National Union Fire Insurance v. Wanberg

260 U.S. 71, 43 S. Ct. 32, 67 L. Ed. 136, 1922 U.S. LEXIS 2341
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 13, 1922
Docket32
StatusPublished
Cited by82 cases

This text of 260 U.S. 71 (National Union Fire Insurance v. Wanberg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Union Fire Insurance v. Wanberg, 260 U.S. 71, 43 S. Ct. 32, 67 L. Ed. 136, 1922 U.S. LEXIS 2341 (1922).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Taft

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a writ of error to the Supreme Court of North Dakota, brought to reverse its judgment affirming one of the District Court of William County of that State for $1,254.25, with interest and'costs, upon a contract of hail insurance, against the National Union Fire Insurance Company, a corporation of Pennsylvania. The judgment rests for its validity on § 4902. of the Compiled Laws of North Dakota, 1913, as follows:

Every insurance company engaged in the business of insuring against loss by hail in this State, shall be bound, and the insurance shall take effect from and after twenty-four hours from the day and hour the application for such insurance has been taken by the authorized local agent of said company, and if the company shall decline to write the insurance upon receipt of the application, it shall forthwith notify the applicant and agent who took the application, by telegram, and in that event, the insurance shall not become effective. Provided, that nothing in this article shall prevent the company from issuing a policy on such an application and putting the insurance in force prior to the expiration of said twenty-four hours.”

The facts as stipulated were:’

At ten o'clock in the forenoon of July 12, 1917, Wan-berg on his farm at Tioga in North Dakota, signed and delivered to Everson, the agent of the defendant company, an application on the blank furnished by the company for insurance on his cropsi in the sum of $1,400 against loss or damage by hail or any other cause, except *73 fire, floods, winter kill or failure of insured to use good husbandry. He also, paid to Everson the premium of $140. Everson had authority as agent only to solicit and receive such applications and the premium therefor and to transmit them to the company’s western office at Waseca, Minnesota, where applications were acted upon and policies issued. The company was duly licensed under the laws of North Dakota to transact its business in the State. On the afternoon of July 13, 1917, Everson mailed the application with the premium less commission to the office at Waseca, where it arrived on Sunday, July 15th, and was delivered on Monday the 16th. In the meantime, at six o’clock in the evening of July 14th, a hail storm injured Wanberg’s growing crops to the extent of the amount of the judgment. On Tuesday, July 17th, and without knowledge of the loss, the Waseca agency returned the application and premium to Everson saying that at that late date it would not be accepted. The application contained a provision that it should take effect from the day it was received and accepted, as evidenced by the issuance of a policy thereon at the Waseca, Minnesota, agency for the company.

The only error we can consider which was duly reserved is that § 4902 as applied to this case violates the Fourteenth Amendment in that it operates to deprive the company of liberty of contract, and therefore of its property, without due process of law, and of the equal protection of the laws.

The decision of this Court in German Alliance Insurance Co. v. Lewis, 233 U. S. 389, settled the right of a state legislature to regulate the conduct by corporations, domestic and foreign, of insurance as a business affected with a public interest. This includes provision for “ unearned premium fund or reserve; . . . the limitation of dividends, the publishing of accounts, valued policies, standards of policies, prescribing investment, requiring *74 deposits in money or bonds, confining the business to corporations, preventing discrimination in rates, limitation of risks and other regulations equally restrictive.” (233 U. S. 412.) It includes moreover the restrictions of defense to recovery on policies and the forbidding of stipulations to evade such restrictions. “Orient Insurance Co. v. Daggs, 172 U. S. 557; Whitfield v. Aetna Life Insurance Co., 205 U. S. 489. But it is said the line of possible and valid regulation has here been passed by affirmatively imposing a contract on an insurance company before it has had a chance to consider the circumstances and decide that it wishes to make it, indeed, that it declares . that to be an agreement, with heavy obligation which is in fact no agreement at all. Thus it is argued that by this statute mandatory obligation is substituted for freedom of contract, which is just that against which the Fourteenth Amendment was intended to secure persons. We agree that this legislation approaches closely the limit of legislative power, but not that it transcends it. The statute treats the business of hail insurance as affected with a public interest. In that country, where a farmer’s whole crop, the work and product of a year, may be wiped out in a few minutes, and where the recurrence of such manifestations of nature is not infrequent, and no care can provide against their destructive character, it is of much public moment that agencies like insurance companies to distribute the loss qver the entire community should be regulated so as to be effective for the purpose. The danger and loss to be mitigated are possible for a short period.' The storms are usually fitful and may cover a comparatively small territory at a time, so that, of two neighbors, one may have a total loss and the other may escape altogether. The risk justifies a high rate of insurance. It differs so-much in thése and other respects from other insurance that it may properly call for special legislative treatment. The statute applies to all companies engaged *75 in such insurance. There is no discrimination and no denial of the equal protection of the laws. The fact that the time requirements of the statute may bear more heavily on foreign companies whose principal offices may be far removed than upon those whose headquarters are within the State is a circumstance necessarily incident to their conduct of business in another State of which they can not complain. They can not expect the laws of the State to be bent to accommodate them as a matter of strict legal right, however wise it may be for a legislature to give weight to such a consideration in securing the use of foreign capital for its people. Moreover, as the business of such insurance companies is purely intrastate, New York Life Insurance Co. v. Deer Lodge County, 231 U. S. 495, the State has power to require them to accept conditions different from those imposed on domestic corporations (Paul v. Virginia, 8 Wall. 168; Hooper v. California, 155 U. S. 648, and cases cited) though this is not, of course, unlimited. Terral v. Burke Construction Co., 257 U. S. 529, 532; 533.

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Bluebook (online)
260 U.S. 71, 43 S. Ct. 32, 67 L. Ed. 136, 1922 U.S. LEXIS 2341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-union-fire-insurance-v-wanberg-scotus-1922.