Rogers v. Ramey

248 S.W. 254, 198 Ky. 138, 1923 Ky. LEXIS 397
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 6, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 248 S.W. 254 (Rogers v. Ramey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rogers v. Ramey, 248 S.W. 254, 198 Ky. 138, 1923 Ky. LEXIS 397 (Ky. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Clay

Reversing.

This is .an appeal from a judgment denying appellant a mandamus requiring James F. Ramey, Insurance Commissioner, to grant him a license to act as agent for the Employers Fire Insurance Company of Boston, Massachusetts.

It appears that appellant is employed ¡by the Capital Guaranty & Brokerage Company as its secretary, and receives a salary for his iservices. The Capital Guaranty & Brokerage Company is a corporation with headquarters in the city of Frankfort, and among the powers conferred by its charter are the following:

‘ ‘ The nature of the .business of ¡said corporation and the objects and purposes to be transacted, promoted and carried on by it, .shall 'be to buy and sell, discount and rediscount notes, drafts, bills of exchange, stocks., bonds, securities and choses in action of all kinds, both as principal and as agent; also to buy and sell liens on real and personal property and to loan money and accept as surety therefor liens on and pledges of real and pérsonal property; to act as agent or attorney for the transaction of any business, or the management of estates or the collection of rents, accounts, interest, dividends, notes, and bonds, securities for money and demands of every kind and character; and to also act as agent-or trustee for persons and corporations in any and all other matters which can -be solicited, negotiated, operated and carried on by an agent or trustee; also to act as agent or broker in securing loans, effecting sales of real and personal property; to organize, finance, develop and improve business firms., partnerships and corporations.’'’

Appellant’s amended application for the license contains the following:

“I am employed by the Capital Guaranty & Broken age Company, -a Kentucky corporation, with its chief-[140]*140office and place of business at. Frankfort, Ky. I work on a salary basis , and my-employer, under tbe conditions of tbe employment, is entitled to my entire time. I propose, therefore, to write insurance on all the property of my employer, its customers, officers and stockholders and for the public generally! I propose to turn over to my employer- all -of the commissions, ,premiums or parts of premiums and profits which I may earn or which may accrue to such agency, because, as' we mutually construe it, my employer is entitled to these commissions under my contract -of employment. While in fact I am applying for an agent’s license,'the license to all intents and purposes is being- issued to the Capital Guaranty & Brokerage Company, my employer. I desire to further state, however, that the Capital Guaranty & Brokerage Company is fully authorized and empowered under its-charter to act as agent or attorney in any and all matters, and is therefore qualified to .act as insurance agent. A copy of the articles of incorporation of the Capital Guaranty & Brokerage Company is attached hereto as a part of this statement. ’ ’

The license was refused, and the.mandamus denied, on the ground that appellant’-s plan of doing business was violative of the. statute prohibiting rebates.

The case of L. W. Botts v. J. F. Barney, Insurance Commissioner, which was before Chief Justice Carroll on motion for an injunction restraining Barney, as -In-, surance Commissioner, from revoking Botts’ license to act as an insurance agent, involved a similar question. Botts, who was an officer -of the Fidelity & Columbia Trust Company, wrote insurance for -the general public in his own name, but accounted to the trust company for all the commissions which he received. In an opinion concurred, in by three other members of the court the Chief Justice held that the Fidelity &■ Columbia Trust Company was authorized by its -charter to act. as an insurance -agent, and its receipt of commissions earned by its officer was not rebating within - the meaning of the statute. In the more recent ca-se of Lyman v. Barney, 195 Ky. 223, 242 S. W. 21, it appeared that Lyman was the secretary of the Kentucky Association -of Highway Contractors, an organization that had no capital .stock, was composed entirely of -highway contractors and whose purposes were to promote the business interests of its members-, but not to make, profits for itself. Lyman was the only paid officer employed, and his .salayy. and • ex[141]*141penses-were paid-by dues or assessments against members of the association;' Lyman proposed to write bonds and indemnity insurance for members of the association and possibly others, and the commissions earned 'by him were to be turned over to the association and used to' pay his salary and -expenses, thus 'reducing the dues or assessments -against the members for whom he -wrote the insurance.' -In holding that this' was1 a method of rebating, the court approved'the'ruling in-the Botts case, but distinguished the two cases in the following language:

“Nor is, as counsel asserts, this conclusion inconsistent 'With an order of a member of this court in which three other members- concurred, granting an injunction in the case óf L. W. Botts v, J. F. Ramey, Insurance Commissioner, pending in the Franklin circuit court. In that case the Insurance Commissioner was threatening to cancel a license granted to Botts, an officer and employe -of the Fidelity & Columbia Trust Company, who was writing insurance for members of the general public in his own name, but accounting to the trust company by whom he was employed for all commissions. That holding was based upon the ground that the trust company, organized for’ -profit -and empowered by its charter to act as insurance agent, was really the agent of the insurance companies, and writing the insurance through its agent, Botts, whereas, appellant’s employer is not by its bharter' authorized to act as- such agent or permitted to -earn -profits-.
“Hence appellant, when writing insurance as he.proposes, must act for himself and not for his employer, and when he indirectly returns to those for whom he writes insurance, the commissions earned by him for so doing, he is rebating, as that word is used and defined in 762a-19, supra.”

But it is insisted that the- Capital Guaranty & Brokerage Company is- not authorized by its charter to act as the agent of a fire insurance company. While it is the rule that if a charter, in defining the powers of a corporation, enumerates certain things which it may do by word's of particular and. specific meaning, and suck enumeration is followed by general words, .the general words are not to be taken in-.their .widest sense, but are restricted to things of the. same general kind as those enumerated, unless a contrary intent appears. State v. Lincoln Trust Co., 144 Mo. 562, 46 S. W. 593; no such [142]*142case is here presented. After enumerating certain other powers, the language of the charter is as follows:.

“To act as agent or attorney for the transaction of any business, or the management of estates or the collection of rents, accounts, interest, dividends, notes and bonds, securities for money and demands of every kind and character; and to also act as agent or trustee for persons and corporations in any and all other matters which can be solicited, negotiated, operated and carried on by an agent or trustee.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
248 S.W. 254, 198 Ky. 138, 1923 Ky. LEXIS 397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogers-v-ramey-kyctapp-1923.