Franklin Fire Insurance v. Hall

247 S.W. 822, 112 Tex. 332, 1923 Tex. LEXIS 99
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 24, 1923
DocketNo. 3765.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 247 S.W. 822 (Franklin Fire Insurance v. Hall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Franklin Fire Insurance v. Hall, 247 S.W. 822, 112 Tex. 332, 1923 Tex. LEXIS 99 (Tex. 1923).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice CÜRETON

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an original proceeding for mandamus filed by the Franklin Fire Insurance Company, a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Pennsylvania, with a permit to transact business in this State, and by John L. Wortham, B. F. Carruth and Cus S. Wortham, composing the partnership of John L. Wortham & Sons, against Ed. Hall, Commissioner of Insurance and Banking, to require him to issue to the relators, John L. Wortham, B. F. Carruth and Gus S. Wortham, a certificate of authority as local agents of the Franklin Fire Insurance Company.

The first named relator is now, and for a number of years has been engaged in the business of insuring owners of property against loss by fire and other hazards. The individual relators are engaged in conducting a local insurance agency in the City of Houston, and are agents for the Franklin Fire Insurance Company. They have been engaged in the local insurance business for a number of years, under certificates of authority heretofore issued from time to time by the Commissioner of Insurance and Banking.

It appears that the Commissioner of Insurance has declined to issue certificates of authority to the individual relators named, for the reason that they have not paid or tendered to him 50$, which he claims to be due for the issuance of each certificate of authority to transact or conduct the business of a local insurance agent.

*334 Article 4960, Revised Statutes, provides:

“It shall not be lawful for any person to act within this state, as agent or otherwise, in soliciting or receiving applications for insurance of any kind whatever, or in any manner to aid in the.transaction of the business of any insurance company incorporated in this state or out of it, without first procuring a certificate of authority from the commissioner of agriculture, insurance, statistics and history (commissioner of insurance and banking).”

The certificate required by this Article is the one here involved. The only question before us for determination is whether or not the charge exacted by respondent is authorized by law. He predicates his right to make the charge on Revised Statutes Article 3834, one subdivision of which authorizes the Commissioner of Insurance and Banking, as well as other State officers,' to make a charge of 50(Í; “for each certificate not otherwise provided for”.

The insistence of respondent is that the fifty cents demanded by him is in no sense a tax, but is a charge for the ministerial act of his department in furnishing the certificate. We can not agree with this contention. The certificate issued by the Commissioner is a license, and the fee due therefor, if any, is a license fee, and not a mere charge for service.

By an Act approved July 9, 1879, the Legislature defined who should constitute insurance agents in the State, and required them to have a certificate of authority, under certain penalties against them and their companies, before they were allowed to transact the business of an insurance agent in the State. This Act, however, did not require a license or a certificate of the agent himself, but a copy of the certificate issued to his company. 9 Gammel’s Laws, p. 64. This Act became Article 4961 Revised Statutes, and defines those to whom Article 4960 is applicable. The last named Article was part of a law which, when originally enacted, was applicable only to life and health insurance companies, but by incorporation in the general provisions relating to insurance in the Revised Statutes of 1879, apparently, was made to apply to all insurance companies. These Articles are in substantially the same form as when originally passed by the Legislature. Rev. Stats., 1879, Art. 2943; 9 G-ammel’s Laws, p. 64; State v. Burgess; 101 Texas, 524, 529, 109 S. W., 922; Rev. Stats., 1911, Arts. 4960, 4961.

Articles 4963, 4964, 4965, and 4966, enacted in 1903, and Articles 4969 and 4971, which became the law in 1909, all relate to the subject of insurance agents, and refer to the certificate of authority required by Article 4960, designating and treating it as a license.

These statutes plainly show that the certificate of authority required by Article 4960 is the agent’s “license”. Considering all the statutes together, and having in mind the State’s general purpose to regulate and control the insurance business, it is plain that Article *335 4960 is a license statute, and that the certificate of authority there referred to is the license of a local insurance agent, when granted to such an agent. This statute confers upon those authorized the special privilege of being local insurance agents, a right not common to all, but denied to all except upon compliance with the law. It is within the usually accepted definition of a license statute. 17 R. C. L., pp. 474, 503; 14 R. C. L., p. 858, § 27; Hoefling and Son v. City of San Antonio, 85 Texas, 228, 231, 16 L. R. A., 608, 20 S. W., 85.

Article 3834 was a Section of an Act passed in 1848.. Articles 3833, 3835 and 3836 represent the remaining Sections of the original measure. 3 Gammel’s Laws, p. 184.

The original Act has remained the law since its passage without material change, except modifications from time to time so as to make it applicable to other officers than those originally named, among which is the Commissioner of Insurance and Banking.

Article 3833 makes it the duty of the various State officers named, including the Commissioner of Insurance and Banking, “to furnish any person who may apply for the same with a copy of any paper, document or record in their respective offices, and also to give certificates, attested by the seals of their respective offices, certifying to any fact or facts contained in the papers, documents or records of their offices, to any person applying for the same.”

Article 3834 declares it lawful “for the officers named in the preceding Article to demand and receive the following fees for the services mentioned therein, except as otherwise specially provided in this chapter:” The fees named in the Article are 15 cents for each one hundred words for copies of any paper, document or record in their offices in the English language, including seal and certificate. The next fee specified is a fee of 25 cents for the same character of document if in any other language than the English language; while the third has reference to translated copies. The fourth charge authorized is for plats or maps on file in any State office, the amount not being specified, but left to be ascertained by the department head on the basis of the labor required. The last designated fee is the one in controversy here. It reads: “For each certificate not otherwise provided for, 50 cents.”

Reading the language as written, and giving it the plain meaning, of the words used, the fees fixed by Article 3834 apply only to those things authorized by Article 3833, which are: (1) “a copy of any paper, document or record” in the office to which application is made; and, (2) “to give certificates, attested by the seals of the respective offices, certifying to any fact of facts contained in the papers, documents or records of their offices.”

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Bluebook (online)
247 S.W. 822, 112 Tex. 332, 1923 Tex. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/franklin-fire-insurance-v-hall-tex-1923.