Fireside Mut. Life Ins. v. Martin

60 So. 2d 224, 1952 La. App. LEXIS 679
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 30, 1952
DocketNo. 3559
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 60 So. 2d 224 (Fireside Mut. Life Ins. v. Martin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fireside Mut. Life Ins. v. Martin, 60 So. 2d 224, 1952 La. App. LEXIS 679 (La. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

DORÉ, Judge.

The Fireside Mutual Life Insurance Company, hereinafter referred to simply as Fireside or as plaintiff, seeks by declaratory judgment to have determined the meaning and significance of a proyision found in LSA-R.S. 22:391, which first came into our laws as part of Section 10.01 of Act No. 195 of- 1948, the act that was known as the Insurance Code. Fireside prays that the provision be decreed to be repugnant to and irreconcilable with the other provisions of Chapter X (now Part X) of the Insurance Code and therefore null and void; or, in the alternative, that it be decreed to impair plaintiff’s contract with the state as reflected in its corporate charter and therefore violative of the Federal and state constitutions. Plaintiff alleged that the Secretary of State, in his capacity as Insurance Commissioner, ordered plaintiff to cease issuing policies on the cooperative or assessment plan; that this will cause plaintiff irreparable injury; and plaintiff prays that the Secretary of State and Ex-Officio Insurance Commissioner be enjoined from attempting to enforce the proviso complained of.

The provision in question made its appearance into our law when a comprehensive insurance code was adopted as Act No. 195 of 1948. That code contained then, as it does now, thirty-one parts and numerous subdivisions or sections. Part VII, LSA-R.S. 22:251 et seq. deals with “Domestic Industrial Insurers”; Part X, LSA-R.S. 22:391 et seq. is headed “Life, Health and Accident Insurers on the Cooperative or Assessment Plan”. There are separate .parts in the code for each general type of [226]*226insurance that can be written in the state. The section containing the controversial proviso, which was originally Section 10.01 and is now LSA-R.S. 22:391, reads as follows, with the controversial proviso being underscored:

“All life, health and accident insurers on cooperative or assessment plan organized and authorized to do business in this State at the effective date of this Code may continue to operate, provided, that from and after December 31, 1950, all policies issued by such insurers shall be subject to and in accordance with the laws and regulations of this State relative to industrial life insurance, and especially subject to the provisions of this Code relative to Domestic Industrial insurers, with the same insuring powers which they have on such date. The operation of such insurers shall be governed by the provisions of this chapter, and by all the applicable provisions of this Code not in conflict herewith.”

At a. pre-trial conference held by the District Judge plaintiff offered in evidence (1) an extract of House Bill No. 253 showing how the first section of Chapter X read when it was originally introduced in the legislature in 1948, (2) page 827 of the Senate Journal of 1948 showing the adoption of a Senate Committee Amendment to the same section, and (3) page 1150 of the Senate Journal of 1948 showing adoption by the Senate of the same amendment proposed by the committee except for a change in the date fixing the effective date of the amendment. Defendant objected to the offerings on the ground that they were incompetent, immaterial and irrelevant, and for the further ground that the regularity of the proceedings leading to passage of the act was not in dispute and that the proceedings of the legislature are not material to this case. The offerings were admitted subject to the objections. We believe that the offerings were properly admitted. In Corpus Juris, Vol. 59, p. 1017, Statutes, Sec. 605, we find the following principle stated:

“To determine the legislative intent in case of ambiguity, resort may be had to the history of the statute, and of the proceedings attending its passage through the legislature as disclosed by the legislative journals * * *.”

American Jurisprudence, Vol. 50, page 319, under Statutes, Sec. 327, states the rule thusly:

“Apart from opinions expressed in debates, the actual proceedings of the legislature, or the steps taken in the enactment of a law, or the history of the passage of the law through the legislature, may be resorted to as an aid in the interpretation of a statute which is ambiguous or of doubtful meaning.”

This practice has been followed by a large majority of the state courts as well as by the U. S. Supreme Court; see citations under notes 94, 95, 96 under 59 C.J. Sec. 605.

Provisos in a statute are by nature designed to accomplish some particular purpose at variance with the general sum and substance of the balance of the act. In addition to any other classification they will fall into one of two categories. Either they are carefully worked out and designed so that the proviso and the balance of the act are woven together somewhat like a tapestry, with the proviso fitting into the scene rather than having the appearance of an interloper or disrupting agent; or else they are added without adequate integration with the balance of the act, with the result that the proviso is like a patch on the tapestry or like a dam built half way across a stream, in conflict rather than in cooperation with the balance of the scene.

The legislative history of our insurance code, and particularly of Chapter X thereof, throws some helpful light on the proviso in question. The code was drafted by the Secretary of State and Ex-Officio Insurance Commissioner pursuant to legislative authority granted by Act No. 211 of 1946. Approximately two years work went into its preparation. When presented to the legislature in 1948 as House Bill No. 253 it contained in general the same headings, sections, and paragraphs as are now found [227]*227in the present code. Chapter X, as stated above, dealt with “Life, Health and Accident Insurers on the Cooperative or Assessment Plan”, and Section 10.01, which was the first section in the chapter, stated:

“All life, health and accident insurers on cooperative or assessment plan organized and authorized to do business in this State at the effective date of this Code may continue to operate with the same insuring powers which they have on such date. The operation of such insurers shall he governed by the provisions of this chapter, and 'by all the applicable provisions of this Code not in conflict herewith.”

The next section, 10.02, stated that:

“No such insurer may be organized, and no alien or foreign insurer may be qualified to do business in this State after the effective date of this Code.”

There were only five other sections to Chapter X; and because the determination of this case will hinge on the relationship of the first section, as finally adopted, to the other sections, or the conflicts between them, each section will be summarized here.

Section 10.03 (now LSA-R.S. 22:393) provides that any domestic insurer that issues any policy or makes any agreement with its members whereby, upon the decease or sickness of a member, any money or benefit is to be paid which money or benefit is derived from voluntary donations or from dues or assessments" collected from the members or a class of members, or accumulation thereof, shall be deemed to be engaged in the business of insurance upon the cooperative or assessment plan. Section 10.04, LSA-R.S. 22:394, requires each such domestic insurer to maintain on deposit with the state treasurer 'bonds of certain types amounting to $25,000. Section 10.05, LSA-R.S. 22:395, calls for an annual report (as is required of all other insurers). Section 10.06, LSA-R.S.

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Related

Fireside Mut. Life Ins. v. Martin
66 So. 2d 511 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1953)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 So. 2d 224, 1952 La. App. LEXIS 679, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fireside-mut-life-ins-v-martin-lactapp-1952.