222 P. 37 | Wyo. | 1924
This is an original action in mandamus raising the question of the right of the defendant, the state insurance commissioner, to cancel a certificate of authority or license, which we shall call the license, dated January 30, 1923, issued to the relator as agent of the Mountain States Life Insurance Company.
On its face the license in question authorizes the relator to act under it until March 31, 1924.
The petition alleges that the license was cancelled by defendant September 25, 1923 on the pretended ground that relator had sold or offered to sell as an inducement to insurance or in connection therewith the stocks of said com
The attorney general demurs to the petition on the ground that it does not state facts sufficient to constitute, a cause of action.
The statute providing for licenses like the one in question is as follows (See. 5277 Wyo. C. S. 1920)
“Before transacting any fire, life or other indemnity or insurance business, each and every agent, firm or corporation acting as agent, solicitor or representative of such corporations or associations, shall procure annually from the state auditor a certificate of authority or license as an agent, solicitor or representative of each corporation or association represented by him or them, and which certificate shall terminate or expire on the 31st day of December of each year unless sooner revoked or terminated as otherwise provided, for which a fee of two dollars for each certificate shall be paid to the state auditor. Certificates of authority or license issued under this section shall be considered the license of the company, corporation, association or society applying for the same, and shall not be transferable from the agent, firm or corporation for which the license was originally issued to another agent, firm or corporation. ’ ’
By later laws the insurance commissioner has succeeded to the duties formerly performed by the state auditor as ex-officio insurance commissioner.
It is also contended in support of the demurrer that the last sentence of section 5277, providing that the license “shall be considered the license of the company, corporation, association or society applying for the same,” makes the license the property of the insurance company, and that the agent has no right therein or thereunder to entitle him to maintain an action of this kind, and, therefore, the action is not prosecuted on the relation of the real party in' interest. Although the license be considered the license of the company it cannot be doubted that the agent’s right to do business for the company is dependent upon it. Of course, the license has no value to the agent unless he has also authority from the company, and if it were shown that the company no longer recognizes the agency, it would seem that the license would have no value either to the agent or the company, but such a state of facts does not appear from the petition. We think it fair to 'infer from the petition that the relation of principal and agent between the company and the relator continues, and that all that stands in the way of the agent’s right to transact business for the
The attorney-general takes the position that under sections 5235 and 5237, C. S. 1920, the commissioner had the power without notice or hearing to revoke the license on the ground which the petition alleges he gave as the reason for his action. Counsel for plaintiff contends that the statutes do not authorize a revocation of a license for that reason, and that, if they do, they are to that extent void because they fail to provide for a notice and hearing and are therefore contrary to the due process clauses of both the state and federal constitutions and to section 7 of article 1 of the state constitution providing that:
“Absolute, arbitrary power over the life, liberty and property of free men exists nowhere in the republic, not even in the largest majority. ’ ’
The questions raised by these conflicting contentions we deem it unnecessary to decide in ruling on the demurrer, for, if the attorney-general’s view be accepted, we think it does not follow that the petition does not state a cause of action. We are dealing with a business which it is admitted the state has no power to suppress or prohibit, but only to regulate. The relator had some right under the license. Though it may be granted that it was not property, it was nevertheless of value to him and could not be arbitrarily taken from him any more than his real or personal property could be so taken. Dent v. West Virginia, 129 U. S. 114; 9 Sup. Ct. 231, 32 L. ed. 623. Many cases relied upon by counsel for plaintiff seem to hold that such a right can only be taken after a judicial or quasi-judicial investigation upon notice and with an opportunity to be heard. Of these cases we cite only a few. Balling v. Elizabeth, 79 N. J. L. 197; 74 Atl. 277; Abrams v. Jones, 35 Ida. 532, 207 Pac.
If we ought to accept the principle last stated, and if the cancellation of relator’s license can be justified thereunder, it would seem clear under these authorities that the commissioner’s action in cancelling the license was administrative, as distinguished from judicial, for the authorities agree that to constitute due process in judical proceedings affecting personal or property rights there must be notice and an opportunity to be heard. And if it is to be held that a license can be thus revoked by an administrative act without notice or hearing or opportunity to be heard, and it should also be held that the commissioner’s action may not be questioned by mandamus, we fear the result would be to repose in the commissioner an uncontrolled discretion which would permit unreasonable or arbitrary action. This view finds support in cases relied upon by the attorney general. For instance, People vs. Health Department, supra, cited also by counsel for plaintiff, the court in considering the right of a board of health to revoke a permit to sell milk said at page 194 of 189 N. Y.; 82 N. E. 189.
By section 6 of chapter 142, laws of 1921, an act to establish an insurance code, it is provided, among other things, that “nothing in this act shall be construed to prevent the company or person affected by any order, ruling, proceeding (,) act, or action of the commissioner * * * from testing the validity of the same in any court of competent jurisdiction, through injunction, appeal, error or other proper process or proceeding, mandatory or otherwise.” While, perhaps, this section does not of its own force give the relator the right to mandamus or to any other particular proceeding to test the validity of the commissioner’s action, it may well be considered as a board legislative declaration of an intention to preserve to all persons aggrieved by the commissioner’s acts some appropriate method of review or control! under other statutes or the common law. In the case at bar mandamus is an appropriate, if not the only, remedy.
We think the petition sufficiently alleges that the stated ground for cancelling the license did not in fact exist. The demurrer admits that that allegation is true, and it would
Demurrer Overruled.