State ex rel. Unity Industrial Life Ins. & Sick Benefit Ass'n v. Michel

46 So. 352, 121 La. 350, 1908 La. LEXIS 677
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 30, 1908
DocketNo. 16,880
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 46 So. 352 (State ex rel. Unity Industrial Life Ins. & Sick Benefit Ass'n v. Michel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Unity Industrial Life Ins. & Sick Benefit Ass'n v. Michel, 46 So. 352, 121 La. 350, 1908 La. LEXIS 677 (La. 1908).

Opinion

BREAUX, C. J.

Relator sued for a writ of mandamus to be directed against John T. Michel, Secretary of State, to compel him to issue to it (relator) a certificate and license under the provisions of the statute to enable it to conduct and carry on an industrial and sick benefit business.

The relator was incorporated by charter on March 14, 1907.

Attorney for relator forwarded to the State Treasurer two state bonds, amounting together to $2,000, deposited as required by Act No. 65, p. 101, of 1906, and at the same time forwarded copies of charter and of affidavits and exhibits.

The affidavit stated that relator had taken over the policies of two other companies that had lapsed.

There was also an affidavit forwarded taken by. the president of the corporation, showing that there were 2,072 outstanding industrial policies of the corporation; none of these policies for an amount over $500, and none providing for a weekly cash benefit for disability for over $20.

The president stated in this affidavit that his company and the other companies absorbed by the relator had, at some time prior to the application just referred to, collected in premiums through the absorbed companies the sum of $38,553.75 in cash, afterward disbursed through- these corporations.

The State Treasurer declined to retain these bonds, and stated in returning them that he acted upon the advice of the Secretary of State, who stated to him that he would not issue the certificate applied for by relator. ,

The relator, a short time thereafter, was informed by the Secretary of State that he must decline to issue the license to give authority to it (relator) to do business as an insurance company, as it had failed to comply with section 16 of article 1 of Act No. 105, p. 141, of 1898.

It was shortly thereafter that this mandamus was sued for, in which the relator claims that the Legislature intended to create a new branch of insurance and did not intend to put a stop to the industrial life insurance business. That as these companies are organized for the benefit of the poor, it is not reasonable to suppose that the insured were expected by the Legislature to provide the sum of $25,000 from their scanty earnings in order to obtain the very limited insurance possible under the plan of organization of the statute.

The defense is that relator failed to follow the terms of its own charter and the requirements of the statute; that the industrial life insurance corporations are bound to follow Act No. 105, p. 132, of the General Assembly of 1898, Act No. 114, p. 161, of 1898, Act No. 65,' p. 101, of 1906, and Act No. 59 p. 83, of 1898; that the companies organized on the mutual plan must comply with section 16 of Act No. 105, p. 141, of 1898, before a license will be issued to them; that they must show subscription in due and satisfactory form in an amount not less than $25,000 — of this amount, $10,000 to be paid in cash, and the remainder secured by notes of solvent makers with good collateral.

[354]*354Respondent avers that this was not done; and avers, further, that no agreement was entered into in good faith, and that no cash and no notes have ever been received from relator.

In addition and in a separate point, defendant urges that relator is attempting to violate the statute by offering to carry on the illegal business hitherto conducted by the George D. Geddes Benevolent & Mutual Assosociation, the Philadelphia National Relief Association, and the George D. Geddes Undertaking & Embalming Company, Ltd., corporations, unauthorized and not licensed by this or any other state to carry on the business of life insurance; that these three concerns are insolvent.

After having seriously considered the issues between relator and defendant, we have arrived at the conclusion that Act No. 65, p. 101, of 1906, is inconsistent with and contrary to Act No. 105, p. 132, of 1898, in so far as that the former act relates to the 825,000 before mentioned.

The following is the section of Act No. 105, p. 142, of 1898, which the defendant takes as controlling in this case:

“Every mutual company organized upon the mutual plan shall exhibit to the Secretary of State satisfactory evidence that it has entered into a bona fide agreement with a number of persons for insurance, the premiums on which insurance shall amount to not less than twenty-five thousand dollars, of which not less than two thousand dollars shall have been paid in cash, and notes of solvent parties, secured by ample security, shall have been received for the remainder.”

Respondent’s contention is that this section is binding upon the relator, and that it must comply with its terms.

We have taken into consideration the section which relator refers to as having repealed the statute confidently cited by respondent. In order to have it before us, we insert it here in extenso:

“Any corporation, association, society or fraternal order organized under the laws of this state, whether organized upon the mutual assessment plan or as a stock company, for the purpose of doing the business of industrial life insurance, as in this act defined, shall, before commencing to do business in this state, comply with the laws of this state regulating the manner in which other insurance companies shall be authorized to do business in this state, except that a deposit of one thousand ($1000) dollars, where the membership is one thousand or less, amd, for every additional one thousand members, or fraction of one thousand, added to the membership, an additional deposit of five hundred dollars ($500), until, the total sum of five thousand dollars ($5000) has been deposited, shall be made by companies operating upon the plan and according to the manner specified in this act.’’

We have italicized that portion of the section which relator urges as having a repealing effect.

In reading the act it does seem to convey the meaning for which relator contends. The statute commands that a corporation, before commencing to do business, shall comply with the laws of this state regulating the manner; that is, the Act No. 105, p. 132, of 1898, regulating the manner in which every insurance company shall be authorized to do business except that of a “deposit of one thousand dollars,” and so on, as set forth in the italicized portion of the quoted section.

The relator corporation is an industrial life insurance company and comes within the definition laid down in the said act of 1906. The corporate object, as stated in the charter, is by the accumulation of a fund from its members at stated terms less than a month to set apart to be used in providing a weekly cash benefit for disability caused by sickness or accident, or to provide for the attendance of a physician, to buy drugs, and for funeral expenses.

We have stated the purpose of the corporation in order to add that those who become subscribers to such corporation could not very well be expected to accumulate such a fund as required by Act No. 105, p. 132, of 1898. It would not be possible for them to gather the amount sufficient. It would be [356]*356an impossibility to obtain subscriptions from a sufficient number of persons willing to bind themselves as subscribers on conditions imposed by the two statutes, if the latter does not in effect repeal the former.

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Bluebook (online)
46 So. 352, 121 La. 350, 1908 La. LEXIS 677, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-unity-industrial-life-ins-sick-benefit-assn-v-michel-la-1908.