South Carolina Ex Rel. Phoenix Mutual Life Insurance v. McMaster

237 U.S. 63, 35 S. Ct. 504, 59 L. Ed. 839, 1915 U.S. LEXIS 1311
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 5, 1915
DocketNos. 195 and 196
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 237 U.S. 63 (South Carolina Ex Rel. Phoenix Mutual Life Insurance v. McMaster) 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
South Carolina Ex Rel. Phoenix Mutual Life Insurance v. McMaster, 237 U.S. 63, 35 S. Ct. 504, 59 L. Ed. 839, 1915 U.S. LEXIS 1311 (1915).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Day

delivered the opinion of the court.

These cases involve the same questions, and, being practically one proceeding, may be disposed of together. They arise out of an application to the Supreme Court of the State of South Carolina for á writ of mandamus, requiring the respondent, Fitz. H. McMaster, as Insurance Commissioner of the State of South Carolina, to issue to the Phoenix Mutual Life Insurance Company, a corporation of tlje State of Connecticut (hereinafter called the' Phoenix Company), a license to do business in South Carolina as a life insurance company for the year beginning April 1st, 1912, The Supreme Court of the State refused to issue the writ (94 S. Car. 379, 382), and the case is brought here, because of alleged deprivation of rights under the Fourteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution.

By the act of March 8,1910, § 13, 26 Statutes at Large (South Carolina), 774, it was provided:

"Before licensing any insurance company to do business in this State, the Insurance Commissioner shall require each such company to deposit- with him an approved bond or approved securities, in the discretion of the Commissioner, as follows: Each legal reserve life insurance company, twenty thousand dollars; each fire, accident, or casualty or surety insurance company, or any company not herein specified, ten thousand dollars: Provided, That domestic industrial insurance companies shall in no case *68 be required to deposit more than the legal reserve on their policies, but not less than one thousand dollars, which said deposit may be made at the rate of five hundred dollars a year, on April 1st of each year, until the whole be deposited; each domestic mutual life insurance company doing business on a recognized table of mortality with interest assumption not higher than four per centum per annum, not -less than three thousand dollars. But each such domestic company shall keep on deposit with the Insurance Commissioner at all times, not less than the legal reserve on all of its outstanding policies: Provided, Further, That the terms of this Section shall not apply to domestic mutual assessment companies not doing business in more than two adjoining counties. If a bond be given, it shall be conditioned to pay any judgment entered up against any such company in. any court of competent jurisdiction in this State, and such judgment shall be a lien upon the bond or securities. In case a bond is given, the judgment creditor shall have the right to bring suit on said bond for the satisfaction of the judgment in the county in which the judgment is received.”

Under authority of this act, the Insurance Commissioner notified insurance companies that, exercising a discretion reposed in him to require such companies to make deposits with the Insurance Commissioner or accept a surety bond, beginning April 1, 1912, companies which had not invested at least one-fourth of their reserve in South Carolina in securities named in the act of 1910, would be required to deposit South Carolina securities with the Department. From such companies no surety bond would be accepted. From companies which had invested at least one-fourth of their reserve on South Carolina policies in securities of that State, a surety bond would be accepted. The letter also stated that the Départment would receive on deposit South Carolina state, county, or municipal bonds; first mortgage bonds of real estate in the State; *69 first mortgage bonds of solvent .domestic corporations, whose property was situate entirely- within the State; or time certificates of deposit in .banks of the State. .

The Phoenix Company applied for a license for the year beginning April 1, 1912, and inclosed its check for the license fee and a surety bond in the sum of $20,000. The Insurance Commissioner refused the license, and declined to .issue the same unless the Phoenix Company would make a deposit with him of securities acceptable to him, in the sum of $20,000, in bonds of the State of South Carolina, of any county, state or town of the State of South Carolina, or first mortgage bonds on real estate in The State of South'Carolina, or first mortgage bonds of solvent domestic colorations, whose property was situated entirely within that State, or any property situated in that State and taxable therein, or time certificates of deposit in banks'of that State.

Afterwards the Commissioner notified the. surety company that he would not accept a bond from the Phoenix Company unless the latter would furnish him with an affidavit showing that at least one-fourth óf its reserve on South Carolina policies had been invested in the securities named in the act of 1910. The Insurance Company declined to make such affidavit, or to make such investments, on the ground that the same was not required by any law of the State of South Carolina. It is the contention of the Insurance Company that the action of the Commissioner in undertaking to exact .from it as a condition of receiving a license the investment of at least'one-fourth of its reserves in the securities as required by the Commissioner, and in accepting from other insurance companies, which had complied with the requirement of the Commissioner, the bond of a surety company, and' issuing to them a license, was discriminatory. And the Phoenix Company particularly insisted that the action of the Commissioner in licensing the Mutual Benefit. *70 Life Insurance Company of New Jersey on giving a surety company bond, without that company having invested 25 per cent, of its reserve in securities demanded by the Commissioner, discriminated against the plaintiff in error, which action, it was contended, deprived the company of its property without due process of law, and violated the equal- protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.

The Supreme Court of the State of South Carolina put its decision denying the writ on the ground that the petitioner had failed to deposit with the Insurance Commissioner any securities, or to comply with the law and the ruling of the Commissioner, and that it stood in nq position to raise the question involved; and dealing with the equal protection of the law, the court held that the Commissioner, under the act of 1910, was given broad authority to examine into the safety and solvency of applicants for the privilege of doing business within the State, with reference to their dealings, and the conduct'of their business; that the statute gave him authority to determine whether the applicant had the necessary qualifications for doing business within the State; and that the Commissioner had the.right to determine whether the particular applicant should deposit bond or securities. In this way only could the discretionary power conferred upon the Commissionerer be exercised, and the court therefore concluded that there was no denial of the equal protection of the laws.

The case is presented here only in its aspect of deprivation of alleged rights secured' by the Federal Constitution. We fail to see any substantial merit in the contention that the applicant has been deprived of due process of law in the exercise of the discretion given to the Commissioner to accept or reject applicants for the insurance privilege under the laws of the State, and in requiring some to give bonds and others to deposit securities, after having *71

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Bluebook (online)
237 U.S. 63, 35 S. Ct. 504, 59 L. Ed. 839, 1915 U.S. LEXIS 1311, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/south-carolina-ex-rel-phoenix-mutual-life-insurance-v-mcmaster-scotus-1915.