Northwestern National Insurance v. Mortensen

284 N.W. 13, 230 Wis. 377, 1939 Wisc. LEXIS 83
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 7, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 284 N.W. 13 (Northwestern National Insurance v. Mortensen) 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
Northwestern National Insurance v. Mortensen, 284 N.W. 13, 230 Wis. 377, 1939 Wisc. LEXIS 83 (Wis. 1939).

Opinion

Fairchild, J.

The plaintiff seeks to enjoin the commissioner of insurance and the fire insurance rating bureau from applying the fire insurance rating act to marine insurance policies, and contends that a certain fine-arts policy which it has issued to the Layton Art Gallery of Milwaukee is a form of marine insurance and not subject to the rating-law. The state, on the other hand, insists that all policies which insure against fire, whether or not within the definition of marine policies, are subject to the fire insurance rating act as to the premiums applicable to the fire risks covered by the policy.

Sec. 203.33, Stats., provides that except as specified in sec. 203.49, every insurer licensed to insure against direct or consequential loss by fire and lightning, windstorm, and hail, shall maintain an actuarial bureau or be a member of such a bureau. Since it was originally enacted, the section has been amended to include insurance against explosion, riot, civil commotion, damage to other kinds of property from aircraft, and self-propelled vehicles, and smoke dam[382]*382age, when written supplemental to or in combination with a policy covering direct or consequential fire loss.

Sec. 203.49, Stats., provides that the rating law shall not apply to town mutual companies, nor to domestic mutual cyclone insurance companies, nor to contracts for automobile insurance, nor to the rolling stock of railroads or property in transit while in the possession of railroad companies or other common carriers, nor to the property of such common carriers used or employed by them in their business of carrying freight, merchandise, or passengers.

The plaintiff is licensed to write fire insurance, and is therefore, under sec. 203.33, Stats., subject to the rating law. It is also licensed to- write marine insurance. Sec. 203.42 provides that no insurer shall intentionally charge a different rate from that which has been filed with the bureau. Does this mean that the plaintiff, being subject to the rating act because licensed to write fire insurance, must file rates for its marine policies also, excepting only such as relate to property of or in the hands of common carriers? It seems apparent that the legislature did not so intend, and that, as the plaintiff contends, the legislature recognized the existence of marine insurance as something entirely distinct from fire insurance. In legislating with reference to fire insurance it was not necessary to except from the fire rating-act marine insurance, because the distinction between the two types of insurance existed without specific provision.

But it also is apparent that insurance companies cannot by custom so expand and distort the concept of marine insurance as to modify their obligation to schedule their fire insurance rates. The exception in favor of marine insurance extends only to traditional forms of such insurance, to the type of policy which is typical of the class, and not to any recently developed or unusual type of coverage bearing a close resemblance to fire insurance.

[383]*383The legislative concept of marine insurance is disclosed by the definition in sec. 201.04, Stats., which authorizes the formation of insurance companies for certain purposes. In sec. 201.04 (2) there is the following definition:

“Marine insurance. — Vessels, freight, goods, moneys, effect's and money loaned on bottomry and respondentia, against the perils of the seas and other perils usually insured against by marine insurance, including the risks of inland transportation and navigation.”

Historically, marine insurance always involved some type of vessel, and the risks insured against were the perils incident to transportation by water. In Winter, Marine Insurance, p. 63, it is said:

“Every marine insurance transaction involves some type of vessel. Whether the insurance be on hull, freight or cargo, there is a vessel as the base of the insurance.”

The term “inland marine insurance” appears to be comparatively new in the insurance world. As late as 1909 the term evidently related to insurance against the risks of navigation on lakes, rivers, and canals. At or about the time of the World War the scope of such policies seems to have been expanded to include risks of actual or technical transportation on land.

So far as we can discover, this enlargement to include transportation by land is the furthest development that the subject has had by ordinary custom and usage. Marine insurance companies may have developed forms of policies which cover risks only incidentally related to transportation, but we do not think that such policies are so distinctively marine insurance, and so different in subject matter from fire insurance, as to be included by implication within the exceptions to the fire insurance rating act. In fact, it is doubtful whether inland transportation insurance is so distinctively [384]*384marine insurance as to be excluded from the fire insurance rating act by implication, especially in view of the fact that the legislature has seen fit to include in the rating law an express exception for rolling stock of railroads or property in transit while in the possession of railroad companies or other common carriers, and the property of such common carriers used or employed by them in their business of carrying freight, merchandise, or passengers, sec. 203.49, Stats.

It must be held that marine insurance relating to transportation by water is, by its very nature, excepted from the provisions of the rating law, but that inland marine insurance not relating to transportation by water is excepted only so far as it comes within the provisions of sec. 203.49, Stats. Difficulties may arise in determining whether a particular policy of insurance is primarily a marine or common-carrier policy, or primarily a policy protecting property in location and only incidentally a transportation policy. But there is no such difficulty in the present case.

The Layton Art Gallery policy protects the property only while located either at the gallery or at the vocational school. The coverage may be extended to include transportation risks, but only upon notice and payment of additional premium. The policy is not marine insurance, nor does it come within the exception in sec. 203.49, Stats. In view of the essential nature of marine insurance, we do not consider that the fact that the insurance is against risks other than fire makes this a marine policy when none of the risks of transportation are insured against. The rating bureau, the commissioner of insurance, and the circuit court properly concluded that the policy was subject to the provisions of the fire insurance rating law.

This conclusion is strengthened when we take into consideration the difficulty of making the rating law effective if fire and marine companies were permitted to write, in their marine departments, insurance against loss by fire, [385]*385lightning, windstorm, hail, and sprinkler leakage upon property at a fixed location, without reporting the rates which they were charging to the actuarial bureaus.

From a study of the report of the interim committee of the legislature which investigated the problem of fire insurance regulation in 1931, it is apparent that one of the purposes of the rating law was to prevent discrimination in fire insurance rates. To this end, companies licensed to write fire insurance have been required to report their premiums and to charge the same rate for all similar risks.

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Bluebook (online)
284 N.W. 13, 230 Wis. 377, 1939 Wisc. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northwestern-national-insurance-v-mortensen-wis-1939.