The People v. . Fire Association of Phil'A.

92 N.Y. 311, 1883 N.Y. LEXIS 149
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 1, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by70 cases

This text of 92 N.Y. 311 (The People v. . Fire Association of Phil'A.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The People v. . Fire Association of Phil'A., 92 N.Y. 311, 1883 N.Y. LEXIS 149 (N.Y. 1883).

Opinion

Finch, J.

The legislation of the State relating to foreign insurance companies is challenged on this appeal as a violation of constitutional right. The act of 1875 (Chap. 60) in substance provides, that an insurance corporation of another State, seeking to do business here, shall pay to the superintendent of the insurance department for taxes, fines, penalties, certificates of authority, license fees and otherwise, an amount equal to that imposed by the State of its origin upon companies of this State seeking to do business there, when such amount charged is greater than our own. The evident purpose of the act is to treat the corporations of another State seeking to transact business here precisely as such other State should treat our own corporations seeking to do business there. It rests upon the idea that the comity due from one State to another is not required to be more than equal and reciprocal, and what is wholly matter of privilege may be granted or withheld upon conditions.

This legislation is assailed, first, upon the ground that it is an unlawful delegation of the legislative power, and the General Term have so held upon the authority of Bario v. Him *316 rod (8 N. Y. 483). We do not think that case at all decisive of this. What was there denominated the school law came from the hands of the legislature, not as a law, but as a proposition. Whether it should be a law or not was precisely the question submitted to the popular vote. The legislature proposed the law, but left it to the people to enact. The process carried out and applied to all bills would have resulted in a complete abdication bythe senate and assembly of their authority and functions. Instead of making laws they would simply have suggested them, reported them for consideration, but left the judgment upon them, the determination of their expediency and wisdom, to an authority outside of their own. As to the school law, the people were made the legislature, and left to decide whether the bill proposed should or should not become a law. This court held that the legislature, under the Constitution, could not so delegate its power, but was bound to determine for itself the expediency of the measure, and either enact or reject it. But nothing in that decision denied to the legislature the right to pass a law whose operation might depend upon, or be affected by, a future contingency. The opinions expressly conceded the existence of such power. It was not denied that a valid statute may be passed to take effect upon the happening of some future event, certain or. uncertain. And this was said as to the character of such event, viz.: “ The event or change of circumstances on which a law may be made to take effect must be such as, in the judgment of the legislature, affects the expediency of the law; an event on which the expediency of the law in the judgment of the law-makers depends. On this question of expediency the legislature must exercise its own judgment definitively and finally.” The statute before us fully answers this description. It came from the hands of the legislature a complete and perfect law, having at once a binding force of its own, and dependent upon no additional consent or action for its vitality and existence. The question of expediency involved in it was not delegated to any other tribunal, but settled definitively and finally by the legislature itself. It determined, as a con *317 elusion proper and expedient, that foreign insurance companies, as the price of admission to our territory, should pay in taxes, license fees and the like precisely what the States which created them should impose upon our companies in excess of our usual rates as the price of admission to the foreign territory. That was the whole question involved. Nothing else in the proposed law remained to he settled as expedient or otherwise, and that question the legislature determined for itself, upon its own reasons and its sole responsibility. Neither the law nor its expediency depended upon the legislation of another State. It remained the law and its expediency was the same, whether other States legislated or not. If they did, the contingency arose which the law stood ready to meet; if they did not, it remained none the less the law, although no fact occurred to set it in operation. This court has steadily declined to push the doctrine of Barto v. Himrod beyond the point which it decided. In Bank of Rome v. Village of Rome (18 N. Y. 39) we sustained as constitutional an act conferring upon municipal authorities certain powers not to be exercised until the act had been approved by two-thirds of the tax payers. The distinction taken was that the law took effect immediately, and conferred the necessary power, but did not compel the village to act under it unless the tax payers so determined. The law was complete, although its operation depended upon a contingency, which might or might not happen. A similar distinction was taken in other cases. (Starin v. Town of Genoa, 23 N. Y. 439; Bank of Chenango v. Brown, 26 id. 467; Clarke v. City of Rochester, 28 id. 605.) While there were differences of opinion in these cases as to the precise grounds which distinguished them from Barto v. Himrod, there was an entire concurrence in the construction put upon the latter case, a construction which makes it inapplicable to the statute under consideration.

But it is argued that this act offends, although not in the same manner as the school law, by leaving the amount of the tax or fine to the legislative discretion of another State. The argument is, that the nature of the attempted legislation is *318 vicious; that what the amount of a tax, fine, penalty or license shall be is essentially the direct and immediate effect of statutory enactment; that the act in question does not determine it; that it remits it to the legislature of another State by its enactments to create or change the tax. Authority for this criticism is found in a decision in Alabama (Clark & Murrell v. The Port of Mobile, 10 Ins. Law Jour.) and in one in Indiana (id. 361). But the whole argument rests on the single point that the amount of the tax or fine imposed is not definitely fixed by the terms of the statute, but depends above a' certain rate npon foreign legislation. Is it true that a fine or tax cannot be imposed unless its amount be stated in the law? And that, if left to be determined by some other tribunal, thereby the legislative power has been delegated ? Laws define a multitude of forbidden acts and impose fines and penalties not exceeding certain amounts, but below those amounts left wholly uncertain and committed to the discretion and judgment of judicial officers or tribunals. It is quite certain, therefore, that the legislature does not abdicate its functions and delegate its authority when it imposes a fine or penalty without itself fixing the amount, or when it leaves it to be fixed by some other tribunal. But" in the statute before us nothing is left to anybody’s discretion. ' That is certain which can be rendered certain, and the act fixes the tax by reference to an extrinsic fact which determines its amount in excess of a fixed and established rate.

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Bluebook (online)
92 N.Y. 311, 1883 N.Y. LEXIS 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-fire-association-of-phila-ny-1883.