Birch v. Mutual Reserve Life Insurance

91 A.D. 384, 86 N.Y.S. 872
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 15, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 91 A.D. 384 (Birch v. Mutual Reserve Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Birch v. Mutual Reserve Life Insurance, 91 A.D. 384, 86 N.Y.S. 872 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Hirschberg, P. J. :

The plaintiff has recovered judgment in this State as assignee of seven judgments which were recovered against the defendant in the State of North Carolina upon contracts of life insurance. The defendant is incorporated in this State as a life insurance corporation, and for'many years prior to the 20th day of May, 1899, wap engaged in the life insurance business in North Carolina. The contracts in question were executed in that State during that period, and the judgments in that State were recovered upon the service of process upon the Insurance Commissioner, of North Carolina after [386]*386May 20, 1899. The question presented upon the appeal is whether by such service of process the North Carolina court acquired jurisdiction to render the judgments.

It has been the policy of the State of North Carolina for many years to require foreign insurance companies, as a condition, precedent to the transaction of business in that State, to appoint an agént residing in the State upon whom civil process may be served, the appointment to be binding upon the companies so long as any liability against them may be outstanding in the State. ■ (See Public Laws of N. C. of 1876,-'77 chap. 157, § 3; Public Laws of N. C. of 1883, chap. 57, § 2; Public Laws of N. C. of 1899, chap. 54, § 62.) The latter section was in force at the time of the recovery of the judgments referred to, and it .provided as follows: “No foreign insurance company shall be admitted and authorized to do business until * * * Third. It shall by a duly executed ' instrument filed in his office constitute and appoint the insurance commissioner, or his successor, its true and lawful attorney, upon whom all lawful processes in any action or legal proceeding against it may be served, and therein shall agree that any lawful process against it which may be served upon its said attorney shall be of the same force and validity as if served on the company * * ** and the authority thereof shall continue in force irrevocable so long as any liability of the company, remains outstanding in this commonwealth. The service of such process shall be made by leaving the . same in the hands or office of the insurance commissioner. Copies of such instrument, certified by the insurance commissioner, shall be deemed sufficient* evidence thereof, and' service upon such attorney shall be deemed sufficient service upon the principal.”

On the 13th day of April, 1899, the defendant, in conformity with this law, duly executed and delivered, to the insurance commissioner of North Carolina the required power of attorney, making him or his successor its true and lawful attorney in that State, upon whom all lawful processes might be served with the same force and validity as if served upon the defendant, and expressly providing that such authority should continue in force and be irrevocable so long as any liability of the defendant should remain outstanding in the State.

On May 17, 1899, the defendant, by its board of directors, [387]*387assumed to cancel and revoke this power of attorney, and it is the claim of the defendant that upon the twentieth day of May following it withdrew from all business within the State of North-Carolina, and has never since transacted any business there; that the power of attorney thereby became null and void; and that accordingly the service of process after that date upon the Insurance Commissioner was without effect so far as concerns the jurisdiction of the. court in that State to render judgment against the defendant based upon such service.

The defendant relies in its contention chiefly upon the- authority of the case of Woodward v. Mutual Reserve Life Ins. Co. (84 App. Div. 324), which decides that where a policy of insurance has been issued before the execution of the power of attorney and consequently not in reliance thereon, the policyholder’s contractual rights are not affected by the revocation of the power and such revocation is, therefore, valid and effectual as to them.

Some of the contracts in this case were issued during the life of the law of 1876-77 and all before the passage of the act of 1899.' They were all executed presumably in reliance upon the provisions of law of North Carolina existing at the time, by which as a condition of doing business in the State the defendant was required to maintain some agent or attorney in the State upon whom sérvice of process might lawfully be made so long as contractual -liability, existed. It was doubtless an immaterial matter who the individual, or official might be upon whom service could be made, so long as there was some one designated in the State through whom jurisdiction as against the defendant might be acquired. It is also a fair presumption that these policies were kept in force by the policyholders in reliance .upon the fact that the defendant under the laws of the State had designated an agent or attorney upon whom process might be served therein. I think under the circumstances that so long as the defendant continued to transact insurance business' in the .State the Insurance Commissioner remained its agent for the ■purpose of receiving service of process to enforce its existing obligations notwithstanding the attempt of the defendant to revoke and cancel his authority.

The Woodward Oase (supra), was submitted upon an agreed statement of facts, among which was the fact stated in the submis[388]*388sion that, the defendant had not done or transacted any business in North Carolina after the revocation of the power of attorney. In this case the learned trial court has found upon sufficient evidence that subsequently to May 20, 1899, the defendant continued to do business in the State of North Carolina, and was doing insurance business in that State at the time of the service of process in the. several suits wherein the judgments were recovered which are sued on in this action. It is true that the defendant did withdraw its agents from the State and ceased to solicit new business, but-it continued to collect premiums and to pay losses on its old policies and to' compromise and adjust claims arising thereon in the State. In Mutual Life Insurance Co. v. Spratley (172 U. S. 602, 610) the court said: “In a suit where no property of a corporation is within the State, and the judgment sought is a personal one, it is a material inquiry to ascertain whether the foreign corporation is engaged in •doing business within the State (Goldey v. Morning News, 156 U. S. 519 ; Merchants' Manufacturing Co. v. Grand Trunk Railway Co., 13 Fed. Rep. 358) ; and, if so, the service of process must he upon some agent so far representing the corporation in the State that he may properly be held in law an agent to receive such process in behalf of the corporation. An express authority to receive process is not always necessary. We think the evidence in this case shows that the company was doing business within the State at the time of this service of process. From 1870 until 1894 it had done an6 active business .throughout the State by its agents therein, and had issued policies of insurance upon the lives of citizens of the State. How many policies it had so issued does not appear. Its action in July, 1894, in assuming to withdraw from the State, was simply a recall of its agepts doing business therein,, the giving of a notice, to the State insurance commissioner, and a refusal.to take any new risks or to issue any new policies within the State.

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Bluebook (online)
91 A.D. 384, 86 N.Y.S. 872, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/birch-v-mutual-reserve-life-insurance-nyappdiv-1904.