American Motorists Insurance v. Central Garage

169 A. 121, 86 N.H. 362, 1933 N.H. LEXIS 65
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedNovember 7, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 169 A. 121 (American Motorists Insurance v. Central Garage) 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
American Motorists Insurance v. Central Garage, 169 A. 121, 86 N.H. 362, 1933 N.H. LEXIS 65 (N.H. 1933).

Opinion

Branch, J.

The course pursued by the plaintiff in attempting to ¡secure a decision upon the question of its duty to defend the suits which have been brought against the defendants in advance of their trial is undoubtedly correct. “Ordinarily, and in the absence of agreement of the parties, the issue is one calling for preliminary presentation, so that the insurer’s right or duty to defend the action for negligence may be first determined.” Sauriolle v. O’Gorman, ante, 39, 49. The declaratory judgment act (Laws 1929, c. 86) provides a convenient procedure for determining such a question, and the present petition is properly brought thereunder.

The first question transferred by the superior court reads as follows:

“1. Whether or not under the law of the State of New Hampshire an insurance company can from its home office outside of the State of New Hampshire, cancel an insurance policy by sending notice direct to the insured instead of through a resident licensed agent.”

This question arises by reason of the following provisions of the statute relating to foreign insurance companies and their agents.

“Licenses. If the foregoing provisions are complied with and 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 to do insurance business by authorized agents within the state, subject to the laws of the state, until April first thereafter. . . .” P. L., c. 275, s. 11.

The position of the defendants with reference to the effect of the foregoing provision is thus stated in their brief. “This is plainly a condition imposed by the legislature that the foreign insurance company shall be granted a license in this State to do business only by its authorized agents within the State . . . In sending out its notices of cancellation directly from the home office to the defendants, the company was not doing business ‘by its authorized agents within the .State’. . . . The plaintiff’s act then was unlawful and the courts only afford relief out of lawful transactions.”

Both of the policies in question contained provisions that notice of •cancellation mailed to the address of the assured should be a sufficient *365 notice on the part of the company. The defendants argue that these provisions are in conflict with the statute and for that reason nugatory.

The section of the statute above quoted had its origin in Laws of 1870, c. 1, s. 3, which provided, first, that no foreign insurance company should “transact any insurance business in this state” unless it should first obtain a license from the insurance commissioner; second, that after the insurance commissioner was satisfied that the requirements of the statute had been complied with by a foreign insurance company, he should issue a license “authorizing such company to do insurance business by authorized agents, subject to the laws of this state.” This language was retained without change in G. L., c. 174, s. 2 and Laws of 1889, c. 86, s. 1. Obviously the purpose of the legislature was to permit the transaction, under a license, of the business which foreign insurance companies were forbidden to do without a license, viz. “insurance business in this state.”

In the revision of 1891, the statutory provisions relating to foreign insurance companies were re-arranged and the long sections of the General Laws were replaced by a larger number of comparatively shorter sections in c. 169 of the Public Statutes. The first provision of Laws of 1870, c. 1, s. 3, above referred to, became section 1 of P. S., c. 169, in the following form. “Section 1. No insurance company not organized under the laws of this state shall do insurance business within the state unless it has obtained a license from the insurance commissioner authorizing it to do so.”

The second provision above referred to, concerning the issuance of licenses, became section 6 of the same chapter, which provides that if the provisions of the preceding sections have been complied with and the insurance commissioner is satisfied that the company is entitled to confidence, “he shall grant a license to it to do insurance business by authorized agents within the state, subject to the laws of the state.” (Italics ours.) All the language of the Public Statutes above quoted was retained in the revision of 1926. P. L., c. 275, ss. 1 and 11.

The prohibition against the transaction of “any insurance business in this state” having been separated in the Public Statutes from the provision authorizing the issuance of a license by four intermediate sections, the words “within the state” were apparently inserted after the word “agents” in the sixth section above referred to, not for the purpose of changing the existing law, but to avoid the seeming absurdity of directing the insurance commissioner to grant licenses to foreign insurance companies “to do insurance business by authorized *366 agents” which it must be assumed they were already authorized to do by the laws of the states in which they were incorporated. The conclusion that no material change in the law was intended is supported by the notation in the margin of the Commissioners’ Report of 1891, indicating that only verbal changes were suggested in section 6. Comm’rs Rep. 1891, 546-48. The meaning of this section, like that of the statute of 1870, is that the company shall be licensed to do insurance business within the state, by authorized agents.

It is true that subsequent sections of the same chapter relating to the licensing of agents do, in effect, require that certain transactions be carried out only through the medium of local agents. P. L., c. 275, ss. 15-19. It seems unnecessary to analyze in detail the provisions of these sections. It is sufficient to say that their net effect is to require that foreign insurance companies act through local agents in “negotiating for or placing risks, or delivering policies or collecting premiums.” P. L., c. 275, s. 17. Such an enumeration of acts which must be done through local agents negatives the argument that section 11 requires all acts affecting the business of foreign insurance companies in this state to be done by such agents. There is nothing in the statute which prohibits other transactions between such companies and their policy holders through other authorized agents. The contention of the plaintiff that the vice-president of a foreign insurance company cannot legally write and send through the mail a letter to one of its policy holders, would reduce the statute to an absurdity. We therefore conclude that P. L., c. 275, s. 11, does not demand that a foreign insurance company shall, as a condition of its license, transact all its business in this state through local licensed agents; nor is the giving of notice of cancellation one of the things required to be done by such agents.

The second question submitted to us for decision by the superior court is as follows:

“2. Whether or not the Insurance Commissioner’s report, decision and findings made by authority of P. L. Ch. 271, as amended by Ch.

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Bluebook (online)
169 A. 121, 86 N.H. 362, 1933 N.H. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-motorists-insurance-v-central-garage-nh-1933.