Hauser v. North British & Mercantile Insurance

100 N.E. 52, 206 N.Y. 455, 1912 N.Y. LEXIS 991
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 19, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 100 N.E. 52 (Hauser v. North British & Mercantile Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hauser v. North British & Mercantile Insurance, 100 N.E. 52, 206 N.Y. 455, 1912 N.Y. LEXIS 991 (N.Y. 1912).

Opinion

Gray, J.

From the facts, which were agreed upon by the parties, in the submission of their controversy, it appears that the plaintiff was a lawyer and, in connection with the practice of the law, had, for some years, carried on the business of an insurance broker. He held what is termed a “first class broker’s certificate,” which had been issued to him by the New York Fire Insurance Exchange; an organization formed by certain fire insurance underwriters. This certificate entitled him to receive commissions, or brokerage, as a fire insurance broker, to be paid by the members of the exchange, of which the defendant was one, upon his placing insurance with them. Upon the application of the plaintiff, the defendant issued, in the months of February and March, 1912, *459 two policies of fire insurance, covering, the one, certain personal property and, the other, certain real property, and delivered them to him for the owners. The amounts of the premiums, or charges, due upon these policies were tendered by the plaintiff to, and were accepted' by, the defendant and were-duly indorsed upon the policies. At the time of making the payments of the premiums, the plaintiff demanded of the defendant “ the usual broker’s commissions * * * upon the premium paid * * * agreed upon and fixed by the members of the New York Fire Insurance Exchange.” Payment, however, was refused by the defendant, “ for the reason that the plaintiff had not, prior to the application for, and the issuance of, the said policies and the payment of the premiums of insurance, or charges, thereon, obtained a broker’s certificate of authority, as provided in section 142 of the Insurance Law, and by reason of the provision contained in said section 142 for a forfeit to the People of the State of the sum of $500 for a violation of any of the provisions of the section.”

Section 142 of the Insurance Law, first inserted in 1911 by chapter 748 of the laws of the year, as amended by chapter 1 of the Laws of 1912, went into .effect, by its terms, prior to the time of the transactions between the plaintiff and the defendant. The section, so far as now material, provided that “No person, partnership, association or corporation shall act as broker in the solicitation or procurement of applications for insurance or receive for services in obtaining or placing such insurance any commission or other compensation from any underwriter authorized or permitted to do an insurance business in this state, or agent thereof, without first procuring a certificate of authority so to act from the superintendent of insurance, which must be renewed annually on the first day of January, or within six months thereafter.” Provision was made for the payment of a fee of $10 annually to the superintendent of insurance and for authority to *460 him to revoke a certificate in cases of violation of the statute. The section then reads: “ Before any broker’s certificate of authority shall be issued by the superintendent of insurance there must be filed in his office a written application for such certificate which must set forth, * * * (cl) That the applicant is engaged or intends to engage, in good faith, principally in the insurance business or that he conducts or intends to conduct such business in connection with a real estate agency or real estate brokerage business,” etc. Subdivisions a, b and c need not be quoted. They require a description of the applicant, whether an individual, a partnership, or a corporation, a statement whether any certificate as agent, or broker, had been theretofore issued and a statement of the business in which the applicant had been engaged. The section requires the application to be verified ; defines the insurance contracts to which it is applicable and provides that for a violation of its provisions there should be a forfeiture to the people of the state of $500. After the act had gone into effect, the plaintiff made his application to the superintendent of insurance for a “broker’s certificate of authority,” which was refused upon the ground that “ said application does not set forth that you are engaged, or intend to engage, in good faith, principally in the insurance business, or that you conduct, or intend to conduct, such a business in connection with a real estate agency, or real estate brokerage - business. ” He had stated in his application, in answer to questions embodying these requirements of the statute, that he was engaged “ in the practice of the law and as an insurance broker in connection therewith,” and he refused to pledge himself otherwise as -to the conduct of his future business.

The case of the plaintiff seems quite clear. Within the existing agreement and in accordance with the rules of the Fire Insurance Exchange, he had entitled himself, by the performance of services as a fire insurance broker, to receive from the defendant the usual brokerage com *461 missions, agreed to be paid in such cases. Their payment was refused, solely, because he held no certificate of authority from the superintendent of insurance, as required by section 142 of the Insurance Law. That official was prohibited by the statute from issuing such a certificate, unless the application contained the statement above quoted from clause d of the section, and he based his refusal of the application, solely, upon that ground. If the enactment of section 142 was a valid piece of legislation, the plaintiff was remediless without a certificate. If, however, the legislative act overstepped the limits, within which the legislature may regulate and restrict the business pursuits of the citizen, then it was violative of the plaintiff’s constitutional rights and was inoperative to deprive him of the right to his brokerage.

The Appellate Division, in the first department, has held the statute to be unconstitutional legislation and I think that we should affirm its determination.

It is evident, from á reading of the provisions of this added section of the Insurance Law, that it was the purpose of the legislature to confine the business of the insurance agent, or broker, mentioned to those who should make that then principal business, or whd should be real estate agents, or brokers. That was made a condition of the right to pursue the' business. We may readily concede that, as a measure regulative of a business pursuit, which, from the extent to which it is carried on, is, presumably, affected with a public interest, the requirement by the legislature of a license would not he an unreasonable exercise of power. That would afford an opportunity for inquiry into antecedents and fitness of character, and be a reasonable enough precaution in the public interest. But the legislature has prescribed in this statute a condition for the issuance of the license, which is a purely arbitrary restriction. There is no good reason, and no public interest can, conceivably, be subserved, in prohibiting persons from conducting the business of an *462 insurance agent, or broker, in connection with any other lawful business, or occupation, in which they may be engaged. As it was intimated below, following the suggestion in People v. Ringe, (197 N. Y. 143), the legislation, now in question, must have been promoted in the interests of those engaged in the insurance brokerage business, alone, or in connection with a real estate brokerage business, rather than with any view of the public welfare. (And see

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Bluebook (online)
100 N.E. 52, 206 N.Y. 455, 1912 N.Y. LEXIS 991, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hauser-v-north-british-mercantile-insurance-ny-1912.