Olsness v. Home Ins.

14 F.2d 907, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 2129
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 13, 1926
DocketNo. 6794
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 14 F.2d 907 (Olsness v. Home Ins.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Olsness v. Home Ins., 14 F.2d 907, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 2129 (8th Cir. 1926).

Opinion

WALTER H. SANBORN, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a final decree of the court below by which it enjoined the defendant, the commissioner of insurance of the state of North Dakota, from enforcing his order of May 20, 1924, which forbade the complainant and other union insurance companies from separating or withdrawing their agents from the mixed insurance agencies in that state.

The material facts alleged by the complainant in its bill in equity here were that [908]*908it was a corporation of the state of New York; that it had been for many years and is engaged in the general business of insuring against losses in the states of this nation; that it was admitted and licensed to prosecute its general insurance business in the state of North Dakota when it beeame a state; that it has been carrying on that business in that state ever since and that on April 1, 1924, it was duly licensed to prosecute its business therein for the ensuing year; that when the order of the commissioner of May 20, 1924, was made, it had transacted in the year 1923 in the state of North Dakota insurance business aggregating in premiums more than $250,000, and that, if permitted, it would in 1924 transact an insurance business in that state aggregating more than $300,000 in premiums; that it had appointed more than 200 agents in that state to receive for it proposals for insurance, countersign and issue policies, receive premiums, consent to the transfer of policies, and attend to other duties of such agents; and that by contract between it and each of its agents his authority as its agent was subject to revocation by it at any time without notice, and he had the like right to terminate this agency at will.

Prior to the issue of the order of May 20, 1924, there were in the state of North Dakota two voluntary associations, one composed of managers of insurance companies who were members of the Western Insurance Bureau, and another voluntary association composed of managers of insurance companies, including the managers of the complainant, who were members of the union. The companies represented in the former organization are called bureau companies; those represented in the latter are called union companies. There were “mixed agencies.” These were agencies representing certain companies whose managers were members of the Western Insurance Bureau and nonafflliated companies whose managers belonged to neither of the two voluntary organizations. Some of the agents of the complainant had been conducting or been members of or been represented by mixed agencies. The complainant deemed it indispensable to its financial soundness, the security and protection of its business as an indemnifier and underwriter of risks, and the success of its business to require its agents and representatives in North Dakota to devote to its business their faithful and loyal services, undivided and unimpaired by their representation at the same- time in the mixed agencies of competing companies whose interests and success were antagonistic to its own. It therefore had been and was the business policy of the complainant, whenever it believed it was not obtaining the best business results and the faithful and loyal services of its agents in mixed agencies, or otherwise, to terminate the agency of such agents who had theretofore conducted or were conducting mixed agencies, after giving them due and timely notice and permitting them to elect whether they would continue to represent it or would represent its competitor or competitors.

The order of the commissioner of May 20, 1924, was: “That further separation processes [separation of the agents of union companies from other agents in mixed agencies] cease forthwith, and all companies and interested persons or organizations are hereby called upon to bring about a restoration of the status quo ante, as regards mixed agencies in North Dakota.” Another paragraph of the order reads:

“Nor the purpose of making this edict effective it is hereby declared and warning given that any company, person or organization violating same will do so at the peril of having their certificate of authority to do business in the state of North Dakota revoeated. Any company whose license is so revoeated, if reinstatement is desired, must take such steps by mandamus or otherwise as it may find available to compel this department to issue a license.”

The complainant alleged in its bill in equity that the commissioner, unless enjoined by the court, would revoke its license to do business in North Dakota, institute criminal prosecutions against it and its representatives to recover thousands of dollars of claimed penalties, greatly decrease or destroy its good will and business in North Dakota, render worthless its agency plants in that state, and inflict other irreparable damages upon it, without lawful authority or due process of law, and in violation of its rights under the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.

The defendant answered this bill on July 16, 1924. The parties filed a written stipulation, entered into on July 7,1924, that this case should be brought on for trial and for final hearing on July 16, 1924. On July 16, 1924, the record reads:

“This cause coming on to be heard, pursuant to the stipulation between the parties filed herein, upon the bill of complaint and the answer of the defendant, and the complainant now moves to strike out the answer [909]*909of the defendant as insufficient, and the defendant consenting to such motion being brought on for hearing at this time without notice, and after hearing arguments of counsel and due consideration, it is ordered that the motion of the complainant to strike the answer of the defendant be granted.”

Thereupon the defendant elected to stand on its answer, the parties stipulated that the commissioner had caused his order of May 20, 1924, to .be served upon the complainant about that date, that he had never revoked it, that he had threatened and did then threaten to enforce and carry it out, and the court, after consideration of this stipulation and the pleadings, rendered its final decree, whereby it perpetually enjoined the commissioner from canceling or interfering in any way with complainant’s certificate of authority to transact business in North Dakota which the commissioner had issued to it, from interfering in any way with its right to transact its business in North Dakota on account of its refusal to eomply with the order of May 20,1924, from interfering in any way with the right of the complainant to terminate its agency contracts at will in any mixed agencies, as. defined in the pleadings, with or without the consent of its agent or agents, and from in any way attempting to compel the complainant to restore the authority of any agent or agents in any mixed agency or agencies which complainant had terminated and from publishing that complainant had no right to transact business within the state of North Dakota.

Counsel for the commissioner did not challenge the sufficiency of the complainant ’s bill to state a cause of action in equity against him in the court below, nor have they challenged it on that account here.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 F.2d 907, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 2129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/olsness-v-home-ins-ca8-1926.