State Ex Rel. American Central Life Insurance v. Landwehr

300 S.W. 294, 318 Mo. 181, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 499
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 23, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 300 S.W. 294 (State Ex Rel. American Central Life Insurance v. Landwehr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. American Central Life Insurance v. Landwehr, 300 S.W. 294, 318 Mo. 181, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 499 (Mo. 1927).

Opinion

BLAIR, J.

Original proceeding in prohibition. Our provisional rule, including an attached copy of the petition theretofore filed, was duly issued and served upon respondent. He has filed a demurrer, thereby confessing the truth of all facts well pleaded in the petition.

From said petition it appears that relator is an insurance corporation organized under the laws of the State of Indiana and duly authorized' to do a life insurance business in the State of Missouri. Respondent is the duly elected, qualified and acting judge of Division One of the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis. Under the provisions of Section 7991, Revised Statutes 1899 (now See. 6310, R. S. 1919), relator appointed the Superintendent of the Insurance De *184 partment of this State and Ms successors as its agent upon whom service of process could be bad in suits filed against relator in this State.

On September 7, 1926, one Bertha Row instituted an action against relator in the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis to recover as beneficiary upon a certain policy of life insurance issued by relator upon the life of her husband, Ebbidel Row, who died March 16, 1926. Insured applied for and accepted said policy in the State of Kansas. He resided in Kansas then and at the time of his death. Bertha Row, the beneficiary in said policy, was then and now is a resident of the State of Kansas. On September 9, 1926, service of summons was had in said cause by the Sheriff of Cole County, Missouri, by delivering a true copy thereof, together with the copy of the petition attached thereto, to the Deputy Superintendent of the Insurance Department of Missouri in the absence of the Superintendent.

At the October term, 1926, of the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis (which was the return term), relator appeared specially and filed its motion to quash and set aside the return of the sheriff to the writ of summons. The motion to quash was thereafter overruled by Judge Hall, who was then the Presiding Judge of Division One. No other ruling by the trial court was proper, in view of controlling decisions of this court hereinafter referred to. Judge Landwehr succeeded Judge Hall as judge of Division One, wherein said cause is now pending, and he was'made respondent in this proceeding.

The sole question in the case is covered by relator’s contention “that Section 6310, Revised Statutes 1919, requiring your petitioner, as a condition of its right to ,transact business in the State of Missouri, to appoint, by power cl-.attorney, the Superintendent of the Insurance Department of the State of Missouri as its agent for the acceptance of process on its behalf in actions instituted against it in said State, is confined and limited to actions instituted on account of business transacted by your petitioner in the State of Missouri, i. e., to actions on policies issued by your petitioner to citizens and .residents of the State of Missouri, and that said statute does not authorize or empower the Superintendent or the Deputy Superintendent of the Insurance Department of the State of Missouri to accept service of process on behalf of your petitioner in actions arising out of business transacted by your petitioner in, and with citizens of, other States or on policies issued by your petitioner to citizens and residents of other States, where, as appears from the averments of the petition filed by the said Bertha Row against your petitioner, as aforesaid, the insured under the policy sued on was, at the time of the application therefor, and at the time of its issuance, and at the time of his death, a citizen and resident of such other. State, and was at no time a citizen and resident of the State of Missouri.”

*185 In tbe case of Gold Issue Mining & Milling Company v. Pennsylvania Fire Insurance Company, 267 Mo. 524, 184 S. W. 999, and State ex rel. Pacific Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Grimm, 239 Mo. 135, 143 S. W. 483, this court ruled adversely to relator’s contention. Relator is now earnestly insisting that our former decisions are out of harmony with the rule announced by the United States Supreme Court and well-considered decisions of other States and do not soundly construe our own statute, and asks that we now recede from the rule announced in those cases.

As pointed out by Judge WoodsoN, in the Gold Issue Mining’ & Milling Co. case, the first legislation in this State requiring foreign insurance companies doing business in this State to designate agents, upon whom process could be served in this State, occurred in 1845. Section 3 of Chapter 87 of the Revised Statutes for 1845 was as follows:

“The agent or agents of any such company aforesaid, shall also be required, before commencing business, or, in case he or they have already commenced business, then, on or before the first day of July, eighteen hundred and forty-five, to furnish to the clerk of the county court, to be placed on the records of said court, a resolution of the board of directors of the company for which he or they may propose to act, or are already acting, duly authenticated, authorizing any citizen or person residing in the State of Missouri, or elsewhere, having a claim against any such company aforesaid, growing out of a contract of insurance, made with the agent or agents of any such company aforesaid, doing business in this State, to sue for the same in any court in said State having competent jurisdiction; and further authorizing service of process on said agent or agents to be sufficiently binding on said company to abide the issue of said suit, and that such service shall authorize judgments in the same manner that judgments are taken against private individuals; and it is hereby enacted, that the service of process on the said agent or agents, in any action commenced against such company, shall be deemed a service upon the company, and shall authorize the same proceedings as in case of other actions at law; the process shall be served and returned in the same manner, as if the action were against the agent or agents personally.”

It will be noted that the designation of agents for the service of process was limited to process in suits instituted by persons “having a claim against any such company aforesaid, growing out of a contract of insurance, made with the agent or agents of any such • company aforesaid, doing business in this State.”

By the fourth subdivision of Section 1, Chapter 84, of the Revised Statutes of 1855, it was provided that a foreign insurance company, doing business in this State, should file with the county clerk of the county, where it proposed to do business, a resolution “au *186 thorizing any person having a claim against such company, growing out of a contract of insurance made in this State, with the agent, or agents, thereof doing business in this State, to sue such company for the same, in any court of this State having competent jurisdiction,” etc., and authorizing service upon such agents.

The provisions of the 1845 and the 1855 statutes are practically identical. The latter made it more certain that service upon such companies should' be limited to actions brought upon contracts of insurance made in this State.

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Bluebook (online)
300 S.W. 294, 318 Mo. 181, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 499, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-american-central-life-insurance-v-landwehr-mo-1927.