Iowa Life Insurance v. Eastern Mutual Life Insurance

45 A. 762, 64 N.J.L. 340, 35 Vroom 340, 1900 N.J. LEXIS 118
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMarch 5, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 45 A. 762 (Iowa Life Insurance v. Eastern Mutual Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Iowa Life Insurance v. Eastern Mutual Life Insurance, 45 A. 762, 64 N.J.L. 340, 35 Vroom 340, 1900 N.J. LEXIS 118 (N.J. 1900).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Adams, J.

The trial judge overruled a general demurrer to a special plea and gave judgment for the defendant. Error has been assigned on the record.

The suit was brought by the Iowa Life Insurance Company against the Eastern Mutual Life Insurance Company, upon an agreement, dated October 10th, 1896, and a supplementary extension thereof, dated March 1st, 1897, which are as follows:

“ The Eastern Mutual Life Insurance Company, of Camden, New Jersey, by this policy of insurance, in consideration of twenty dollars, promises to pay to the Iowa Life Insurance Co., as insurer, one thousand dollars, upon proof that Joseph Terrett, of Ashley, county of Luzerne, State of Pennsylvania, who is insured in the Iowa Life Insurance Co., under policy No. 20,308, shall have died on- or before the second day of April, 1897. This insurance may be renewed by the payment of twenty-one dollars on the first day of April and October in each year hereafter for nine years. The title to benefits under this policy is not assignable.
“Signed at Camden, New Jersey, October 10th, 1896.
“George W. Townsend,
“Secretary.
J. E. Nixon,
“ President.
“In consideration of extra premium of one ^¡- dollars, this policy of insurance is extended to April 15th, 1897.
“Dated at Camden, N. J., March 1st, 1897.
“George W. Townsend,
“Secretary.
J. É. Nixon,
President.”

[342]*342The declaration sets up the original and supplementary agreements; alleges that Joseph Terrett, the insured, died on April 10th, 1897; that due proof of his death was delivered to and accepted by the defendant; that the plaintiff thereupon paid the amount for which said Joseph Terrett was insured, and that thereby the defendant became liable to pay to the plaintiff the sum of $1,000.

The special plea that was demurred to avers, in bar of the action, “ that the defendant was, at the time of the making of the contracts in said declaration mentioned and is now, a life insurance company organized and incorporated under and by virtue of the laws of the State of New Jersey; that the contracts mentioned in said declaration wherein defendant, for the consideration in said declaration mentioned, agreed to pay to the plaintiff, as insurance, the money as mentioned therein, are contracts of re-insurance, and were not, nor were either of them, made with the consent in writing of two-thirds in number of the holders of the policies proposed to be re-insured, nor was such contract of insurance, or either of them, submitted to the secretary of state and by him approved as provided by law, and hence said contracts of insurance are utterly invalid and of no force whatever.”

The statutory provision on which this plea is founded is paragraph 66 of “An act to provide for the regulation and incorporation of insurance companies” (Revision), approved April 9th, 1875, and will be found on page 1755 of the General Statutes. It reads as follows: “That it shall not be lawful for any life insurance company organized or to be organized under the laws of this state, to contract for the re-insurance of any of its outstanding risks or policy obligations in any other company, nor itself to re-insure such risks or obligations of another company unless two-thirds in number of the holders of the policies proposed to be re-insured shall assent thereto in writing; and the contract for such reinsurance shall be utterly invalid and of no force until it shall have been submitted to the secretary of state of this state and by him approved, which he shall only do after due [343]*343inquiry and upon satisfactory evidence that the interests of the policyholders are fully protected and that the consent of two-thirds of them has been had in writing as aforesaid.”

The section above quoted was originally passed as the third section of a supplement to the Insurance act, approved March 8th, 1877. Pamph. L., p. 100. This supplement was subsequently amended as to provisions not material to this inquiry, and as amended was incorporated in the revision of 1875. Gen. Stah, p. 1754. The first section of this supplement provides, among other things, that whenever the secretary of state, as the result of examination authorized by the act to which the statute of 1877 is a supplement, shall ascertain that the assets of any life insurance company are not sufficient to re-insure its outstanding risks and discharge its total actual liabilities it shall be his duty to apply to the Chancellor for an injunction restraining such corporation from the transaction of any further business or the transfer of its assets, or any portion thereof, in any manner whatsoever. The fourth section says that it shall be lawful for the receiver of ány life insurance company organized under the laws of this state, whenever the assets of such company shall be sufficient for that purpose, and the consent of two-thirds of the policyholders thereof shall have been had in writing, to re-insure all the policy obligations of such company in some other solvent life insurance company, or whenever the assets are insufficient to secure the re-insurance of all the policies in full, he may re-insure such a percentage of each and every policy outstanding as the assets will secure; provided, that there shall be no preference or discrimination as against any policyholder, and that the contract for such re-insurance by the receiver shall be approved by the secretary of state before it shall have effect.

It is now urged by the plaintiff in error that for several reasons the defence set up by the special plea is insufficient in law.

It is said, in the first place, that the sixty-sixth section of the Insurance act is invalid, because it violates that provision [344]*344of the Fourteenth amendment of the constitution of the United States which declares that no state shall deprive any person of life, liberty or property without due process of law. The argument submitted on behalf of the plaintiff in error is this: A corporation is a person. The right to contract is both a “liberty” and a “property” right which is essential to corporate existence. The sixty-sixth section takes from a corporation its right to thus contract. It is not a regulation, nor is it reasonable, but it is oppressive and wrong. The legislature may determine what powers and franchises shall be conferred on corporations, but it cannot constitutionally provide for conferring impaired or illusory powers—that is, it may limit the sphere of its grant, but within the -sphere the company must have the liberty to contract, and this right cannot be invaded. Consequently the lawmaking power cannot limit the right of a corporation to contract as to a matter that is within its corporate range, unless it is a proper subject of legislative control, such as a case that falls within the scope of the police power. The constitution has not expressly confided the matter of insurance to the legislature, and therefore legislative action can be justified only when it is reasonable.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
45 A. 762, 64 N.J.L. 340, 35 Vroom 340, 1900 N.J. LEXIS 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/iowa-life-insurance-v-eastern-mutual-life-insurance-nj-1900.