103 Wis. 208 | Wis. | 1899
Lead Opinion
It is conceded that if defendant was entitled to the benefit of ch. 418, Laws of 1891, during the period covered by its several licenses, the judgment appealed from is wrong and must be reversed. That chapter exempts from the genei’aí insurance laws of the state imposing on accident insurance companies an annual license fee of $300, every corporation, society, order, or association therein named upon complying with its provisions. The descriptive words of the organizations covered by the act are contained in the following: “No fraternal or beneficiary corporation, society, order or association, furnishing life or casualty insurance or indemnity upon the mutual or assessment plan, organized under the laws of any other state or territory of the United States or District of Columbia, or foreign countries, . . . shall transact business in this state,” except upon compliance with the provisions
There is no need in this case of determining the precise meaning of the term “ beneficiary ” or “ benefit ” as descriptive of a species of insurance corporations or societies. It would be a task by no means free from difficulty. If it were undertaken we should find that such terms have not always been used in exactly the same sense in legislative enactments, and that the question has usually been found to be, in the adjudged cases, not what is their proper signification generally speaking, but in what sense were the terms used by the framers of the particular law under consideration. In Bacon’s work on Benefit Societies (§§ 23 to 52, inclusive), after a careful review of many cases on the subject, it is said, in substance, that the business of benefit societies js substantially that of furnishing life insurance; that the predominant feature of them and life insurance companies is the same, as to the payment of a definite sum to a designated beneficiary on the death of a member insured; that the essential difference between the two is the manner in which the fund is accumulated to meet matured claims. In life insurance companies it is accumulated by the payment of certain amounts at certain intervals, agreed upon in advance and presumed to be sufficient, based upon the probable duration of human life and the value of the use of the fund till needed to pay the expenses of conducting the business of the company and the claim at maturity, and also the
The consti-uction of the law of 1891, given as stated, doubtless governed its administration by the insurance department of the state from the time the decision was rendered down to about the time of the commencement of this litigation, covering a period of several years. It cannot now be changed. A construction so long followed must be considered a part of the legislative enactment the same as if plainly written into it originally. It cannot now be changed by construction any more than plain language used by the lawmaking power can be added to or taken from by judicial construction.
It follows from what has preceded that defendant is á beneficiary corporation furnishing casualty or life insurance upon the mutual or assessment plan, hence, admittedly, was exempt from the general insurance laws of the state as to the annual 1*300 license fee, except for the first license year, which commenced before the act of 1891 went into effect. As to that year appellant claims the benefit of the exemption, notwithstanding the license was issued and received when the fee of $300 was required to entitle its holder to do business under it, because the fee which it then conceded was required, being a sum other than the $300 fee, was not actually received by the state from defendant till two days after the change in the law. The mere fact that the commissioner of insurance irregularly permitted defendant to delay payment for the license till some days after it was issued and received, did not postpone its effect so as to
The conclusive answer to the contention that the statute of limitations pleaded bars the claim for the first license fee, is that defendant is a foreign corporation and has never been a resident of this state. By sec. 4231, R. S. 1878, it is excluded from the benefits of exemption statutes. We are not unmindful of the fact that the doctrine, that when a corporation, pursuant to a statutory requirement, maintains an attorney in the state upon whom process can be served in actions commenced in the courts of this state to enforce causes of action arising here, it is a resident of the state for all the purposes of litigation and therefore entitled to the benefit of exemption statutes. Nevertheless it seems clear that such doctrine results from a judicial reading into plain statutes words of exception not found there or contemplated by the lawmaking power, in violation of that inflexible rule that courts must take such statutes and enforce them as they find them, nothing adding thereto or taking therefrom. Moreover, notwithstanding the suggestion of counsel for appellant to the contrary, it is considered that in Travelers’ Ins. Co. v. Fricke, 99 Wis. 367, it was held by this court that
If the question, of whether the mere fact that a corporation maintains a resident attorney upon whom process can be served for the purpose of litigation in the courts of this state takes such corporation out of the general exception of nonresidents from the benefits of limitation statutes, were presented here for the first time, the change in sec. 4231, made in 1897, would be deemed quite sufficient to show a legislative purpose, not to give nonresidents, generally, the legal status of residents because of the circumstances mentioned, and would be considered controlling if the statute were deemed open to the operation of rules of construction. That amendment expressly conferred the rights of a resident on certain foreign corporations on condition, among other things, of their maintaining a resident attorney to receive service of process in actions commenced in this state on causes of action arising here. That special exception from the general exclusion of nonresidents from limitation
By the Court.— The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause remanded with directioDS to render judgment in favor of the plaintiff for the $300 license fee which should have been paid by defendant for its first license, with interest thereon from the time such fee was due to the state, and with the costs of the action as taxed and allowed.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). Although the legislature had plenary power to prescribe the conditions upon which foreign insurance companies might be allowed to do business in this state, yet I dissented in Travelers' Ins. Co. v. Fricke, 99 Wis. 376-378, on the ground that the statute was not sufficiently broad to authorize the commissioner of insurance to exact, as a condition precedent to the issuance of a new license, the payment of a fee which, as the statute has recently been construed by this court, might have been exacted in granting a license which had long before expired, but Avhich was never in fact exacted. The case at bar is a straight action of assumpsit, and it is held that the state may recover in this action on contract $300, as a license fee for the year 1891, which the insurance commissioner never until recently exacted, nor supposed he had any right to exact, and which the defendant never promised to pay. Under such circumstances, I am unable tó perceive upon what theory the defendant can be held liable for the amount mentioned upon an implied contract, to which the defendant never assented, and Avhich in fact was never made.
On the right of a foreign corporation to plead the statute of limitations, see note to Winney v. Sandwich Mfg. Co. (86 Iowa, 608), in 18 L. R. A. 524.—Rep.