City & County of San Francisco v. Liverpool & London & Globe Insurance

15 P. 380, 74 Cal. 113, 1887 Cal. LEXIS 755
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 10, 1887
DocketNo. 11945
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 15 P. 380 (City & County of San Francisco v. Liverpool & London & Globe Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City & County of San Francisco v. Liverpool & London & Globe Insurance, 15 P. 380, 74 Cal. 113, 1887 Cal. LEXIS 755 (Cal. 1887).

Opinions

Temple, J.

This action is brought to recover $441.36, with interest, under an act of the legislature, entitled [117]*117“An act to require the payment of certain premiums to counties and cities and counties by fire insurance companies not organized under the laws of California, but doing business therein, and providing for the disposition of such premiums,” approved March 3,1885. (Stats. 1885, c. 15.)

An answer was filed to the complaint, and thereupon, on motion, judgment was rendered for the plaintiff on the pleadings, from which defendant appeals.

The act requires every agent of the insurance companies designated to pay into the hands of the treasurer of any county or city and county in the state a sum equal to one per centum upon the amount of all premiums which, during the year, or part of the year, ending on the first Monday of September, shall have been received by such agent, or which shall have been agreed to have been paid for any insurance effected, or agreed to be effected, within the limits of such county or city and county; the money when so paid to constitute a fund known as the Firemen’s relief fund of the county or city and county in which the property insured is situated, and to be under the exclusive control of the fire commissioners, or other governing body of the fire departments of such county or city and county, under such general regulations as the board of supervisors thereof may prescribe.

The answer does not deny any of the material allegations of the complaint, but the defendant claims that the exaction is illegal, and that the statute imposing it is unconstitutional and void; that it is violative of various provisions of the constitution, and among them is section T2, article 11, which reads as follows:—

“The legislature shall have no power to impose taxes upon counties, cities, towns, or other public or municipal corporations, or upon the inhabitants or property thereof, for county, city, town, or other municipal purposes, but may, by general laws, vest in the corporate authorities [118]*118thereof the power to assess and collect taxes for such purposes.”

If this exaction is a tax, and the purpose to which the proceeds are devoted is a county, city, town, or other municipal purpose, it is plain that it is prohibited by this section. Both propositions are denied by respondent.

It is claimed that the object of the act is to prescribe a condition upon the performance of which foreign corporations shall be permitted to do business in this state; that the state may discriminate against such corporations in favor of her own citizens or domestic corporations; that as such foreign corporations have no rights under the state constitution, except such as are expressly guaranteed to them, eo nomine as foreign corporations; that the power of the state to impose conditions is not limited by general provisions of the state constitution, and is absolute unless specifically limited, either in the federal or state constitution; and in the absence of such limitations, foreign corporations, as such, have no rights which the state cannot touch.

This claim is certainly very broad, and is derived from the proposition that corporations have no absolute right to recognition in other states, but do business in such states merely by grace, depending for the enforcement of their contracts upon the assent of those states, which may be given on such terms as they please.

It is of some interest to note here that the power of the legislature to impose conditions is as absolute over domestic as over foreign corporations. There is no natural right in our own citizens to do business in a corporate name. These home corporations act as such purely by grace, and not by right, depending absolutely upon the consent of the state for the enforcement of their contracts, and that assent may be withheld or permitted on such terms as the state shall choose. It may exclude domestic corporations entirely from the state, and in the absence of express constitutional limitation, permit for[119]*119eign corporations alone within its borders, or may impose a license tax upon domestic corporations which is not imposed upon foreign corporations. It may amend or repeal its charters at any time, or impose such new terms and conditions to the right to do business, as it may see fit. This absolute power over domestic corporations was never denied or questioned, except as to the right to alter or amend the charters, and that right is clear under our constitution. The whole force and effect of the decisions cited from the federal courts is, that foreign corporations are not protected by section 2, article 10, of the federal constitution, and therefore the state may deal with corporations organized in other states as absolutely as with domestic corporations. When the courts of the United States speak of the power of the state to impose conditions upon foreign corporations, they of course have reference to federal limitations. There is no intimation that such corporations are not, when permitted to do business within a state, entitled to the protection of its laws as fully as citizens. That is not a federal question; but those courts have held that a statute of Iowa, which provided that any foreign corporation which should remove a cause from a state court to a federal court should forfeit its right to do business as a corporation within the state, was void. (Barron v. Burnside, 121 U. S. 186.) In that case the statute made it a misdemeanor for any one to act as agent for any company which had forfeited its right to do business in the state under this act. Barron was convicted under the statute, and his conviction was declared illegal by the supreme court, on the ground that no such condition could be imposed..

The effect of this decision is, that the permit was valid, but the condition void. Following the logic of this case, the result would seem inevitable that a condition in violation of the state constitution is simply void. Indeed, this would seem too obvious to require much discussion. The fact that the party against whom a suit is brought [120]*120to collect a tax may be a foreign corporation may be very material in determining whether the tax is prohibited by the constitution; but it could not authorize the legislature to exercise a power clearly denied to it in the constitution. Such laws are ultra vires, and as clearly void when they operate upon a foreign corporation as upon a citizen.

We come now to the inquiry, Is the exaction here in question a tax? The statute itself denominates it a tax, and it must be confessed that it has all the characteristics of a tax. It is a charge imposed by the legislature for the purpose of revenue. It is not founded upon contract, and does not establish the relation of debtor and creditor. It is an enforced proportional contribution, levied by authority of the state, and, as respondent claims, for public needs.

That it has all the attributes of a tax is practically admitted by the respondent, but it is sought by a very subtile process of reasoning to show that, in this particular case, it must not be regarded as a tax. However deftly it is stated, the point in all this specious logic is, that unless it be held something else than a tax, it may be unconstitutional.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 P. 380, 74 Cal. 113, 1887 Cal. LEXIS 755, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-county-of-san-francisco-v-liverpool-london-globe-insurance-cal-1887.