People ex rel. Secretary of State v. State Insurance

19 Mich. 392, 1869 Mich. LEXIS 74
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 28, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 19 Mich. 392 (People ex rel. Secretary of State v. State Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People ex rel. Secretary of State v. State Insurance, 19 Mich. 392, 1869 Mich. LEXIS 74 (Mich. 1869).

Opinion

Cooley Ch. J.

The present is an application on behalf of the Secretary of State to compel the defendants to submit to such an examination of their books and affairs as is contemplated by Section twenty-six of an act relative to the organization and powers of fires and marine insurance Companies transacting business within this State.” Laws of 1869 Vol. 1 p. 230. The defendants resist the application on the grounds:

1. That mandamus is not a proper remedy for such a case, but that the State, if they refuse to comply with any [394]*394provision of their charter or with any statutory regulation, must proceed by quo warranto or by indictment.

2. That the application is premature, inasmuch as the defendants were in existence as a corporation under a prior law when the act above mentioned was passed, and by the thirty-fifth Section of that act were allowed until the first day of January, 1870, to conform to its provisions. They cannot therefore, it is argued, be compelled to do or submit to any thing under that act until the time thus allowed them has fully elapsed.

3. That although the Legislature, under its complete power to amend laws of incorporation, may legislate such corporations out of existence, unless they will comply with new provisions, yet it has no power to compel the defendants against their will to continue in existence under, or to accept the provisions of a new law, and if it had, the title of the act in question does not indicate that such was the intention.

To determine upon the validity of these objections, it is important to examine a little the purpose of the act of 1869, that we may be enabled to discover what it was precisely which the Legislature undertook to accomplish by it. The general purpose of the act may be stated to be, to regulate the business of fire and marine insurance within the. State, whether carried on by corporations existing in virtue of organizations under its laws, or by foreign corporations, associations or partnerships. To accomplish this general purpose it provides for the organization of corporations within the State, points out their powers and duties, and the powers and duties of their officers, and makes a great many regulations designed for the protection of policy holders, against the imprudent or dishonest action of officers or agents. While it leaves unimpaired the corporate entities previously created in the State for the transaction of this business, it limits a time within which they shall make [395]*395their organization conform, to the new act; the design being that at the end of that time all corporations existing under the laws of the State for the purpose specified, shall possess uniformity m their leading features, and stand upon the same footing as regards powers, capacities, duties, obligations and liabilities, except so far as the act itself creates differences, dependent upon the differences in the kinds of business to be transacted by them; whether' fire, or marine, mutual or otherwise. It also, for the like purpose of protection to policy holders, establishes various regulations in regard to foreign insurance companies, associations or partnerships, a compliance with which is the condition upon which they are to be suffered to transact business within the State.

Among the most important provisions which the act makes towards the accomplishment of its general purpose, is that for the inspection of the books and affairs of any company doing business within the State, and incorporated under its laws. For this purpose Section twenty-six provides that the Secretary of State may appoint one or more persons not officers of any fire insurance company, doing business within this State to make the necessary examination; and the statute makes it the duty of the officers or agents of any such company to cause their books to be opened for the inspection of the person or persons so appointed, and otherwise to facilitate such examination so far as it may be in their power to do. Further provisions are then made for winding up the affairs of the company by legal proceedings if it shall prove of doubtful solvency; and for its entire dissolution.

Now, it is obvious, that to make the protection to the policy holders which was contemplated by the section here referred to efficacious, the Secretary of State must have some expeditious mode of enforcing compliance against un[396]*396willing officers, and that if be is left to the slow process of quo warranto or criminal prosecution, the whole purpose of this Section may be defeated. Insurance Companies and other financial institutions differ from most other corporations in the general interest the public have in knowing precisely what their pecuniary condition and responsibility is from day to day; and while the law has made’ ample provision for periodical reports, it has also wisely empowered the proper public officer to demand an examination at any time, without previous notice, and without affording the officers of the corporation an opportunity to prepare deceptive appearances. Such opportunity will be afforded in every case if the examination can be resisted, and the security which this section of the statute was designed to give, will be of little avail except so far as a refusal to submit to examination may subject a corporation to suspicion an'd thus put the public upon its guard.

We understand the general rule to be, that where a statute imposes a specific duty,' either in express terms or by fair and reasonable implication, and there is no other specific and adequate remedy, the writ of mandamus may be awarded to compel performance of the duty. And in such a case it is no sufficient objection that the corporation upon which the duty is imposed, is liable to indictment for neglect to perform it.—People v. Mayor etc. of New York, 10 Wend., 395; The King v. The Severn and Wye Railway, 2 B. and Ald,. 646. This must be so on general principles, unless, as is said by Abbott Oh. J. in the case last cited, the remedy by indictment is “equally convenient, beneficial and effectual.”

In the present case no' prosecutions, either of the Company or of officers can speedily and beneficially afford to the policy holders the desired protection, and there can be no sufficient reason, therefore, why this remedy should not be resorted to, in order to compel a compliance with the [397]*397law. This being our view, we think the first objection not well taken.

The second objection we think equally untenable. We do not understand the act of 1869 to be inapplicable to the previously existing companies, before the thirty-first day of January next, or that it allows them until that time to accept its provisions. The act, on the contrary, applies to them immediately; and the time allowed by Section thirty-five is only given for the purpose of enabling them to make such changes in their own organization, or in their rules, regulations, modes of business &c. as would be needful to put themselves into entire conformity with the new law. For that purpose it might be found necessary to change their articles of association; but in the mean time they are not exempt from any proper inspection or examination, or from other provisions of the act which are equally applicable and equally important whatever the law under which the company was formed, and whatever their pre-existing regulations.

Nor do we think the third objection a valid one.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Advisory Opinion on Constitutionality of 1975 PA 227
1975 PA 227 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1976)
Advisory Opinion Re Constitutionality of 1972 PA 294
1972 PA 294 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1973)
ATTORNEY GENERAL EX REL. OPTOMETRY BOARD OF EXAMINERS v. Peterson
164 N.W.2d 43 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1969)
ATTORNEY GENERAL EX REL. BOARD OF EXAMINERS IN OPTOMETRY v. Peterson
145 N.W.2d 386 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 1967)
Dearborn National Insurance v. Commissioner of Insurance
44 N.W.2d 892 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1950)
Bismarck Tribune Co. v. Wolf
255 N.W. 569 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1934)
Lockwood v. Stoll
250 N.W. 321 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1933)
Hurd v. Sanitary Sewer District
191 N.W. 438 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1922)
People ex rel. City of Chicago v. Kent
133 N.E. 276 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1921)
Grinky v. Wayne Probate Judge
100 N.W. 171 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1904)
Detroit v. Detroit Citizens' Street Railway Co.
184 U.S. 368 (Supreme Court, 1902)
Cooperative Building & Loan Ass'n v. State ex rel. Daniels
60 N.E. 146 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1901)
Taubman v. Board of Commissioners
84 N.W. 784 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1900)
Bigelow v. Brooks
77 N.W. 810 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1899)
McMorran v. Great Hive of the Ladies
75 N.W. 943 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1898)
Hackfeld v. King
11 Haw. 5 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1897)
Burrows v. Delta Transportation Co.
29 L.R.A. 468 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1895)
State ex rel. Klotz v. Ross
23 S.W. 196 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1893)
Wardle v. Cummings
49 N.W. 212 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1891)
In re Open & Widen Willis Avenue
22 N.W. 871 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1885)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 Mich. 392, 1869 Mich. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-secretary-of-state-v-state-insurance-mich-1869.