The state has undoubted power to prohibit foreign insurance
companies from doing business within its limits, or, in allowing
them to do so, to impose such condition as it pleases.
Where the state court decides that a foreign insurance company
cannot recover assessments on a policy issued within the state
because it has not complied with the statutory conditions imposed
by the state, no federal question is involved, and a request to
find that the state statute could not prevent the insured from
going outside the state and obtaining insurance on property within
the state does not raise a federal question, where the fact was
otherwise, and the writ of error will be dismissed.
140 Mich. 344 affirmed.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This action was brought in the Circuit Court of Schoolcraft
County, Michigan, by Swing, trustee of the Union Mutual Fire
Insurance Company, a corporation of Ohio, against the Weston Lumber
Company, a corporation of Michigan, to collect its share as a
policyholder of an assessment made by the order of the Supreme
Court of Ohio in liquidating the liabilities of the insurance
company.
The assessment against defendant was in respect of a policy for
$5,000 and a renewal thereof on defendant's lumber and other
property at Manistique, Michigan. The insurance company was never
licensed to do business in Michigan, and the
Page 205 U. S. 276
defense was pleaded that it was a foreign corporation, not
authorized to transact business in that state, and that the
policies were issued in direct violation of the laws of Michigan,
the company not having complied with those relating to foreign
insurance companies doing business in the state, and that the
contracts of insurance were at variance with and contrary to the
settled policy of the state.
The case was tried by the court without a jury. At the
conclusion of the trial, plaintiff made requests for certain
findings as matters of law, including this:
"11. That the statutes of this state do not and could not, under
the Constitution of the United States, prohibit this defendant from
going or sending outside of this state and there procuring
insurance on property belonging to the defendant and located in
this state, from an insurance company not authorized to do business
in this state,"
which the court refused.
Findings of fact and conclusions of law were made and filed. It
was found, among other things, that --
"In the latter part of the summer of 1889, defendant desired to
increase the amount of insurance carried upon lumber accumulated in
its yards, and made application to a local agency conducted by a
banking institution of the town for a considerable addition to the
line of its insurance already held in that agency. Not being able
to write, in one risk, in its own companies, the amount of
additional insurance desired, the local agency, through W. C.
Marsh, an employee of the bank, who attended to its insurance
business, placed twelve different policies with outside agencies.
Part of this line of insurance was sent to George R. Lewis &
Company, an agency of Minneapolis, Minnesota, through which concern
the $5,000 insurance involved in this case was placed with the said
Union Mutual Fire Insurance Company of Cincinnati, Ohio."
It was admitted that the insurance company had never complied
with any of the requirements imposed by the statutes of Michigan on
insurance companies of other states seeking to transact business in
Michigan.
Page 205 U. S. 277
Sections 5157 and 10467 of the Compiled Laws of Michigan of 1897
are as follows:
"(5157.) That it shall be unlawful for any person or persons, as
agent, solicitor, surveyor, broker, or in any other capacity, to
transact or to aid in any manner, directly or indirectly, in
transacting or soliciting within this state any insurance business
for any person, persons, firm, or copartnership who are
nonresidents of this state, or for any fire or inland navigation
insurance company or association, not incorporated by the laws [or]
of this state, or to act for or in behalf of any person or persons,
firm or corporation, as agent or broker, or in any other capacity,
to procure, or assist to procure, a fire or inland marine policy or
policies of insurance on property situated in this state, for any
nonresident person, persons, firm, or copartnership, or in any
company or association without this state, whether incorporated or
not, without procuring or receiving from the commissioner of
insurance the certificate of authority provided for in section
twenty-three of an act entitled 'An Act Relative to the
Organization of Fire and Marine Insurance Companies Transacting
Business within This state,' approved April third, eighteen hundred
and sixty-nine, as amended. Such certificate of authority shall
state the name or names of the person, persons, firm, or
copartnership, or the location of the company or association, as
the case may be, and that the party named in the certificate has
complied with the laws of this state, regulating fire, marine, and
inland navigation insurance, and the name of the duly appointed
attorney in this state on whom process may be served."
Act of 1881, § 1.
"(10467.) But when, by the laws of this state, any act is
forbidden to be done by any corporation, or by any association of
individuals, without express authority by law, and such act shall
have been done by a foreign corporation, it shall not be authorized
to maintain any action founded upon such act, or upon any liability
or obligation, express or implied, arising out of, or made or
entered into in consideration of, such act. "
Page 205 U. S. 278
Judgment was entered in favor of defendant, and affirmed, on
error, by the Supreme Court of Michigan. 140 Mich. 344.
The supreme court held that a foreign mutual insurance company
which had not been authorized to do business in Michigan as
provided by its statutes could not maintain a suit to collect
assessments due on a policy issued by one of its agents in another
state on request of an insurance broker of Michigan who was unable
to place the whole line in his own authorized companies.
Seamans v. Temple Co., 105 Mich. 400, citing many cases,
was referred to and quoted from. It appeared therefrom that it had
been for years the policy of the state to limit the business of
insurance to such corporations, domestic and foreign, as should be
authorized to do business, after compliance with certain
regulations and conditions prescribed by law, and that the statutes
were intended to be prohibitory in their character.
The power of the state to prohibit foreign insurance companies
from doing business within its limits, or, in allowing them to do
so, to impose such conditions as it pleases, is undoubted.
Hooper v. California, 155 U. S. 648;
Security Mutual Life Insurance Company v. Prewitt,
202 U. S. 246;
Chattanooga National Building & Loan Association v.
Denson, 189 U. S. 408.
What was held here on the facts was that the contract was
brought about and completed in Michigan by a representative of the
foreign corporation. So far as defendant was concerned, its
application for insurance was made and the business was done with
the home office at Manistique, with which it was in the habit of
doing business. It was not a case of defendant's
"going or sending outside of this state and there procuring
insurance on property belonging to the defendant and located in
this state from an insurance company not authorized to do business
in this state,"
as supposed in plaintiff's eleventh request for finding. That
request is the only pretense in the record of a federal question's
being raised prior to the judgments below, and was entirely
inadequate for that purpose.
Page 205 U. S. 279
Naturally enough, neither the circuit court nor the supreme
court referred to any federal question whatever.
The writ of error cannot be maintained.
Chicago,
Indianapolis & Louisville Railway Company v. McGuire,
196 U. S. 128,
196 U. S. 132;
Allen v. Alleghany County, 196 U.
S. 458.
Writ of error dismissed.