109 Minn. 364 | Minn. | 1909
The defendant is a corporation organized under chapter 186, Laws 1885, for the purpose of insuring upon the mutual plan, amongst other hazards, damage by hail to growing crops. For some time prior to March 1, 1903, the defendant was duly authorized to transact such insurance business in the state of Iowa. . Its license to do so expired upon February 28, 1903, and since then it has been refused admission to that state. On or about April 8, 1903, the defendant issued and delivered to the plaintiff by mail its insurance policy of that date, whereby in consideration of an annual assessment, the exact amount of which was to be subsequently determined, but which should in no case exceed a stated amount, it insured the plaintiff against loss or damage by hail to his growing crops upon certain lands situated in the state of Iowa, of which state the plaintiff was a resident. The crops on those premises were damaged by hail July
The by-laws of the company provided that if the net proceeds of any assessment, together with seventy-five per cent, of the surplus fund, should be insufficient to pay all claims and expenses, the expenses of the company should be first paid, and the remainder divided pro rata among loss claims which should be payment in full. The policy provided for arbitration in case of disagreement, and “that no suit or action against this company for recovery of any claim for loss by virtue of this policy shall be sustainable in any court until after an award shall have been obtained fixing the amount of claim by arbitration in the manner above provided, nor unless such suit or action shall be commenced within sixty days after the loss shall have occurred.”
In October, 1903, an assessment amounting to $21 was levied against the plaintiff. He remitted the amount to the defendant, who returned it to the plaintiff, on the ground that the policy was void, having been issued in the state of Iowa upon property in and to a resident of that state, while the defendant was unauthorized to transact such business in Iowa. The plaintiff subsequently remailed the amount of the assessment to the defendant, which claims never to have received the letter containing it. The court, upon sufficient evidence, found payment by plaintiff of the assessment.
The statutes of Iowa provide the conditions upon which foreign insurance companies may transact business in that state, and forbid the issuance of insurance policies by any corporation not complying with those statutes, and establish penalties for any such unauthorized act; and in addition section 1758, tit. 9, c. 4, of the Iowa Code, provides: “No action shall be maintained in any court in the state upon any policy or contract of fire insurance issued upon' any prop
This action was commenced on July 20, 1904, was tried by the ■court without a jury, and judgment directed and entered in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of $155 and interest from December 1, 1903. The defendant appeals from this judgment, and has made forty ¿separate assignments of error, which, however, have been grouped and may be considered as follows: 1. That there was no arbitration, nor was the action commenced within sixty days after loss. 2. The ■contracts were Iowa contracts, and, being void in Iowa, were unenforceable in Minnesota. 3. That, inasmuch as the defendant could not have enforced the payment of assessments, the plaintiff cannot •enforce the payment of loss. 4. That in rendering judgment against -the defendant the court failed to give full faith and credit to the public acts, records, and judicial proceedings of another state.
1. The action in this case was upon the adjustment entered into between the plaintiff and defendant August 1, 1903. The policy required arbitration only when the parties disagreed as to the amount ■of the loss. They having agreed and adjusted the loss, there was nothing to arbitrate. In the adjustment agreement, the company agreed to pay the loss “on or about December 1,” 1903. The plaim •tiff could commence no action before that date, and so could not have brought the action within sixty days from July 20, the date upon which the loss occurred. The result of the adjustment was to put the plaintiff’s claim, with respect to the time of bringing suit, entirely •outside of the policy, and the only limitation upon the time for bringing action was the statutory one. McCallum v. National Credit Ins. Co., 84 Minn. 134, 86 N. W. 892.
2. None of the provisions of the Iowa law to which we have been referred declare void a policy of insurance issued in that state by a company not authorized to transact business there. The effect
3. The contention that the defendant could not have enforced the assessment against the plaintiff,' and that, therefore, the'plaintiff cannot maintain an action to recover for loss under the policy, is necessarily included in what has already been said. That identical claim was rejected in the Seamans case, above referred to, and under that authority the result .is the same, even if the policy were actually delivered in Iowa.
4. The judgment against the defendant in no way violates the provision of the federal constitution requiring each state to give full faith and credit to the acts, records, and judicial proceedings of every other state. The court did- not refuse to give effect to any provision of the Iowa statutes, but simply held that a corporation of this state could not avoid liability by pleading its own wrong. The fact that the defendant corporation is a mutual insurance company, which collects its premiums in the form of assessments, is, to our mind, immaterial. The contract of insurance provided that it would pay all the damage sustained by the plaintiff from the happenings insured against. There is no claim made by the defendant that the proceeds of the assessment made by it during the year 1903 were not
.Judgment affirmed.