Aetna Casualty & Surety Co. v. Sullivan

143 A. 687, 83 N.H. 426, 1928 N.H. LEXIS 44
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedNovember 7, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 143 A. 687 (Aetna Casualty & Surety Co. v. Sullivan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aetna Casualty & Surety Co. v. Sullivan, 143 A. 687, 83 N.H. 426, 1928 N.H. LEXIS 44 (N.H. 1928).

Opinion

Peaslee, C. J.

This proceeding is designed to review the action of the insurance commissioner in refusing to renew the licenses of certain foreign insurance companies to do business in this state. The controversy relates to automobile public liability insurance, and the plaintiffs’ conduct in relation thereto.

The statute under which the commissioner acted reads: “If . . . the commissioner is satisfied that the company has the requisite capital and assets and is a safe, reliable company, entitled to confidence, he shall grant a license to it . . . ; and . . . such license may be renewed so long as the company shall comply with the requirements of the law and the commissioner shall regard it as safe, reliable and entitled to confidence.” P. L., c. 275, s. 11.

I. The underlying question presented here is whether the above provision relates solely to financial responsibility, or whether it has a broader scope and requires the commissioner to refuse to grant a license if for other reasons he is satisfied that it does not appear that *428 the applicant is reliable and entitled to confidence. Upon the plain meaning of the language used, the latter is the true interpretation. It is matter of common knowledge that not every opulent individual or corporation is either reliable or entitled to confidence. Mere ability to pay does not prevent one from being a cheat, or from taking unfair advantage of those in need.

The idea that insurance companies are peculiarly exposed to temptation in such respects, and that they sometimes yield thereto, has found frequent expression both in legislation and in judicial decisions. This view long antedated the adoption of the statute under consideration. The enactment involved no innovation in that respect.

It is urged that such an interpretation leaves the matter with no certain test for admissibility established. It is true that the test is not a mathematical one; but it may well have been regarded by those who established it as a very practical one, and well calculated tb protect the people of the state from the supposed abuses above referred to. The commissioner could ascertain, as the ordinary individual could not, whether the company was honorable in its dealings and whether it offered fair or unfair contracts. The measure was enacted for the protection of the people, rather than for the benefit of the companies. Past experience was believed to show the need for such protection, and the statute is to be construed from that point of view.

Similar tests for qualification in certain occupations are frequently prescribed by statute. School teachers (P. L., c. 117, s. 11), hawkers and peddlers (P. L., c. 157, s. 2), junk dealers (P. L., c. 159, s. 1), lightning-rod dealers (P. L., c. 160, ss. 3, 5), guides(P. L., c. 203, s. 5), physicians (P. L., c. 204, s. 10), dentists (P. L., c. 205, s. 7), chiropractors (P. L., c. 206, s. 8), optometrists (P. L., c. 207, s. 22), veterinarians (P. L., c. 209, s. 12), pharmacists (P. L., c. 210, s. 30), nurses (P. L., c. 211, s. 1), dealers in securities (P. L., c. 284, ss. 10,12), and lawyers (P. L., c. 325, ss. 2, 3) are all required to possess certain character qualifications. If the argument advanced here were sound, then all these statutes would be void as furnishing no certain test to guide the action of those whose duty it is to pass upon the qualification of the applicants. Hanover &c. Precinct v. Atkins, 78 N. H. 308; Sundeen v. Rogers, ante, 253.

The court has not heretofore found it impossible to apply the test of worthiness of public confidence. “Character, no less than medical education, skill, and experience, is, within the meaning of the statute, a qualification for a competent physician or surgeon. One who does not possess the requisite qualifications cannot be worthy of public *429 confidence.” Gage v. Censors, 63 N. H. 92, 94. Power to grant a license upon a finding that the applicant is a suitable person, may be conferred. State v. Cohen, 73 N. H. 543; Diepenbrock v. State Board, 82 N. H. 451.

The suggestion that the provision for licensing foreign insurance companies originated with Laws 1870, chapter 1, overlooks the provision found in Laws 1869, chapter 13, section 4. The condition there made was that license should be issued if in the opinion of the commissioners “the business of such company is properly conducted, and such company is safe, reliable and entitled to public confidence, and not otherwise.” While the phrase “the business of such company is properly conducted” is omitted in the act of 1870, its insertion in the act of 1869 shows that the legislature then had in mind something more than mere financial ability. It negatives whatever force there otherwise might be in the suggestion that up to 1870 legislation upon this subject related to finances only.

The omission of that phrase in 1870 was probably due to the evident fact that it was included in those which followed. It is not to be assumed that there was a purpose to discard any of the safeguards theretofore provided. The manifest design of the enactment was quite to the contrary.

The statute relating to lightning rod dealers (P. L., c. 160, s. 3) contains a more explicit statement of the qualifications required as follows:" . . . is safe and reliable as to assets, business standing and methods, and is entitled to confidence.” The same thought is expressed in another form in the phrase “has the requisite capital and assets and is a safe, reliable company, entitled to confidence.”

It is argued that section 12 of the act providing for licensing foreign insurance companies (Laws 1870, c. 1) proves that the words “safe, reliable and entitled to public confidence” relate to financial stability only. That section provides for proceedings to wind up a domestic company when upon complaint and examination the commissioner is “of opinion that the affairs of the company are in such condition as to render it unsafe or unworthy of public confidence.” Financial unsoundness unquestionably shows that the company is unsafe and not entitled to confidence. But it by no means follows that unreliability may not exist in other respects.

In the revision of 1891, the phrase “unworthy of public confidence” was omitted from the foregoing provision as to winding up domestic companies (P. S., c. 168, s. 34), but the corresponding phrase was retained as to licensing foreign companies (P. S., c. 169, s. 6). This *430 plainly evidences an intent to differentiate the conditions laid down in the respective sections.

Comparison of the provisions of section 11, P. L., c. 275, with those relating to licenses for domestic companies furnishes added evidence that the terms “safe, reliable company, entitled to confidence,” include more than financial standing. Local companies are required to conform to a certain standard of financial responsibility (P. L., c. 273, ss.

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Bluebook (online)
143 A. 687, 83 N.H. 426, 1928 N.H. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aetna-casualty-surety-co-v-sullivan-nh-1928.