Lubrano v. Imperial Council of the Order of United Friends

38 L.R.A. 546, 37 A. 345, 20 R.I. 27, 1897 R.I. LEXIS 37
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedApril 17, 1897
StatusPublished

This text of 38 L.R.A. 546 (Lubrano v. Imperial Council of the Order of United Friends) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lubrano v. Imperial Council of the Order of United Friends, 38 L.R.A. 546, 37 A. 345, 20 R.I. 27, 1897 R.I. LEXIS 37 (R.I. 1897).

Opinion

Tillinghast, J.

This case is before us on the plaintiff’s petition for a new trial. It was brought in the Common Pleas Division, was not answered by the defendant, and was dismissed by the court for lack of service. The record shows that the defendant is a corporation of the so-called fraternal class, incorporated in the State of New York; that it is doing business in this State ; that the plaintiff was a member of a subordinate lodge, organized under said corporation, in the city of Providence; and that this action is brought upon a liability incurred by said defendant. The writ in the case was served by leaving an attested copy thereof with the insurance commissioner of this State. The record shows, however, that he had not been appointed by the defendant as its attorney to accept service, under Gen. Laws R. I. cap. 1S2, § 8, which is as follows : “No insurance company not incorporated under the authority of this state, shall directly or indirectly issue policies, take risks, or transact business in this state, until it shall have first appointed in writing the insurance commissioner 'of this state to be the true and lawful attorney of such company in and for this state, upon *28 whom all lawful process in any action or proceeding against the company may be served with the same effect as if the company existed in this state. Said power of attorney shall stipulate and agree on the part of the company that ■ any lawful process against the company which is served on said attorney shall be of the same legal force and validity as if served on the company, and that the authority shall continue in force so long as any liability remains outstanding against the company in this state. A certificate of such appointment, duly certified and authenticated, shall be filed in the office of the insurance commissioner, and copies certified by him shall be received in evidence in all courts in this state. Service upon such attorney shall be deemed sufficient service upon the principal.”

The first question which we are called upon to decide is whether the contract on which the action is based is a contract of insurance within the meaning of our statute.' We think it is clear, upon the evidence submitted, that it is such a contract and that the defendant is doing an insurance business in this State. The making of a contract like the one in suit, whereby a benefit is to accrue to the plaintiff upon his death or physical disability, which benefit is or may be conditioned upon the collection of an assessment upon persons holding similar contracts, is declared to be a contract of insurance by Gen. Laws R. I. cap. 184, § 2. 1 See also Commonwealth v. Wetherbee, 105 Mass. 149 ; State v. Nichols, 78 La. 747; Niblack Insurance and Benefit Societies, § 3 and cases cited.

*29 The main question in the case, however, and the one which, in view of the authorities cited by plaintiff’s counsel, has caused us to hesitate in deciding, is whether there has been any valid service of the writ. The plaintiff’s counsel contends that the service was sufficient because the defendant is estopped to deny that it has appointed the insurance commissioner its attorney to accept service, after having done business in the State and received the benefits thereof. While it is probably true, and indeed such seems to be the well settled law, that the defendant would be estopped to deny that it has complied with the statute as to the appointment of an attorney to accept service-, yet a difficulty arises in the application of the principle to this case. The defendant makes no appearance ; so that no question of estoppel,1 as it seems to us, can properly be raised or considered. See Anthony, Dennison & Co. v Bray ton, 7 R. I. 53-4. The writ was not served upon an agent of the- defendant corporation, as was the case in Moch v. Ins. Co., 10 Fed. Rep. 696, and other cases cited by plaintiff ; nor was it served upon any person authorized by the defendant to accept service thereof. Moreover, the fact appears of record, and from the plaintiff’s own showing, that the defendant failed to comply with the statute first above quoted, and hence that there was no service of the writ whatsoever unless we can hold that service upon the insurance commissioner, with the actual knowledge on our part that he was never authorized to accept the same, gives jurisdiction. It seems to us that to so hold would violate the very foundation principle of all judicial proceedings, which principle requires that, in order to give the court jurisdiction over a defendant where it is a proceeding in personam, he must have notice, either actual or constructive, of the proceeding instituted against him. In this case the defendant had neither. And that fact appears, not by reason of the defendants setting up the same, as it does in the cases relied on by the plaintiff, but from the record itself. And herein lies the difference between this case and those which have been cited by plaintiff’s counsel. In those cases there was an appearance for the defendant, either general or special, at *30 some stage of the proceeding, and the question of jurisdiction was litigated and decided adversely to the defendants respectively. Such was the case in Hagerman v. Empire Slate Co., 97 Pa. St. 534, where the writ was served on an agent of the defendant found in the State. The defendant had not complied with the statute in the appointment of an agent on whom process might be served. The court held that “when a foreign corporation, transacting business in this State, has failed to establish an office and report the name of its agent to the secretary of the commonwealth, but has some person therein who acts as its agent, it must be presumed that the corporation has substituted such agent as one on whom service is authorized to be made.” Moreover, under a statute of that State, service of process against a foreign corporation may be made upon any officer, agent or engineer of the corporation, either personally or by copy.

In Ehrman v. Insurance Co., 1 McCrary, 123, the defendant appeared and filed a plea to the jurisdiction, which plea was held to he defective. The court, however, considered the main point intended to be raised by the pleader, and held that the defendant could not be heard to say that service of the summons on the State auditor was not a good personal service on the company. It also held that, from the fact of the defendants doing business in the State, the presumption of its assent to service in the mode prescribed by the statute arose, and that no averment or evidence to the contrary was admissible to defeat the jurisdiction, and that the defendant would not be permitted to relieve itself from a liability which the written stipulation required by the statute would have imposed, by pleading its own fraud on the law of the State and her citizens, under the maxim that no man shall take advantage of his own wrong.

Foster v. Lumber Co., 5 S. Dak. 57, was a defaulted case in the court below, where, after judgment, the defendant appeared and moved to set aside the judgment on the ground that the writ was not served on any authorized agent of the defendant, which motion was denied and an appeal was taken.

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Commonwealth v. Wetherbee
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Bluebook (online)
38 L.R.A. 546, 37 A. 345, 20 R.I. 27, 1897 R.I. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lubrano-v-imperial-council-of-the-order-of-united-friends-ri-1897.