I understand the case, is by the application of principles similar to those applied in the case of Scott v. Flowers, 61 Neb. 620, or to those sometimes applied to the taxation of the business of a corporation engaged in intrastate and interstate business, and the act is held to be valid so far as it affects
“In other words, in such a case, so much of the law as conflicts Avitli the act of congress in the given case is held invalid, and that part of the state law which is in accord with the act of congress is held to be the measure of his (the stockholder’s) liability. There is no difficulty here in drawing the line between those cases to which the statute does not apply and those to which it does, between the cases in which it violates the act of congress and those in which it does not. There is, therefore, no necessity of holding the statute void as to all taxation of national bank shares, when the cases in which it is invalid can be readily ascertained on presentation of the facts. It follows that the assessors were not without authority to assess national bank shares; that where no debts of the owners existed to be deducted the assessment was valid, and the tax paid under it a valid tax. That in cases where there did exist such indebtedness, which ought to be deducted, the assessment was voidable but not void.”
In other words, the statute could be given a constitutional construction in that it permitted the assessment of shares where no debts were to be deducted, and this construction was given in preference to one holding it wholly unconstitutional. In Poindexter v. Greenhow, 114 U. S. 270, the new act was held to be absolutely void, and of no effect, as to the right of certain parties holding bonds of the state to pay taxes by surrender of coupons for interest, as this would amount to the impairment of the obligation of a contract, otherwise the law was valid and enforceable. By the application of the same principle, we might, perhaps, if it were found necessary to uphold the law, construe the statute applying to deficiency judgments as being applicable only to contracts entered into after the passage of the deficiency judgment law. This same rule seems to be applied in Commonwealth v. Gagne, 153 Mass. 205, 10 L. R. A. 442.
REHEARING DENIED.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
The only question in this case is, whether or not the act of 1887, providing for a tax upon the net premiums of insurance' companies, repeals so much of the insurance law of 1873 as provides for what is commonly called “The reciprocal tax.”
An examination of our legislation affecting this question shows that the law relating to insurance companies, above mentioned, was passed at the legislative session of 1873, and has remained substantially the same from that day to this. Further examination discloses that when the general revenue law of 1879 was enacted it contained a section, to wit, section 38, almost identical in form and substance with the act of 1873, above mentioned, except that it provided for taxing insurance companies upon their gross premiums instead of their net premiums. In the act of 1879 it was provided:
“Insurance companies shall be subject to no other taxation, under the laws of this state, except taxes on real estate, and the fees imposed by the chapter on insurance.”
Under this law, which was in force from the time of its enactment until 1887, no claim was ever made that the clause, above quoted, .repealed the reciprocal tax law, either directly or by implication. On the contrary, the reciprocal tax was collected from, and paid by, all foreign insurance companies doing business in this state subject to taxation under the terms thereof, without objection. The act of 1887 (ch. 77, sec. 38), however, contains the following:
“Insurance companies shall be subject to no other tax, fees or licenses, under the laws of this state, except taxes on real estate, and the fees imposed by section 32 of an act*346 regulating insurance • companies, passed February 25, 1873.”
It will be observed that there is a slight difference in the wording of the two provisions, but they are in substance much the same. To me it seems quite doubtful if the legislature intended to change that part of the law relating to the reciprocal tax. Without doubt it was the intention of the lawmakers not to interfere with the operation of that law at all.
It is contended, however, that the clause in the law of 1887, last above quoted, repeals the reciprocal tax law, known as section 33 of the Compiled Statutes, relating to insurance companies. The repealing clause found in section 2 of the act of 1887 does not repeal section 33 of the statutes relating to insurance companies, in express terms; so, if that section is repealed at all thereby, it is by implication, and because it is in direct conflict with the clause last above quoted. Nothing else in the act of 1887 can be construed to affect the reciprocal tax law in any manner whatever. It is our unanimous opinion that so much of the last mentioned act as is quoted above is unconstitutional and void, because it exempts insurance companies from taxation on their personal property. It follows, then, that this clause falls to the ground, it goes out of the statute, and the law stands the same as though it had never existed, and had never been passed by the legislature, for any purpose. Conceding now the correctness of the view that the first clause of the act of 1887, which provides for taxing insurance companies upon their net premiums, is good and can be enforced, and must therefore stand, it by no means follows that the act operates to repeal the reciprocal tax law. That part of the act relating to the taxation of insurance companies upon their net premiums does not conflict with the reciprocal tax law in any manner whatever; and there has been no suggestion that both of these laws can not stand and be enforced together. We have, then, the proposition that the clause of the act which may be held to be valid is not in
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
Section 38 of the revenue law, referred to in the opinion, required insurance companies to be taxed upon the premiums received by them in excess of the losses and ordinary expenses, and provided that this taxation should be in lieu of all other taxes, except taxes on real estate. This provision, if entirely valid, would relieve insurance companies from the reciprocal tax, so called, which this action was brought to enforce against this defendant, and would also relieve them from taxation upon their personal property. These companies could not be relieved from taxation upon their personal property, because of the requirement of the constitution that every person and corporation shall pay a tax in proportion to the value of his, her or its property. The tax upon premiums provided for by the statute is held valid and enforced, and the opinion discloses that the provision of this statute doing away with the reciprocal tax, on account of the new tax imposed upon premiums, would be valid, if it were not for the fact that the same clause of the statute also attempts to relieve the personal property of these companies from taxation. It does not seem to be in harmony with reason or authority to hold that a sentence or clause of a statute which attempts to accomplish several distinct purposes must be held to be unconstitutional, in toto, because some one of the several things sought to be accomplished is beyond the poAver of the legislature. Exempting insurance companies from taxation upon their personal property was not an inducement to this legislation or to any part of it.
*348 “A law' which is unconstitutional within certain limitations, if in terms it exceeds or fails to notice those limitations, may yet be entirely operative within its legitimate sphere, and properly held to have the application which thus confines it.” Commonwealth v. Gagne, 153 Mass. 205, 10 L. R. A. 442. Poindexter v. Greenhow, 114 U. S. 270, 29 L. ed. 185; Board of Supervisors v. Stanley, 105 U. S. 305, 26 L. ed. 1044; Treasurer of Fayette County v. Peoples & Drovers Bank, 47 Ohio St. 503, 10 L. R. A. 196, and notes. Steed v. Harvey, 18 Utah, 367, seems to hold a contrary doctrine, but no satisfactory reason for such holding is given.
The conclusion reached in the opinion does not seem to me to be Avell supported by the reasons given. It may he that it can be supported upon other grounds. At all events the case has already been twice argued, and as the majority of the court are satisfied that no different result could be reached upon further consideration of the case, a further hearing does not seem advisable.
The following opinion on motion of state for judgment on the pleadings was filed February 8, 1906. Motion sustained:
Tliis cause ivas argued and submitted to the court while Chief Justice Holcomb presided. Before his term of office expired he prepared the following opinion, which meets with our approval, and which expresses our views with clearness and perspicuity:
“This cause is submitted on the petition of the plaintiff, the state, the second amended and substituted answer of the defendant, and a motion filed by the state for judgment on the pleading's. The court has heretofore considered and decided the principal legal questions arising in this controversy on a ruling on a demurrer interposed by the state to the answer of the defendant. State v. Insurance Co. of North America, ante p. 335.
“Nothing new or essentially different from' the questions already passed upon is presented by the defendant’s second amended and substituted answer except that it is now alleged that the defendant's business of insurance of property against loss by fire, as conducted and carried on between it and the citizens of the different states of the Union with whom it contracts for indemnity, is interstate commerce within the meaning of the clause of the constitution of the United States concerning the regulation of commerce between the different states of the Union and the citizens thereof; that the tax sought to be enforced by the state in this action constitutes a direct imposition upon the insurance business of the defendant, and that the section of the statute of this state authorizing the exaction sought to be enforced amounts to a regulation of commerce among the states and of the instrumentalities enjoyed therein; in violation of clause 3, section 8, article I of the constitution of the United States. The question thus presented pertains to the construction of the federal
“It is plausibly argued that the vast business of fire insurance, carried on, as it is, by the different companies and corporations of many of the state's with the citizens of all the state's of the Union, is so vital and inte'rwovem with our industrial and commercial fabric that it is essential to the welfare, success and permanence of our institutions, and is in its nature a commodity, in the; exchange of Avliich the business should be properly classed as interstate commerce, entitled to the protection and coming within the provision of the clause of the federal constitution to which reference has been made. Without taking the time to engage in a discussion of the question as an original proposition to be decided upon a course of reasoning and logic based upon underlying principles, and under the rules pertaining to the proper construction of provisions found in the fundamental law of the land, we must content ourselves by saying that the question can hardly be regarded as an open one, and that wo feel ourselves bound by the decisions of the highest judicial tribunal, whose special and peculiar function it is to construe a clause.of the constitution of the kind and character under consideration, and apply it to questions of litigation as they may arise. It is not for us to ignore, or seek to overturn the authoritative utterances of that august body, but rather to remand to it the question of Avhether its own opinions shall be approved and .followed, or overruled, because* upon further consideration they are believed to be, erroneous or unsound.
“In Now York Fire Ins. Co. v. Cravens, 178 U. S. 389, decided in 1900, by a unanimous court, it is held that “The business of insurance is not commerce, and the making of a contract of insurance is a mere incident of commercial intercourse in AArhich there is no difference AAdiat-ever between insurance against fire, insurance against the perils of the sea, or insurance of life.’ In the opinion, after discussing and affirming the power of the state to*351 regulate in the manner attempted, as shown' herein, it is by the court said: ‘Further comment on this head may not be necessary, and we only continue the discussion in deference to the insistence of counsel upon the interstate character of the policy in suit. It is the basis of every division of their argument, and an immunity from control is based upon it for plaintiff in error, which, it seems to be conceded, the state can exert over corporations of its own creation. An interstate character is claimed for the policy, as we understand the argument, because plaintiff in error is a New York corporation and the insured was a citizen of Missouri, and because, further, the plaintiff in error did business in other states and countries.’ And further it is observed: ‘Is the statute an attempted regulation of commerce between the states? In other words, is mutual life insurance commerce between the states? That the business of fire insurance is not interstate commerce is decided in Paul v. Virginia, 8 Wall. (U. S.) 168; Liverpool Ins. Co. v. Massachusetts, 10 Wall. (U. S.) 566; Philadelphia Fire Ass’n v. New York, 119 U. S. 110. That the business of marine insurance is not, is decided in Hooper v. California, 155 U. S. 648. In the latter case it is said that the contention that it is, “involves an erroneous conception of what constitutes interstate commerce.” We omit the reasoning by Avliich that is demonstrated, and will only repeat, “the business of insurance is not commerce. The contract of insurance is not an instrumentality of commerce. The making of such a contract is a mere incident of commercial intercourse, and in this respect there is no difference whatever between insurance against fire and insurance against the ‘perils of the sea.’ ” And we add, or against the uncertainty of man’s mortality.’
“Hooper v. California, supra, fully supports the later case of New York Life Ins. Co. v. Cravens. In Paul v. Virginia it is said by Mr. Justice Field, speaking for the court: ‘Issuing a policy of insurance is not a transaction of commerce, The policies are simple contracts of*352 indemnity against Joss by fire, entered into between the corporations and the assured, for a consideration paid by the latter. These contracts are not articles of commerce in any proper meaning of the word. They are not subjects of trade and barter offered in the market as something having an existence and value independent of the parties to them. They are not commodities to be shipped or forwarded from one state to another, and there put up for sale. They are like other personal contracts between parties which are completed by their signature and the transfer of the consideration. Such contracts are not interstate transactions, though the parties may be domiciled in different states. The policies do not take effect —are not executed contracts — until delivered by the agent in Virginia. They are, then, local transactions, and are governed by the local law. They do not constitute a part of the commerce between the states any more than a contract for the purchase and sale of goods in Virginia by a citizen of New York whilst in Virginia would constitute a portion of such commerce.’
“In Crutcher v. Kentucky, 141 U. S. 47, the question for decision was with reference to the validity of a state statute having for its object the regulation of agencies of foreign- express companies, and it is held that the statute was a regulation of interstate commerce, so far as -applied to corporations of another state engaged in that business, and was to that extent repugnant to the constitution of the United States. A consideration and comparison of the case last cited, with Hooper v. California, supra, will make clear and emphasize the holdings of the United States supreme court on the question of the conduct of the business of insurance not being of a character Avhich brings it within the scope of the commerce clause of the constitution. In both cast's, agents of the foreign corporations had been fined in the. state courts, for doing-business contrary to the provisions of the state statutes seeking to regulate the business of foreign corporations. Each of the statute's had been upheld in the state courts.*353 In the Hooper ease the statute ai'feeted foreign insurance companies, while in the Crutcher case it was directed against foreign express companies. The principal question in each case argued on appeal to the federal supreme court was, whether the statute under which the conviction was had contravened the provision of the federal constitution Avith reference to the regulation of interstate commerce. In the Hooper case the decision of the state court Avas affirmed on the ground, distinctly stated, that the business of insurance, carried on by a foreign corporation in the state of California did not involve interstate commerce and the state statute was therefore valid; Avhile in the, Crutcher case the decision of the state court was mmrsed for the sole and only reason that express companies were engaged in interstate commerce, and the law seeking to regulate the business of such companies c^ame in conflict Avith the commerce clause of the federal constitution. In the Crutcher case, in pointing out the distinction between the making of contracts of insurance; and interstate commerce, or the necessary instrumentalities thereof, it is said: ‘The case is entirely different from that of foreign corporations seeking to do a business which. eloe;s not belong to the regulating poAver of congress. The insurance business, for example, can not be carried on in a state by a foreign corporation without complying with all the conditions imposed by the legislation of that state. So with regard to manufacturing corporations, and all other corporations whose business is of a local and domestic nature, Avhich Avould include express companies whose business is confined to points and places wholly Avithin the state. The cases to this effect are; numerous.’
“ With these clear and explicit expressions as to the; proper construction of the clause of the constitution appealed to by the defendant in the case at bar, as it applies to the business of insurance, our duty appears reasonably plain, and Ave must hold to the; vie;w that the answer, in rc;spect to the matter being discussed,*354 states no defense to the canse of action pleaded by the plaintiff.”
With these views we are content, and for the reasons therein stated the plaintiff is entitled to judgment on its motion, and it is accordingly so ordered.
Judgment for plaintiff will be entered for the sum prayed for in its petition.
Judgment foe plaintiff.