Vermont Accident Insurance v. Burns

40 A.2d 707, 114 Vt. 143, 1944 Vt. LEXIS 93
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedNovember 8, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 40 A.2d 707 (Vermont Accident Insurance v. Burns) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vermont Accident Insurance v. Burns, 40 A.2d 707, 114 Vt. 143, 1944 Vt. LEXIS 93 (Vt. 1944).

Opinion

Buttles, J.

The plaintiff, a Vermont mutual insurance corporation, by this suit in chancery prays that the defendant as Commissioner of Banking and Insurance for the State of Vermont be enjoined from granting the application of the New Hampshire-Vermont Hospitalization Service, a New Hampshire corporation hereinafter called the applicant, for permission and license to do business in this State in accordance with the provisions of Sec. 9a of No. 174 of the Acts of 1939 as enacted in No. 117 of the Acts of 1943. No. 174 of the Acts of 1939 as amended and added to by No. 117 of the Acts of 1943 is hereinafter termed the Vermont Act. The bill of complaint alleges that for reasons which hereinafter appear the defendant cannot lawfully grant such permission and license to the applicant. The complaint also prays for adjudication of certain matters which are incidental to the granting or refusal of such license, and for general relief. To the complaint the defendant demurred upon the grounds that the Court of Chancery has no jurisdiction to determine whether the rights and privileges afforded by the New Hampshire law are substantially similar to those granted by this State, as they are required by our statute to be, because the determination of that question by the defendant is by statute made final; that the plaintiff’s complaint contains no allegations that establish its right to maintain this suit under P. L. Chap. 305 as amended, relative to trade marks or trade names, and no allegations which take the subject matter of this suit out of the provisions of Section 2 of the Vermont Act relative to the admission of a foreign hospital service corporation to do business in this State; that no acts or threats of acts by this defendant are alleged which in law constitute unfair competition or infringement of plaintiff’s alleged trade mark rights; that the defendant in his official capacity or otherwise is without jurisdiction to adjudicate between the plaintiff and the applicant relative to the matter of trade *145 marks or unfair competition; that the rights and privileges afforded by the New'Hampshire statute to hospital service corporations are substantially similar to those granted by this State, within the intent of the statute. The demurrer was sustained, plaintiff’s bill of complaint adjudged insufficient, exception allowed the plaintiff and cause passed to this Court on such exception before final decree as provided by P. L. 2072 and Number 34 of the Acts of 1941.

The Vermont Act provides-by Sec. 9a for the admission of a foreign corporation which “except as to state of organization is a hospital service corporation as defined by Section One”, and Section One provides that “for the purposes of this Act the term ‘hospital service corporation’ shall be deemed to include any corporation organized under the provisions of this Act.” The plaintiff contends that the applicant is not, under its articles of incorporation, a corporation that can be permitted to operate in this State under the laws of Vermont because the provision in those articles that it shall be operated “exclusively for the promotion of public welfare” is said to be in conflict with Sec. 2 of the Vermont Act which requires that such hospital service corporation shall be ... . “maintained and operated solely for the benefit of the members and subscribers thereof.”

In order to determine whether there is such conflict between these provisions we apply the rule applicable to the construction of statutes as well as of contracts that in determining the meaning of a part of an instrument the whole and every part thereof is to be considered. Clifford v. W. Hartford Creamery Co., 103 Vt 229, 252, 153 A 205; In re James, 99 Vt 265, 271, 132 A 40; Brammall v. LaRose, 105 Vt 345, 349, 165 A 916; Totvn of Randolph v. Montgomery, 109 Vt 130, 136, 194 A 481; McLean v. Windham Lt. and P. Co., 85 Vt 167, 178, 180, 81 A 613; DeGoosh v. Baldwin and Russ, 85 Vt 312, 319, 82 A 192; Vt. Shade Roller Co. v. Burlington Tr. Co., 102 Vt 489, 502, 150 A 138.

It cannot be questioned that establishing, maintaining and operating a non profit hospital service plan whereby hospital care may be provided to such of the public as become subscribers to the plan is the promotion of one form of social welfare. That such is the purpose for which a hospital service corporation may be organized appears from Sec. 1 of the Vermont Act. Such purpose is also to be inferred from the designation of such a corporation as a “hospital service corporation”. No other purpose and no *146 activity of the corporation except in connection therewith are authorized by the Vermont Act. A corporation has no other powers than those conferred upon it by the sovereignty which creates it. The enumeration of certain powers implies the exclusion of all others not fairly incidental to those enumerated. State v. Clement Natl. Bank, 84 Vt 167, 197, 78 A 944, Ann Cas 1912 D 22; Central Transp. Co. v. Pullman’s Palace Car Co., 139 US 24, 11 S Ct 478, 480, 35 L ed 55, et seq.

Do the words “exclusively for the promotion of social welfare” as used in the applicant’s articles of incorporation include other forms of social welfare than that contemplated by the Vermont Act ? Article 2 in which these words occur reads thus:

“The object for which this corporation is created is to establish, maintain and operate a non-profit hospitalization service plan, whereby hospital care may be provided for subscribers by hospitals with which this corporation has a contract to furnish such care. This corporation shall be operated exclusively for the promotion of social welfare, and no part of the net earnings or surplus of the corporation shall inure to the benefit of any private member or individual. This corporation shall have all the rights, powers and duties set forth in chapter 226, Public Laws, and Chapter 80, Laws of 1939.”

The statement of the purpose of the corporation in the first sentence of the above Article is in language practically identical with language contained in Section 1 of Chapter 80 of the New Hampshire Laws of 1939, and also, it may be noted, with Section 1 of-the Vermont Act. When this Article is considered as a whole and in connection with the New Hampshire law the reference to the promotion of social welfare must be construed as including only the furnishing of hospital care to subscribers unless by some other provision of that law the corporation is given broader or more inclusive purposes and powers. Our attention has been called to no such provision and we find none.

The plaintiff also contends that the laws of New Hampshire do not grant to hospital service corporations organized under the laws of this state rights and privileges which are substantially similar to those which the applicant would have under the Vermont *147 law if permitted to do business here. Sec. 9a of the Vermont Act provides that the commissioner shall determine whether there is such substantial similarity and that his determination shall be final.

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Bluebook (online)
40 A.2d 707, 114 Vt. 143, 1944 Vt. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vermont-accident-insurance-v-burns-vt-1944.