Mygatt v. New York Protection Insurance

21 N.Y. 53
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 15, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 21 N.Y. 53 (Mygatt v. New York Protection 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
Mygatt v. New York Protection Insurance, 21 N.Y. 53 (N.Y. 1860).

Opinions

Selden, J.

It appears from the report of the referee in this case, that the defendants were organized as a mutual insurance company, under the gen[58]*58eral act of 1849; that the policy upon which the suit is brought was duly issued, and the premium paid; that all the conditions on the part of the insured were kept and performed; that the property was destroyed by fire, as set forth in the complaint, and that the demand arising from the loss had been assigned before, suit brought, to the plaintiff. The defence which prevailed at the trial, and which is relied upon here, is, that the defendants having been organized as a mutual company, had no authority to issue policies for premiums to be paid in cash, and, consequently, that their act in issuing the policy in question was ultra vires, and the policy void.

I shall assume, for the purposes of this case, that the defendants can avail themselves of this defence, and that they are in no .manner estopped from insisting upon their own want of power.2 The question then is, did the defendants exceed their corporate powers by issuing this policy and receiving the premium upon it ?

The charter adopted by the defendants, which was introduced and proved upon the trial, contained the following clause: “ Any person applying for insurance, so electing, may pay a definite sum in money, to be' fixed by said corporation, in full for said insurance, and in lieu of a premium note.” The policy *in question here was issued in strict accordance with this provision. The defendants, therefore, .to sustain their defence, must [59]*59show that the company had no authority to insert such a clause in its charter; and this depends entirely upon the provisions of the act of 1849, under which the company was organized.

By § 3 of that act, it is enacted, that persons intending to become incorporated under it, “ shall file in the office of the secretary of state a declaration, signed. by all the corporators, expressing their intention to form a company for the purpose of transacting the business of insurance, as expressed in the several subdivisions of the first section of this act, which declaration shall also comprise a copy of the charter proposed to be adopted by them; ” and § 10 provides that it shall be the duty of the corporators of any and every company organized under this act, to declare in the charter, which is herein required to be filed, the mode and manner in which the corporate powers given under and by virtue of this act are to be exercised.”

Thpse provisions confer upon the companies organized under the act a broad and unrestricted power to prescribe for themselves the manner in which they will conduct the business of insurance. They virtually transfer to these companies full legislative control over the subject, and, construed by themselves, would invest each company, whether joint-stock or mutual, with power to provide for every kind of insurance authorized by the act. The only expressed limitation upon this power, is contained in § 11, which requires that the charter “ shall be examined by the attorney-general,” who, if he finds it “ to be in accordance Avith the requirements ” of the act, “ and not inconsistent Avith the constitution or Iravs of this state,” is to “ certify the same to the comptroller,” &e. It cannot be pretended, that the clause in the defendants’ charter, under which this policy Avas issued, is in any manner repugnant either to the constitution or the general haws of the state; the only question, therefore, is, Avhether it is in conflict Avith anything contained [60]*60in the act of 1849 itself. Unless the defendants can find ^something in. that act which, prohibits companies organized as mutual companies from receiving their premiums in cash, they cannot maintain their defence.

There is clearly nothing in the terms of the act which contains such a prohibition; but the restriction is sought to be deduced by implication from those provisions of the act which discriminate between joint-stock and mutual companies. It is based mainly upon §§ 3, 4 and 5. The charter, which persons wishing to become incorporated are required by § 3 to file, is, as we have seen, to prescribe “ the mode and manner ” in which their “ corporate powers ” are to be exercised; § 4 authorizes the company, after filing such charter, “ to open books for subscription to the capital stock of the company,” * “ or, in case the business of such company is proposed to be conducted on the plan of mutual insurance, then to open books to receive propositions,” &c. It is then provided (§ 5) that no “joint-stock company” shall bo organized in the city of New York, or the county of Kings, with a smaller capital than $150,000, nor in any other county, with a smaller capital than $50,000; and that no company formed for the purpose of doing business “ on the plan of mutual insurance,” in either of the counties of New York or Kings, shall commence the- business of fire or inland navigation insurance, until agreements have been entered into for insurance, with at least one hundred applicants, the premiums on which shall amount to $200,000, nor in any other county, until such premiums. shall amount to $100,000, for which premium notes'are to be taken “ in advance,” as a “ part of the capital stock ” of the company.

Now, the argument on the part of the defendants is, that there having been in this state, previously to the act of 1849, two distinct and well-known classes of insurance companies, viz., joint-stock and mutual companies, [61]*61organized upon different principles, and transacting their business in different modes, it was the_ evident design of the legislature, as evinced by the provisions to which I have referred, to keep these two classes of companies entirely distinct, and to prevent any intermingling *of the two modes of insurance in the same company; that insuring for a specific premium, payable in cash, is the appropriate business of a joint-stock company, organized with a view to profit upon its capital, the corporators in in Which consist, not of the persons holding policies, but of the owners of this capital; that a mutual insurance company is composed exclusively of the persons insured, and is organized by its members, not with a view to profit, but for the solo purpose of mutually insuring each other; that it is essential to such a company, that every person insured should be a member of the company, and an insurer of all the other members, as well as insured by them; and that one who pays the premium upon his policy in cash, and is liable for nothing more, does not become a member of the company, and is in no sense an insurer of others holding its policies; that there is no mutuality, therefore, between such a person and those who have given premium notes, liable to be assessed for future losses; and hence, that issuing policies for cash premiums, is a departure from the legitimate business of a mutual insurance company, and subversive of that distinction between joint-stock and mutual companies which it was the design of the legislature to preserve.

This argument, it will be seen, consists of two branches, viz.: 1. Of that construction of the act of 1849, which holds that a strict line of demarcation was intended to be drawn between the two classes of companies, and that when a company had once made its election to organize, either as a joint-stock or a mutual company, it was the object of the act that it should be ever thereafter rigidly confined to that mode of insurance which is appropriate to its class. 2.

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Bluebook (online)
21 N.Y. 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mygatt-v-new-york-protection-insurance-ny-1860.