State v. Home Insurance

81 N.W. 443, 59 Neb. 524, 1900 Neb. LEXIS 6
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 3, 1900
DocketNo. 10,929
StatusPublished

This text of 81 N.W. 443 (State v. Home Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Home Insurance, 81 N.W. 443, 59 Neb. 524, 1900 Neb. LEXIS 6 (Neb. 1900).

Opinion

Harrison, C. J.

This action was commenced for the state in the district court of Lancaster county, and it was alleged in the petition that the defendant company filed with the state auditor during the month of January, 1896, a státement, such as the law required, of “foreign insurance companies” transacting business in the state, and received of the auditor a certificate of its compliance with the law, also one hundred and twenty-five certificates of authority to its agents throughout the state to transact its business; that the aggregate of the fees to be paid the state for . the services so rendered was $272, which sum the defendant had not paid, and for which judgment was prayed. The defendant, in answer filed, admitted that the services pleaded had been performed for it, and that the amount of fees was correctly stated, but denied its failure to pay. It was alleged in the answer that the defendant had been conducting its business in this state for more than twenty-five years, and had at all times endeavored to comply, and had in fact complied, with the requirements of the laws of the state with respect to insurance companies; that since the year 1873 the defend-' ant had paid to the auditor the fees exacted by law from insurance companies for the services performed by the auditor in accordance with the terms of section 32, chapter 33, General Statutes (section 32, chapter 43, Compiled Statutes, 1897); that from the year 1873, inclusive of the years 1895 and 1896, it was customary and usual for the defendant and all other insurance companies transacting business in the state to pay the fees required of them by [528]*528law for services of the auditor to him, and from 1873 up to and inclusive of the year 1896 the auditor accepted said fees, and, until about January 1, 1896, the auditor paid all such fees to the state; that the state,'by its executive and legislative officers, had knowledge of the aforesaid, custom and usage, and made no objection thereto and took no action with respect to the same. It was averred that Eugene Moore was the auditor of public accounts in this state during the year 1896, and, relying upon the custom and usage which had prevailed in regard to the payment of such fees during “nearly” twenty-five years, the defendant company paid the fees, the subject of this .litigation, to him as the agent of the state, and the said Eugene Moore failed to account for or turn over to the state said fees; that said Eugene Moore, as auditor of public accounts, collected during the year 1895 fees from this and other insurance companies, in the aggregate the sum of $16,738, and during the year 1896 the sum of $15,378.70, which fees were paid to him as agent for the state and for and on account of fees required by law to be paid; that on January 3, 1896, Eugene Moore paid to the state treasurer $5,000, on February 9, 1897, paid to the state treasurer $1,500, and on February 17, 1897, the sum of $2,500, all of said sums being of the fees he had collected of defendant and other insurance companies, and said amounts were received by the state by its treasurer and credited upon the books of the state among miscellaneous receipts and passed into the general fund moneys of the state; that included in the total amount due from Eugene Moore to the state upon which the aforesaid payments were made was the sum for the recovery of which this suit was instituted. It was further answered that in an action in the same court in which this suit was in progress, in a petition filed on March 2, 1898, the plaintiff, the state, prayed a recovery of the said Eugene Moore and the sureties on his bond as state auditor the balance of the amount of money he had collected as fees as aforesaid, and stated in such petition that “be[529]*529tween the 3d day of January, 1895, and the 7th day of January, 1897, the said Eugene Moore, as auditor of public accounts of the state of Nebraska, received into his possession and control as such auditor the sum of $27,-208.05, the property of the state of Nebraska, which sum came into his hands as auditor of public accounts in payment for services performed by him or performed under his direction as such auditor, which sum was received by him by virtue of his office as such auditor and which sum it was his duty as such auditor to pay the treasurer of said- state of Nebraska or turn over on the 7th day of' January, 1897, to his successor, but the said defendant has at all times failed and refused to pay the same to the treasurer of the state of Nebraska, or to his successors in •office, except the sum of $4,000 paid by the defendant Eugene Moore to the treasurer of the state of Nebraska on or about the 15th day of February, 1897.” Also pleaded in said petition that the money sought to be recovered from Eugene Moore and his sureties on his official bond was paid to him by the insurance companies then doing business in this state for services performed by him as auditor of the state. It was of the further allegations of the answer in this cause that in the case against Moore and his bondsmen there was on March 25, 1898, judgment for the state against him for the sum of $25,184.50, principal and interest, which judgment was inclusive of the sum upon which the present suit is predicated. To this answer there was filed for the state a general demurrer, which on hearing was overruled. The state then filed a reply, which was as follows:

“Now comes the plaintiff in the above entitled action,' and for its reply to the second amended answer of the defendant states: It denies that the defendant company has complied with all the laws of the state of Nebraska in this, that it has not paid to the state of Nebraska the money due to the state from it for the services rendered to the defendant company by the state as more particularly described in the petition in this action.
[530]*530“2. Plaintiff denies that Engene Moore was the agent of the plaintiff at any of the times named in the petition or second amended answer for the purpose of receiving from the defendant company or any other insurance company fees for services rendered by the said Moore as auditor of public accounts of the state of Nebraska and denies that the said Moore was at any time authorized by the plaintiff to receive for plaintiff’s use and benefit or on its account or for any purpose whatever any moneys of any kind whatever due and payable to the state as fees for services rendered by the said Eugene Moore as auditor of public accounts.
“3. Plaintiff denies that the legislature of the state of Nebraska at any time authorized or had the power to authorize Eugene Moore as auditor of public accounts to receive for the state the money sued for in this action or any moneys due and payable to the state of Nebraska and denies that the state of Nebraska through its legislature or otherwise ratified or approved or consented to the action of said Eugene Moore, while auditor of public accounts in receiving from said defendant company the fees sued for in this case and which were due and payable to the state of Nebraska and alleges that whatever the said Moore did in connection with the receipt of the said fees was done by him as the agent of the defendant company and not as the agent of the state of Nebraska.
“4.

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Bluebook (online)
81 N.W. 443, 59 Neb. 524, 1900 Neb. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-home-insurance-neb-1900.