Travelers' Insurance Co. v. Fricke

74 N.W. 372, 99 Wis. 367, 1898 Wisc. LEXIS 5
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMay 3, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 74 N.W. 372 (Travelers' Insurance Co. v. Fricke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Travelers' Insurance Co. v. Fricke, 74 N.W. 372, 99 Wis. 367, 1898 Wisc. LEXIS 5 (Wis. 1898).

Opinion

The following opinions were filed March 1, 1898:

WiNslow, J.

In the former action in equity brought by this same company, and reported in 94 Wis. 258, the question presented and decided was whether the insurance commissioner had power to revoke the license of the plaintiff to> do an insurance business in this state on account of failure to pay the license fees required by law for the year for which the license was issued. In the present suit the question presented is whether the insurance commissioner has power to revoke the defendant’s license for the current year, on account of its failure to pay the full license fees accruing for past years, during which it has done business in this state under license.

We have no intention of reviewing again the questions discussed and decided in the previous action. The statutes were then deliberately considered and construed, and the conclusions then reached are entirely satisfactory; and, so far as applicable, they will be applied to the present case. It was then held, in effect, that the annual license fees required to be paid by foreign insurance companies desiring to do business in this state were levied upon the business transacted, and not upon the company transacting the business; that ch. 105, Laws of 1880 (sec. 1953a, S. & B. Ann. Stats.), was an amendment simply to sec. 1220, R. S. 1878, and that it added to the fees previously required the pay[371]*371ment of two per cent, upon tbe gross income received upon accident business during the preceding year; that the doctrine of practical construction had no application, because the statute was plain, and not doubtful; and that the commissioner had a right to revoke the license for the current year on account of failure to pay the two per cent, upon the previous year’s business. The question of the power of the commissioner to revoke the current license on account of past defaults in payment of license fees was expressly reserved for future consideration, and that is the question now to be decided. When it was held that the license fees were fees levied upon the business, and not upon the company transacting the business, it necessarily followed, under the provisions of sec. 1220, R. S. 1878, that a foreign company which transacted both life and accident business in this state was required to pay two fees of $300 each, and, in addition, was required to pay two per cent, upon its previous year’s income arising from the accident business. The plaintiff company has been such a company ever since the enactment of the Revised Statutes, and it has paid but one fee of $300 during each year, although doing both kinds of business; and hence it has failed to comply with the law in this respect, as well as in omitting to' pay the two per cent, additional required by ch. 105, Laws of 1880.

The default of the plaintiff company being established, the vital question for consideration is as to the power of the commissioner to revoke an existing license on account of such default. It is not, and cannot now be, denied that the plaintiff company could only transact business in this state by permission of the state, and under such conditions as the state might impose. This principle has been laid down again and again in no uncertain terms. Ryan, C. J., in State ex rel. Drake v. Doyle, 40 Wis. 175, says: “Save by voluntary license of the state, the insurance company has no right to carry on its business within the state. . . . Authorizing such [372]*372license, out of its mere discretion it was competent for the legislature to impose any conditions, reasonable or unreasonable, and to provide for revocation, upon any cause or no cause, in any manner it might see fit.” See, also, Fire Department of Milwaukee v. Helfenstein, 16 Wis. 136; Lewis v. Am. S. & L. Asso. 98 Wis. 203.

These propositions being impregnable, we may at once proceed to consider what power of revocation the legislature has given to the commissioner of insurance. Sec. 1955, R. S. 1878, provides as follows: “If any such corporation [referring to foreign insurance corporations] shall violate or fail to comply with any provision of law applicable thereto, or in case its capital shall be impaired and shall not be made good within such time as the commissioner of insurance shall require, according to section 1968, it shall be the imperative duty of said commissioner to revoke any and every authority, license or certificate granted to such corporation, or any agent thereof, to transact business in this state,” etc. It is argued that the power here granted to the commissioner is “not a power of revision of the past, but of provision for the future;” that the language is prospective, and not retrospective; and that, for defaults occurring during the existence of previous annual licenses, there can be no revocation of an existing license the fees for which have been fully paid. Carried to its legitimate result, this argument would produce this result: that, when a license was once issued by the commissioner, all past matters, even in connection with the issuance of the license itself, would become a sealed book. It might have been obtained without compliance with the necessary conditions, and yet it could not be revoked, because the power of' revocation is only given to be exercised upon violations occurring after the issuance of the license. We do not say that this was the argument made by the appellant, but that such is the ultimate effect of the argument.

It is manifest, of course, that such could not have been [373]*373the intent, of the legislature; and it was substantially admitted on the argument that, in case of the failure to comply with any of the conditions which are a prerequisite to the issuance of a given license, that license might be revoked; but it was argued that this was the extent of the power of revocation, and that for the defaults occurring during the existence of previous licenses there could be no revocation. Certainly, this position seems reasonable, as applied to defaults which might be called “temporary,” as distinguished from “ continuing ” defaults. For instance, in case the company had failed during some previous year to file a copy of its charter or appoint its resident attorney, but had supplied the omission before the issuance of the current license, it would seem that there could scarcely be a revocation of the existing license on account of such' default. Eut can such an argument be applied to a failure to pay the lawful license fee ? Is not this a continuing failure to comply with the law, and just as much a present failure as it was during the year when it occurred? Certainly, it was a legal duty then to pay the required fee. Did the duty cease at the end of the year? Has the lapse of time made it any the less a duty ? Has the offense been condoned by the issuance of new licenses, decorated with gilt seals ? So long as the fee remains unpaid, is it not a present failure to comply with the law, just as much as it was in the year when it occurred? ¥e are unable by any chain of logical reasoning to say that this failure to comply with the law is a failure which is past and closed, and that it is not an existing failure as well. If it be a present existing failure, then the present existing license may be revoked because of such failure, under the strictest construction that can be given to the law.

It avails nothing to say that this license fee is essentially a tax, and that no action lies to recover a tax unless it be given by express statutory enactment. Concede for the moment that this be so, the failure to pay the lawful license

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Bluebook (online)
74 N.W. 372, 99 Wis. 367, 1898 Wisc. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/travelers-insurance-co-v-fricke-wis-1898.