Hobbins v. Hannan

202 N.W. 800, 186 Wis. 284, 1925 Wisc. LEXIS 263
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 10, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 202 N.W. 800 (Hobbins v. Hannan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hobbins v. Hannan, 202 N.W. 800, 186 Wis. 284, 1925 Wisc. LEXIS 263 (Wis. 1925).

Opinion

Doerfler, J.

The plaintiffs are licensed insurance agents, and as such represent numerous insurance companies authorized to do business in this state. It is a well known fact, of which the court can take judicial notice, that the great bulk of the insurance business is initiated and procured through the instrumentality of agents or agencies; that a large part of the insurance so procured is controlled by the agents, and upon the expiration of policies is renewed through them, so that in the course of time an insurance agent or an agency, by reason of such renewals and procuring of new risks, succeeds in working up a large and lucrative business. Under the practices thus established and maintained, an insurance agent becomes a vital factor in the insurance field, and he is recognized as such by the statutes upon the subject, which require him to obtain a license and -which declare that he shall be deemed to have a financial interest in the conduct of the insurance business and in matters coming up before the insurance department for review.

[291]*291The plaintiffs, as such insurance agents, contend that the rating bureau has no authority in law to establish uniform rules and riders, but that in the performance of its legitimate functions it is confined to the establishment of uniform rates of insurance; that if the rating law is construed in a manner as to authorize the bureau to establish and maintain uniform forms and riders, that then the act is unconstitutional, for the reason that it provides for an unlawful delegation of legislative power and because it interferes with the constitutional provision which guarantees the right of freedom of contract. They also maintain that the insurance commissioner has no authority in law to approve or disapprove such forms and riders, and that if the statutes be construed that the legislature has attempted to grant such power, the grant amounts to an unlawful delegation of legislative power and is for that reason void; that the insurance commissioner is a mere administrative officer, clothed with the duty under the statute to fix what he deems a reasonable and non-discriminatory rate of insurance, and that he is authorized to enforce such administrative power as to rates, and as to rates only; that the field of drafting forms of policies not inconsistent with the standard form of riders belongs to the companies and the agents at the present time, substantially to the same degree as it existed prior to the enactment of the rating daw in 1917; that the notices sent out by the stamping office containing criticisms and corrections of forms and riders, and the threats issued by such officer to report failures to comply with such notices to the insurance commissioner, and the provisions of the statutes under which such alleged violations may be penalized by fines, are an unlawful interference with the legal rights of the companies and of the agents to write their own contractual forms and riders, and that such acts and threats have resulted in demoralizing the entire insurance business in the state of Wisconsin, and particularly that represented by the plaintiffs, and that it has thrown the business of the [292]*292plaintiffs into utter confusion and so entangled the same as to cause them great and irreparable loss; and in order to remedy the situation they have sought relief in the present equitable action to enjoin the defendants from sending out such notices and criticisms and from reporting alleged violations to the commissioner, and from their penalization by the commissioner under the provisions of the statutes.

This in brief presents in concrete form the theories of the plaintiffs, as set forth in their complaint, and at the very threshold of the issues so presented we are confronted with the vital question (assuming that all that is contended by the plaintiffs in their complaint is true) whether they present a situation which entitles them to the relief prayed for or any relief whatsoever.

In every insurance contract of the nature involved herein there are interested, first, the companies issuing the policies; second, the assured, for whose protection the policy is issued; and third, the insurance commissioner, with administrative power to fix and maintain a reasonable and non-discriminatory rate. In the fixing and maintenance of such rate the commissioner represents the public interests. The insurance agent is interested in a financial way in all policies procured by him as an agent of the companjr. The commissions on risks procured by him constitute the profits of the agent’s or agency’s business. In this sense, and this only, is the insurance agent a party to an insurance contract. But in no sense can it be deemed that the agent occupies the position of a principal. The very term “agent” in itself would refute such a contention. The profits, if any, ensuing from the assumption of an insurance risk belong to the company, and it is in consideration solely of valuable services performed for the company that the iatter consents to the payment of a part of the premium to the agent. It is undeniably true that in the past the drafting of special forms of riders has been to some extent permitted to rest with the agent, and [293]*293that the ingenuity of an agent in drafting forms has in many instances acted persuasively in procuring risks for the company. That such permission is granted by companies to the agents is largely due to the tremendous, power wielded by them in the field of insurance, so that as a matter of business policy many companies have acceded to the forms and riders promulgated by the agents. Indeed, any one familiar with insurance practices as they existed prior to 1917 must realize that this great power of insurance agents or agencies, particularly those who have built up large patronages, acted coercively on the companies, and caused the latter 'in many instances to yield; for after all, an insurance company is organized for profit, and where loss of profits is threatened a yielding and compromise are likely to result.

It thus appears to the writer quite clearly that one of the principal objects and purposes of the enactment of the rating law by the legislature in 1917 was to stabilize and make uniform not only rates, but contractual forms and riders, not ifi violation of the standard form of policy, which directly or indirectly might affect the subj ect of rates.

But merely assuming that the rating law, when given a proper construction, authorizes the bureau to establish and maintain uniform forms and riders, and that such law is unconstitutional for the reasons claimed by the plaintiffs, that it constitutes an unconstitutional delegation of legislative power to the bureau and interferes with the constitutional provision guaranteeing the right of freedom of contract, nevertheless, under the provisions of the statutes, the companies have joined these rating bureaus and have elected a chief examiner, are operating under the rating law, and are not now here claiming or contesting the constitutionality of the law. The companies have therefore declared their position, have established themselves as component parts of the rating bureau, and operated under the law, and they are the principals in the writing of every insurance [294]*294risk. It is an anomaly in the law to contend that the agent has rights (unless specifically created by contract) superior to the rights of the principal, or to contend that the agent can dictate the manner in which the principal shall do his business, or that the principal is bound in any respect to submit to the dictates of the agent or to be in any way subservient to him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
202 N.W. 800, 186 Wis. 284, 1925 Wisc. LEXIS 263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hobbins-v-hannan-wis-1925.