Aetna Insurance v. Hawkins

125 S.W. 313, 103 Tex. 195, 1910 Tex. LEXIS 276
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 2, 1910
DocketNo. 2067
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 125 S.W. 313 (Aetna Insurance v. Hawkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aetna Insurance v. Hawkins, 125 S.W. 313, 103 Tex. 195, 1910 Tex. LEXIS 276 (Tex. 1910).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Williams

delivered the opinion of the court.

The relator asks for a mandamus to require respondent to issue to it a certificate of authority to do a fire insurance business. The respondent has refused to issue the certificate for the reason that relator has not furnished the bonds, which, according to respondent’s contention, .are required by the Act of March 20, 1909. (Laws 31st Leg., 182.)

The controversy is as to the true construction of the provisions of that Act concerning the bonds exacted of fire insurance companies. The first point of difference is as to the number of bonds required, respondent demanding two upon the contention that one is required by the first section and another by the third section of the statute, while relator insists that the two sections require only one bond, the amount' of the penalty of which depends upon the varying conditions prescribed.

While the two sections give color to the insistence of respondent, in that each provides for a bond without express reference to, or limitation upon the other, a close examination of the provisions, in connection with the account given of their passage through the legislature, convinces us of the correctness of relator’s position.' In the first place no sensible reason can be- given for the requirement of two such bonds as would be produced if one were taken under each of the sections. The first section prescribes a bond in a sum equal to twenty-five percent of premiums collected during the preceding year, not to exceed $50,000 nor to be less than $10,000, conditioned “that said company will pay all its lawful obligations to citizens of this State.” The third section, in substance, provides that before any company shall issue any policy, etc., it “shall first have filed . . . during the calendar year in which such policy may issue ... a bond . . . in a sum not less than ten thousand dollars, conditioned for the payment of all lawful obligations to citizens of this State arising out of any policies or contracts issued by such fire insurance company,” and makes it a penal offense for any company to issue policies, etc., without having given this bond. It is thus seen that the condition is the same in the two sections except that the last adds the restrictive language, “arising out of any policies or contracts issued by such fire insurance company.” If this should be regarded as requiring anything less than the first section, a question to which we shall recur, it is nevertheless true that a bond in the language of the first section would comprehend all that is provided for bv the third, and, hence, if two bonds are contemplated, they would be for the same purpose, which requirement would appear to be senseless.

Further, we observe that section three names no payee and prescribes no rule by which the amount of the penalty is to be ascertained, except that it is to be “not less than” an amount named. This at once suggests the thought that some other part' of the Act [197]*197is to be consulted to find the payee and the rule for fixing the penalty, and that the words, “not less than ten thousand dollars,” were intended merely to require that, in any event, the bond in contemplation be at least in that sum; in other words, that section three is, in this particular, a complement of section one, intended to supply a further provision concerning the same bond there provided for. This theory meets with the difficulty that section one itself provides all that is essential, as to the elements of the bond, if only one is to be given, viz.: the rule for determining its sum, a maximum, a minimum and a payee, which raises the inquiry, why put this provision in section three only to erect a safeguard already provided in section one? A reasonable explanation is found in the journal of the Senate in which the bill originated. The original bill has, it seems, disappeared from the files, but the Senate journal gives the words which were stricken out and those which were added by amendment, and thus supplies the data for reproducing it by reinserting in the law, as it now stands, the words stricken out and omitting from it those inserted. When this is done we find that the bill as originally introduced provided in section one for a bond equal in amount to fifty percent of the previous year’s premiums, and fixed neither a maximum nor a minimum. When it is considered that some companies might apply for certificates when they had previously done little or no business and could therefore be admitted practically without bond, it will be seen that this was not an adequate provision, a deficiency supplied by section three in the requirement of a bond of at least $10,000. The length of the provision and its verbosity may have been thought to be proper to the definition of the offense penalized by that section. Doubtless it was because section three was intended merely to prescribe a minimum amount for the penalty of the bond treated of by both sections and at the same time to make it an offense to do business without having given it, that no payee, nor rule for fixing the amount were therein prescribed, those things being left to be regulated by section one. We thus find what we regard as a reasonable explanation of a provision which, if regarded as the requirement of a bond for the same purpose for which another had already been required, would be inexplicable. Amendments were offered and adopted in the Senate which inserted in section one a maximum and a minimum penalty and thereby dispensed with the necessity of the provision of section three as to the amount and condition of the bond; but that section still performed an important office, in that it defined and punished an offense. Its provision concerning the bond was not amended or changed in any way and, therefore, it means, as it now stands in the law, no more than it meant when originally introduced. When a company applies for a permit and executes a bond as provided in the first section, which it must do before it is authorized to pursue its business, it has complied with the third section, in that it has “filed” a bond “in a sum of not less than ten thousand dollars.” Doubtless this statute was framed upon the assumption that certificates of authority to do business in this' State dated from the beginning of each year and that the necessary bond would then be given [198]*198and, hence, the language in section three, “during the calendar year in which such policy may issue.”

Another contention of the relator is that it is not now required to give a bond at all, for the reason that it gave one in full compliance with section one of the Act, within ninety clays after it took effect as required by section two, which will continue in force and meet the purposes of the law after the issuance of the new certificate applied for. To this we do not agree. Certificates of authority must, under other statutory provisions, be obtained annually. Section one of this Act requires that “every fire insurance company, etc., applying for a certificate of authority, etc., shall, before obtaining such certificate” file the preseibed bond. Ho business can be done without the annual certificate and no certificate can be obtained without the bond. It necessarily follows that the bond must be given whenever application is made for a certificate. The condition of the bond corresponds. It is that the company will pay all its lawful obligations, etc.; which plainly contemplates the accrual of liabilities which the company becomes bound to pay, and it is for this the bond is security.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 S.W. 313, 103 Tex. 195, 1910 Tex. LEXIS 276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aetna-insurance-v-hawkins-tex-1910.