French v. People

6 Colo. App. 311
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 15, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 6 Colo. App. 311 (French v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
French v. People, 6 Colo. App. 311 (Colo. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

Reed, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Counsel for appellant attack the information in argument. The first assignment of error is, “ That the information does not set forth or state any facts constituting an offense' against the defendant.” Although it is not as full and explicit and as technically correct as it might have been, it appears to have been sufficient in substance. In my view of the ease, it may be determined upon other and more satisfactory grounds ; consequently the supposed error will not be further regarded.

The statute appellant was charged with violating is section 16 of “An Act to Establish an Insurance Department in and for the State of Colorado and to Regulate the Insurance Companies Doing Business Therein,” Gen. Stats., sec. 16, chap. 55,” as follows:

[313]*313“ It shall be unlawful for any person, company or corporation in this state, either to procure, receive or forward applications for insurance in or to issue or to deliver policies for any company or companies not having complied with the provisions of this act, or to adjust any loss, or in any manner, either directly or indirectly, to aid in the transaction of the business of insurance with any such company, unless duly authorized by such company and licensed by the superintendent of insurance, in conformity to the provisions of this act, and any persons violating the provisions of this section shall be liable to a penalty of <$500 for each and every offense.”

The intention of the legislature and the wisdom and necessity of the law are obvious; its object, to protect the people against irresponsible foreign insurance companies and subject all foreign insurance companies to the supervision of the state insurance department, and, by license fees, provide a fund to defray the expenses of such department. For the purposes of this opinion I am willing to adopt, as far as it goes, the statement as to the scope, object and intention of the act as made by the learned attorney general in his printed argument:

“ The object is to regulate insurance, a business that so intimately concerns the whole business world; to prevent persons who have no proper qualifications from engaging in the business; and to force all companies doing business in this state to pay their just quota of the fees which make up the insurance fund.” Again : “ But the principal object of our statute seems to be to protect the insured from fraud, and to cause all companies doing an insurance business to contribute to the insurance fund, which in turn is to be used to prevent this very fraud,” etc. In this definition there is evidently an important omission in the second clause. Hot all companies doing an insurance business are expected to contribute to the fund. It should be limited to those doing insurance business within the state.

There is one line of argument and construction of the statute that should not pass unnoticed, as it may have, more or less, influenced the decision, though rather vaguely and in[314]*314definitely expressed. It is, in effect, that by reason of our statute contracts of insurance made by residents of the state with foreign insurance companies, though legal where made, are a violation of the state law. This contract of insurance was made by the resident Milling Company by correspondence, and was made at the home office of the Insurance Company in the city of Chicago. The attorney general says:

“ If the argument of counsel for plaintiff in error is to prevail, then, in order to evade the requirements of the statute, and to escape payment of dues to the superintendent of insurance, it would only be necessary to issue policies from offices outside of the state, and pay losses at the place where •the policy was issued, and the adjustment, and the negotiations leading up to and following it, and the fact that the contract of insurance affects property situate in Colorado, and premiums are paid by its citizens, may be laid out of the case, as being matters not properly belonging to 4 the business of insurance.’ ”

. Again : 44 It is no defence to say that the policy was made out in Chicago and mailed to Denver, and that the adjustment of the' loss was finally consummated in Chicago and the .money paid there. The contract of insurance from the time it .was received in Denver was in force here in this state until the destruction of the property insured, and the right to recover'the amount of the loss existed at all times in this state, from the time of the loss until the time of the payment. It is of no consequence whether the final act of adjustment in the payment of the loss occurred in Chicago or here in Denver. The business of insurance was being carried on here in Colorado unlawfully by The Millers' National Insurance Company from the time it replied to Mr. Mullen’s first letter up to the time of the adjournment of the committee of adjustment from Denver to Chicago, and all the acts of plaintiff in error in aid or abetment of that business was in direct contravention of the letter and spirit of our insurance law.”

The only logical conclusion from the argument is that because Colorado has a law controlling the business of insur[315]*315anee within the state, any contract made by a citizen of the state, for insurance within the state, in a foreign office, though legal where made, was a violation of state law and illegal here. If such is a proper construction of the law, it is unnecessary to say that the law is worthless and void, abridging and restricting constitutional rights guaranteed by the constitution of the state and of the United States.

To say that a resident of this state cannot make a contract pertaining to his property in this state, in Chicago, New York or London, if lawful where made, unless a license is obtained and money contributed to a fund, is so directly in conflict with universal law as not to need farther comment.

Before taking up the principal questions involved, there is another contention of the learned attorney general that may be noticed. After speaking of the participation of appellant in the action of the committee, he contends that a conviction can be had under the statute for a partial adjustment or an attempt to adjust, and reasons that it was not necessary that appellant should have been a member of the committee, that it was sufficient if he was present, aiding and advising, and in support of the proposition cites section 701 of General Statutes, defining an “ accessory ” in a criminal offense, and adds the general definition of an accessory from the text books. I am at a loss to know for what purpose this was put in. There is no claim that the committee were violating the law or guilty of crime or criminal intention. If their pursuit and business was lawful, I cannot understand how there could be an accessorj', when he was only aiding and advising in a legitimate matter.

In the insurance law under which the conviction was had, there is no provision for the punishment of accessories, and the law can hardly be extended so as to warrant the conviction of a party as accessory, under the law of insurance.

Penal statutes of this character, making new offenses and providing for conviction and punishment, must, according to all the authorities, be strictly construed. The provisions cannot be extended by inference or implication or analogy to other acts.

[316]*316There is no controversy in regard to the facts.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 Colo. App. 311, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/french-v-people-coloctapp-1895.