Booker & Kinnaird v. Louisville Board of Fire Underwriters

224 S.W. 451, 188 Ky. 771, 21 A.L.R. 531, 1920 Ky. LEXIS 352
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedSeptember 17, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 224 S.W. 451 (Booker & Kinnaird v. Louisville Board of Fire Underwriters) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Booker & Kinnaird v. Louisville Board of Fire Underwriters, 224 S.W. 451, 188 Ky. 771, 21 A.L.R. 531, 1920 Ky. LEXIS 352 (Ky. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Chief Justice Carroll

Overruling motion for injunction asked by plaintiffs.

Many years ago the Louisville Board of Fire Underwriters, a voluntary unincorporated association of fire and tornado insurance agents having no capital stock but charging an admission fee, was organized in the city of Louisville.

The objects of the association are thus stated in its constitution:

“Its objects shall be the promotion of harmony and correct practice in the business of fire and tornado un[773]*773derwriting; the maintenance of established rates and forms of fire and tornado insurance; the regulation and employment of solicitors as to their number and conditions; the adoption of such by-laws and regulations and their enforcement by the imposition of fines, penalties and expulsion for violation as the best interests of fire and tornado underwriting may seem to require; and to do any and all things as in their 'judgment may redound to the improvement and elevation of the business of fire and tornado insurance.

“It shall have jurisdiction over all fire and tornado business of insurance taken by its members and prescribe a uniform manner of conducting said business.”

It is also provided in the Constitution that: “No person shall be eligible for election to membership in this board who does not represent at least two companies (other than local companies) that have no other agent in the city of Louisville (except as hereinafter provided in the constitution or by-laws), and has not an office of his own, and who does not intend and after election shall not be engaged solely in the business of fire and tornado insurance or such other business as the board, after receiving the report of the committee on membership, shall decide not to be in conflict with the fire and tornado insurance business or the interests of other members. “No member of this board shall take the agency of a company which has already two existing agencies in the city of Louisville, except that a company obtaining control of the business (other than that of the retiring company in its home state) by purchase, reinsurance or otherwise of any other company then represented by a member of this board, may continue the business in that agency either in its own name or under any underwriting, agency title it may select.”

In the by-laws adopted by the association are these provisions:

“A. Members shall not receive business from any company, person or firm engaged in the fire and tornado insurance business, who is a resident of the city of Louisville, and who is not a member of this board.

“Members shall not place business with any one not a member of this board, who is a resident of the city of Louisville, except when instructed by the assured to do so or where the facilities of all companies represented by members of this board, acceptable to the assured, [774]*774have been, exhausted, and in such cases, shall immediately report in writing to the secretary.

“B. Whenever a company represented by a member of this board is also represented by an agent not a member hereof, the secretary shall immediately bulletin such fact to all members, and if the non-board representation of said company is not discontinued in fifteen days from date of such bulletin, it shall be the duty of all board members representing such company to immediately resign the agency thereof, unless the terms of limitation shall have been extended by action of the board. Not applicable to automobile floater insurance.”

In other by-laws provision was made for the infliction of fines, and the expulsion of members from the board who refused to obey or violated the constitution or by-laws.

There are many other clauses in- the constitution and by-laws regulating the business conduct of the association and its members, but the ones quoted are sufficient for the purposes of this case.

In 1902 the plaintiffs, Booker & Kinnaird, fire insurance agents in the city of Louisville, became members of the board and retained their membership in good standing from that time until June, 1920, when the matters now in litigation came up between them and the board and its members.

In March; 1920? the Firemen’s Insurance Company of New Jersey, which was then and had been for many years represented in Louisville by Booker & Kinnaird, appointed L. W. Botts of Louisville its agent to solicit and issue policies of fire insurance, and procured a license to be issued to Botts by the state of Kentucky, authorizing him to conduct the business of fire insurance agent for the use and benefit of the Fidelity & Columbia Trust Company, a Louisville' corporation, of which Botts was the president. Botts was not a member of the board, and could not under its rules become one because he was not then engaged solely in the business of an insurance agent and did not intend to engage in this business except in connection with his presidency of the trust company.

At the time Botts was appointed an agent for the Firemen’s Insurance Company in the city of Louisville the plaintiffs Booker & Kinnaird were also acting and had been for some time as its agent in Louisville. Soon [775]*775after the' appointment of Botts as agent for this company, the hoard pursuant to rule B. before quoted demanded of Booker & Kinnaird that they have the Firemen’s Insurance Company cancel the appointment of Botts as its agent, or themselves surrender their agency for the company, stating that in the event of the failure of Booker & Kinnáird either to have the agency of Botts cancelled by the company or to resign their own agency they would be subject to the penalties of fine or expulsion as provided in the constitution and by-laws of the board.

When this demand was made of Booker &. Kinnaird, they refused to surrender their agency for the Firemen’s Insurance Company or to make any effort to have this company cancel the agency of Botts, and to avoid the penalties authorized to be imposed by the constitution and by-laws upon recalcitrant agents they resigned as members of the board, and thereupon brought this suit in the Jefferson circuit court, against the board and the forty-one firms’ and individual agents who were members of it, seeking an injunction against the board and its members to restrain it and them from ■ combining, conspiring or acting in concert to injure the business ol Booker & Kinnaird, as insurance agents, by attempting to enforce against them or the insurance companies represented by them the provisions of the by-laws heretofore set out.

As grounds upon which to rest this prayer for injunctive relief, it was averred in the petition in substance that the board had instructed all of its members that Booker & Kinnaird had resigned from membership in the board and therefore members of the board must on and before a date fixed in the notice discontinue to act as agents for any of the fire insurance companies represented by Booker & Kinnaird; that pursuant to these instructions the board and its members had notified the various’ companies represented by Booker &' Kinnaird that they would no longer represent them as agents or conduct any business for or with them unless on or before the date named they cancelled the agency of Booker & Kinnaird.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
224 S.W. 451, 188 Ky. 771, 21 A.L.R. 531, 1920 Ky. LEXIS 352, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/booker-kinnaird-v-louisville-board-of-fire-underwriters-kyctapp-1920.