The People v. . the New England Mutual Life Insurance Co.

26 N.Y. 303
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 5, 1863
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 26 N.Y. 303 (The People v. . the New England Mutual Life Insurance Co.) 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. . the New England Mutual Life Insurance Co., 26 N.Y. 303 (N.Y. 1863).

Opinion

By the act of 1844 companies could be organized to make insurance on lives, c., and for all kinds of insurance. No deposit with the comptroller was required to be made by any company created under the laws of another State, but companies incorporated by any foreign government other than the states of this Union, were to have certain stocks, which were to be held in trust by citizens of this State (p. 444, § 7).

By the act of 1851, chapter 95, all companies transacting the business of life insurance within this State were to deposit with the comptroller $100,000 in public stocks or bonds and mortgages. The comptroller was to hold such stocks, bonds and mortgages as security for policy holders (§§ 1, 2). Section 3 relates to agents.

The act of 1853, chapter 463, is entitled an act to provide for the incorporation of life and health insurance companies, and in relation to agencies of such companies. By the 14th section, page 892, agents were prohibited from acting for companies organized under the laws of other states, unless such corporations possessed certain capital and securities deposited with one of the officers of the State under which the companies were organized.

By the 15th section, companies organized under the laws of foreign governments were prohibited doing business in this State until they had deposited with the comptroller, for the benefit of stockholders, c., securities to the amount of $100,000. By the 22d section, so much of the act of April 10, 1849, and of April 8, 1851, as relates to life insurance, was repealed; but this section was not to affect any company incorporated under such acts.

In my opinion, the requirements of the 1st and 2d sections of the act of 1851 were no longer in force after the passage of the act of 1853. The latter act contains clear and specific directions touching what shall be done by corporations created under the laws of other states, and also under the laws of a foreign government: in the latter, what deposits of sureties are to be made with the comptroller of this State. In the *Page 305 former, the corporations are to possess a certain amount of capital invested in the manner specified, and such investments are to be deposited with the auditor, comptroller or chief financial officer of the State by whose laws said company is incorporated. The act carefully specifies the proof which such corporations are to furnish to the comptroller of this State, of the facts authorizing it to do business in this State. Such companies are permitted from time to time to exchange the securities so deposited with the auditor, comptroller or chief financial officer of the State in which such company is located, for other stock, authorized by the act. This section 14 was amended in June of the same year, chapter 551. Its substance, upon the question under consideration, is, that it shall not be lawful for any person to act within this State, as agent or otherwise, in receiving, c., c., for corporations organized under the laws of other states, unless such company is possessed of the amount of capital required ($100,000), and the same is invested in stocks of the United States, or of the State of New York, or of the State in which such company is located, or in such stocks and securities as now are or may hereafter be received by the bank department, which investments are deposited with the auditor, comptroller or chief financial officer of the State by whose laws the said company is incorporated, and the comptroller of this State is furnished with the certificate of such auditor, comptroller or chief financial officer aforesaid, under his hand and official seal, that he, as such auditor, comptroller or chief financial officer of such State, holds in trust and on deposit, for the benefit of all policy holders of such company, the security before mentioned, which certificate shall embrace the items of the security so held, and that he is satisfied that such securities are worth $100,000. It is added: But nothing herein contained shall be construed to invalidate the agency of any company incorporated by another State, by reason of such company having from time to time exchanged the securities so deposited with the auditor, comptroller or chief financial officer of the State in which such company is located, for other stock authorized by this act, or *Page 306 by reason of such company having drawn their interest and dividends from time to time for such stock. Such company is to appoint an attorney in this State, on whom process of law can be served, and the attorney is to file with the comptroller a certified copy of the charter of such company, and also of the vote or resolution appointing him. When these requirements have been complied with, the comptroller is to give a certificate of the facts, and setting forth the name of the attorney, and when this certificate is filed in the county clerk's office, where the agency is to be established, it is to be the authority of the company to commence business. The company or its attorney is required annually to file with the comptroller of this State, a statement of their affairs, in the manner and form provided in section 12, for similar companies in this State. Here we have a complete system for life insurance companies, organized under the laws of either of the United States, and they are put upon the same footing as those organized under the laws of this State, as to the amount of their capital and the securities required to be filed. Companies organized under our statutes are to file securities with our comptroller, and the companies organized under the statutes of other states are to file the like securities and in the like amount with the auditor, comptroller or other chief financial officer of the State under whose laws the corporation was organized, to be held by such officer in trust and on deposit for the benefit of all the policy holders of such company. On furnishing the evidence required and appointing an attorney, c., the comptroller may give a certificate and the company may commence business.

The act of 1853 professes to provide a complete system for the incorporation of life and health insurance companies, and it contains a system perfect and complete in all its parts, by which corporations created under the laws of other states, for the purpose of such insurance, may do business in this State, and then it repeals the previous acts, so far as they relate to life insurance, saving, however, from its effects, the companies incorporated under those acts. *Page 307

The act of 1851 was an act in relation to all companies transacting the business of life insurance in this State, and it required the filing of the securities with the comptroller in this State. By the act of 1853 all this is changed, and this part of the act of 1851 is abrogated and repealed, and another system is substituted. This act of 1853 provides for the organization of companies in this State, and after it became a law no new companies could be organized for life insurance under the act of 1849. In short, corporations created under the acts of other states were no longer required to file any securities with the comptroller in this State, but were to file them with the officer specified in their own states, and from that time I have no doubt such companies had a right to withdraw any securities they may have deposited with the comptroller in this State, unless it should be shown that policy holders in this State had acquired some lien upon them. At any rate, after the act of 1853 became a law, there was no necessity of any deposit of securities with the comptroller in this State as a prerequisite to its transacting business here.

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Bluebook (online)
26 N.Y. 303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-the-new-england-mutual-life-insurance-co-ny-1863.