Swing v. Thomas

120 Ill. App. 235, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 636
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 20, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 120 Ill. App. 235 (Swing v. Thomas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Swing v. Thomas, 120 Ill. App. 235, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 636 (Ill. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Puterbaugh

delivered the opinion of the court.

The declaration in this case alleges that the Supreme Court of Ohio, in case Flo. 2,541 thereof, in which case the State of Ohio was plaintiff and said The Union Mutual Fire Insurance Company of Cincinnati, was defendant, disincorporated said insurance company and appointed the appellant the trustee for the creditors of said insurance company, and appellant brought this action by order of said court; that said insurance company was a mutual one, incorporated under the laws of Ohio, and was licensed in April,' 1890, to do business in the State of Illinois; that under the laws of Ohio relating to the liability of policy holders in such mutual insurance companies (which are set out verbatim^ each policy holder who was insured was bound to pay for such losses and necessary expenses as accrued in and to the company in proportion to the amount of the policy holder’s deposit note or contingent liability, and that the contingent liability of policy holders was five times the amount of their respective annual premiums; that the defendants were partners, and, as such, were insured in said insurance company from March 1, 1889, to December 19, 1890, and that their annual premium was $45; that the Supreme Court of Ohio, in said case Flo. 2,541, on June 11,1901, made a decree of assessment, in which the time is divided into seven periods of approximately three months each, and the amount of the unpaid debts and the amount of the contingent liability and the percentage to be assessed is specifically set out in each quarter respectively, and that the defendants were duly notified on January 28, 1903, to pay their said assessment under said decree, and that they refused to pay, etc.

Appellees interposed a general demurrer to the declara, tion, which was sustained by the court and judgment entered against appellant in bar óf action, and for costs.

The errors assigned for reversal are that the court erred in . sustaining said demurrer and in rendering judgment against appellant.

It is first contended by appellant that the fact that the policy upon which the action at bar is predicated, was issued by a foreign insurance company before such company had complied with the statutes of the State of Illinois requiring it to obtain a license to transact business therein, did not have the effect to render such policy void, but voidable merely.

Section 1 of chapter 73 of the Statutes of Illinois (Rev. St. 1903, page 1058), provides, that “ It shall not be lawful for any insurance company * * * incorporated by, or organized under the laws of any other State * * * for the purpose of insuring against loss or damage by fire * 5 * to take risks or to transact any business whatever * * * until it shall have complied with the following requirements in addition to those already imposed bj existing. laws. * * * It shall first file with the auditor of public accounts, a written application for a license to do business in this State.”

Section 2. “ * * * and no such incorporated company ' * * * shall carry on the business for which it may have been incorporated within this State until it shall have obtained such license. ¡Nor shall it be lawful for any agent or agents for any company or companies referred to in this section, directly or indirectly, in taking risks or transacting the business of fire or inland navigation insurance in this State, without procuring from the auditor of public accounts a certificate of authority, stating that such company has complied with all the requisites of this act which apply to such company, and the name of the attorney appointed to act for the company.”

The purpose of the foregoing statute is to protect the public against irresponsible foreign insurance companies. That the issuing of a policy by an insurance company constitutes the transaction of business, within the meaning of such statute, is not controverted.

In the case of Cincinnati, etc., Co. v. Rosenthal, 55 Ill. 91, the court says: “ ‘When the legislature prohibits an act, or declares that it shall be unlawful to perform it, every rule of interpretation must say that the legislature intended to impose its power to prevent the act, and, as one of the means of its prevention, that the courts shall hold it void. This is as manifest as if the statute had declared that it should be void.”

It appears upon the face of the declaration under consideration, that the policies upon which appellant’s right of action is predicated, were issued before appellant was licensed to do business in this State. The act of issuing the same being expressly prohibited by the statute, they were void ab initio and not merely voidable.

The cases cited by counsel for appellant do not support their contention to the contrary.

Watertown Fire Ins. Co. v. Rust, 40 Ill. App. 119, was an action upon an insurance policy to recover for a loss by fire, and where, as here, the company issuing the policy had not complied with the conditions prescribed by the statute in question. We there held that where an agreement is not unlawful in itself but is forbidden by statute, except upon certain conditions, and both the parties know, or are rightfully presumed to know, the extraneous facts which bring it within the. prohibition, they are in pari delicto, and relief will be refused to either; but that in cases of agreements made in violation of prohibitory statutes, intended only to restrain one class for' the protection of another, though both parties may be in delicto, yet they may not be in pari delicto, for the reason that while in such case both parties must be presumed to know the law, one of them may not know, nor be rightfully presumed to know, the facts that make it applicable in the particular case and therefore be entitled to relief, although the courts would not aid the other party. It was further held that, in the case then under consideration, the insurance company was bound to know such facts because its right to issue the policy was in the nature of a license upon condition expressed, and that when it undertook to exercise such license, it was bound to know, at its peril, that the conditions were complied with, and that if they were not, the agreement .on its part was in violation of law and that it thereby acquired no right thereunder which a court of law would enforce. It was also held" that the party thereby insured was not in pari delicto for the reason that she had violated no provision of the statute; nor was she a party consenting to its violation by the insurance company; nor had she-any knowledge of the facts which imposed upon the company a prohibition against the act, nor was she bound to inquire about them; that when the agent of the company proposed to insure her property she was not bound to call for his certificate of authority, but might assume that he had the same, and that as against her claim, the fact that he had none, was no defense. The judgment of the Appellate Court was affirmed, upon appeal, by the Supreme Court. 141 Ill. 85.

Tested by the foregoing views to which we still adhere, the policies in suit conferred no rights upon appellant which he can legally enforce, and to that extent they are absolutely void.

The case of Thompson v. Ins. Co., 66 App. 254 is not in point as the question here under consideration, was not there involved.

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Bluebook (online)
120 Ill. App. 235, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 636, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swing-v-thomas-illappct-1905.