94 Wis. 258 | Wis. | 1896
The first contention of the plaintiff is, in brief, that there are three classes of foreign life or accident insurance companies recognized by our statutes, viz.: (1) Life insurance companies; (2) life and accident insurance companies ; and (3) accident insurance companies; and that the first two classes of companies are required to pay an annual license fee of $300 only, and the third class a license fee of two per cent, upon the premium receipts for the preceding year. Further, it contends that it is a company of the second class, namely, a life cmd accident insurance company, and hence that it can only be compelled to pay a license fee of $300 per annum. The reasoning is sound if the first premise is correct; hence the question is whether that premise is correct. The consideration of this question calls for a review of the legislation on the subject, commencing -with.
• This view of the statute renders it harmonious and effective from beginning to end, while the other renders it absurd by creating two very singular, not to say ridiculous, gaps in it. But, whatever might be our conclusion as to the proper construction of this act had it remained upon the statute book, it seems to us entirely clear that the course of subsequent legislation upon the subject has relieved the question from all doubt. By ch. 214, Laws of 1878, an insurance department was organized, and the office of insurance commissioner was created, and the business of supervising insurance business of all kinds within the state was taken out of the hands of the secretary of state, and placed in charge of the new officer. By ch. 256, Laws of 1878, sec. 27 of ch. 59,
Thus it appears that in 1878 all- words indicating that there was or might be such a thing recognized by the insurance commissioner as a “ life and accident insurance company ” as a separate class or kind of insurance corporations disappeared entirely from the statute book. The law as it then stood recognized a life insurance company and an accident insurance company, and placed upon them substantially, the same requirements and restrictions as to their capital, reports, investments of funds, etc. It then provided that every company doing a life or accidental insurance business in this state should pay an annual license fee “ for transacting such business ” of $300, and that domestic companies should pay two per cent, of their cash premium receipts additional. The language here indicates plainly and unmistakably that the license fee is a license to transact the business either of life or accident insurance, and not both. In other words, the license fee is levied upon the business, and not upon the company. Thus, Avhen the revision of 1878 went into effect, the law as to insurance license fees stood as follows: All foreign fire and inland navigation insurance companies were required to pay two per cent, of the preceding year’s gross income on business transacted within the state. R. S. 1878, sec. 1219. All foreign life or accident companies were required to pay $300 per annum for transacting “such” business. All domestic life or accident companies were required to pay, in
But it is contended that there has been a practical construction placed upon the law by the insurance department
These conclusions determine this action, and render it cér-tain that the plaintiff was not entitled to the injunction asked for. It had not paid the license fees required by the plain provisions of the law for the transaction of accident insurance business for the current year, and consequently it was the duty of the insurance commissioner to revoke the license which had been erroneously issued. Whether the commissioner had a right to revoke the license in default of the payment of the two per cent, fee upon previous years’ business for all the years during which it had not been paid is a serious question, but one not necessary to be decided, and, in the absence of full argument, we do not deem it proper now to decide it. It is decisive of this case that the plaintiff
By the Court. — Judgment reversed, and action remanded with directions to dismiss the complaint.