A fire insurance company transacting business in a state other
than that of its incorporation is bound, in respect of such
business, by the laws of the state where the business is
transacted. P.
250 U. S. 9.
A Pennsylvania fire insurance corporation, through a series of
years, issued a succession of policies on property in Florida, the
business being done through local brokers who applied for the
insurance, received and transmitted the premiums, drew their
commissions from the company, and were consulted by it as to the
subject matter insured and the other companies carrying insurance
thereon. The policies, executed in Pennsylvania and sent to the
brokers by mail, each contained a warranty for concurrent insurance
throughout its term in another specified company, but, with the
knowledge
Page 250 U. S. 3
of the brokers, a different company was substituted before the
loss occurred. A law of Florida in existence throughout the
transactions made any person who solicits insurance or procures
applications therefor the agent of the insurer, anything in the
application or policy to the contrary notwithstanding, and made one
who receives or receipts for money from the insured to be
transmitted to the insurer the agent of the latter "to all intents
and purposes."
Held that, as applied to the case so as to
charge the company with the brokers' knowledge and effect a waiver
of the warranty, the Florida law did not deny full faith and credit
to the laws of Pennsylvania, or violate the privileges and
immunities, due process, or equal protection clauses of the
Fourteenth Amendment.
Id. New York Life Insurance Co.
v. Head, 234 U. S. 149, and
Mutual Life Insurance Co. v. Hilton-Green, 241 U.
S. 613, distinguished.
In the interest of justice, the Court may decide the merits
without passing on a motion to dismiss that depends on a disputed
proposition involving the merits. P.
250 U. S. 14.
74 Fla. 130 affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 250 U. S. 5
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
Action on two fire insurance policies issued by plaintiff in
error, to which we shall refer as the insurance company, to
defendant in error, to which we shall refer as the lumber company.
Each policy was for the sum of $2,500. There was total insurance on
the property described in the policies of $45,750, and it was
provided that the insurance company should only be liable for its
pro rata share of any loss caused by fire under the
provisions of the policies. The loss to the lumber company was
$21,028.17, and the insurance company's
pro rata share
was, on each policy, $1,149.08.
There is not much dispute about the facts. There
Page 250 U. S. 6
is considerable dispute about the inferences from them, and
facts and inferences were presented in a maze of pleadings which
terminated in a demurrer to a rejoinder by the insurance company to
replications of the lumber company to the pleas of the insurance
company to the declaration in the case.
The court, in passing upon the demurrer, being of the view that
§ 2765 of the General Statutes of Florida (
infra) was
applicable, rendered judgment accordingly for the lumber company on
the policies for the sum of $2,298.16, with interest at 8% from
February 16, 1913, and the sum of $300 as a reasonable attorney's
fee. The supreme court of the state affirmed the judgment.
The controversy is not especially complicated of itself, but it
is made somewhat so by the manner of its presentation. The form and
issue of the policies and the fact of fire and loss by it are not
in dispute. The controversy centers in the relation of a particular
firm of insurance brokers, residing at Tampa, Florida, to the
insurance company and the lumber company, whether they were the
agents of the former or of the latter under § 2765 of the
Statutes of Florida and whether they could dispense with the
requirement of a clause in the policies called the warranty clause.
That clause, therefore, and § 2765 (and we may say also §
2777, the supreme court of the state taking it into account),
become essential elements of decision, and we exhibit them
immediately.
Section 2765 is as follows:
"Any person or firm in this state who receives or receipts for
any money on account of or for any contract of insurance made by
him or them, or for such insurance company, association, firm, or
individual aforesaid, or who receives or receipts for money from
other persons to be transmitted to any such company, association,
firm, or individual aforesaid for a policy of insurance or any
renewal thereof, although such policy of insurance is not
Page 250 U. S. 7
signed by him or them as agent or representative of such
company, association, firm, or individual, or who in any wise
directly or indirectly makes or causes to be made any contract of
insurance for or on account of such insurance company, association,
firm, or individual shall be deemed to all intents and purposes an
agent or representative of such company, association, firm, or
individual."
Section 2777 is as follows:
"Any person who solicits insurance and procures applications
therefor shall be held to be agent of the party issuing a policy
upon such application, anything in the application or policy to the
contrary notwithstanding."
The warranty clause reads:
"Warranted same gross rate terms and conditions as and to follow
the American Central Ins. Co. of St. Louis, Mo., and that said
company has, throughout the whole time of this policy, at least
$5,000 on the identical subject matter and risk and in identically
the same proportion on each separate part thereof; otherwise, this
policy shall be null and void."
The clause was not complied with. The lumber company carried
concurrent insurance, but not in the Missouri company. The omission
and substitution, it is alleged, were at the suggestion of Lowry
& Prince of Tampa, Florida, who were the agents of the
insurance company and who, as such agents, caused and procured the
lumber company to renew its policies from time to time, and finally
the company, at the suggestion of Lowry & Prince, substituted
other policies for policies in the Missouri company, with the
knowledge of the insurance company, such other companies being
equal in credit and responsibility to the Missouri company.
To these assertions the insurance company opposed contentions of
law and fact, not, however, by any one pleading. The following are
the facts it alleged, stated
Page 250 U. S. 8
narratively: the insurance company is a Pennsylvania corporation
authorized to write and issue policies on property outside of
Pennsylvania. Lowry & Prince, as brokers of the lumber company,
applied for it (the lumber company) to the insurance company for
insurance upon the lumber company's property. Policies were issued,
and upon subsequent application policies were continued to be
issued, including those in suit. They were executed in Philadelphia
and delivered to Lowry & Prince by mail. They each contained a
warranty such as has been set out as to the existence of concurrent
insurance with an approved and designated company doing business in
Florida, the names of the companies being changed from time to time
at Lowry & Prince's request, and finally the name of the
American Central Insurance Company of St. Louis, Missouri, being
inserted, the ground of the request being that they were the agents
of that company and would know of any cancellations by it. Lowry
& Prince were not agents of the insurance company, nor
authorized "to represent it in any manner, shape or form," but, as
agents of the lumber company, transmitted to the insurance company
at its main office in Philadelphia the original and subsequent
applications for policies, and as such agents received by mail the
policies and transmitted the amount of premiums to the company,
less the usual brokers' commissions.
Besides statement of the above facts, the rejoinder contained
the following denials: that, by issuing the policies to the lumber
company it, the insurance company, was engaged in the transaction
of business in the State of Florida; that the lumber company paid
Lowry & Prince for it, the insurance company, any premiums on
the policies; that Lowry & Prince were its agents; that, prior
to the furnishing of the proofs of loss by the lumber company, it,
the insurance company, had any notice or
Page 250 U. S. 9
knowledge that the Missouri company had cancelled its policies
on the property insured and did not carry $5,000 on the identical
subject matter and risk, or that it advised or consulted with Lowry
& Prince as to the advisability of the risk or otherwise,
except to the extent that it did request information from them as
to the subject matter insured and as to the companies carrying
insurance thereon.
It will be observed that the rejoinder raised no question under
the Constitution of the United States. That was done by a demurrer
to the replications of the lumber company, and was expressed, in
effect, as follows:
"The legal predicate for the conclusion that Lowry & Prince
were the agents of the defendant [the insurance company] rests upon
§ 2765 of the General Statutes of Florida."
And, further, if the section be so construed, it violates (a)
the full faith and credit clause of the Constitution of the United
States in that the State of Florida would thereby deny full faith
and credit to the laws of the State of Pennsylvania, and, so
construed, it violates (b) the privilege and immunities clause, the
due process clause, and the equal protection clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment.
Some other matters were set forth in the demurrer which we think
are not material to mention. They only express what is expressed in
other places, that Lowry & Prince were not the agents of the
insurance company, but were and must be considered as agents of the
lumber company, and alleged that the policies were Pennsylvania
contracts, complied with the Pennsylvania law, and that to construe
them as the lumber company contends they should be construed would
be to deny that law full faith and credit.
The ultimate question, then, is the relation in which the
insurance brokers stood to the respective companies. The case would
seem therefore not to be of broad compass, nor to justify the
elaborateness of argument that
Page 250 U. S. 10
has been addressed to it. We certainly do not consider a review
of the many cases cited by the insurance company necessary to be
made.
The Florida law first demands attention. It is explicit in its
declaration. It was in existence when the policies were executed,
and when the policies of which they are the successors were
executed. There was therefore a course of conduct and transactions
through a succession of years, not a single instance or an isolated
one, as the insurance company contends -- but a number of instances
and all in relation. Nor does the case present an attempt of the
Florida law to intrude itself into the State of Pennsylvania and
control transactions there; it presents simply a Pennsylvania
corporation having the permission of that state to underwrite
policies on property outside of the state and the exercise of the
right in Florida. And necessarily it had to be exercised in
accordance with the laws of Florida. There was no law of
Pennsylvania to the contrary -- no law of Pennsylvania would have
power to the contrary. There is no foundation, therefore, for the
contention that full faith was not given to a law of Pennsylvania,
nor of a denial of a right to a citizen
* of Pennsylvania,
nor of a denial of due process or the equal protection of the
law.
The law of Florida, it is true, puts an element into the
transactions of the parties to insurance and makes the person who
solicits insurance and procures applications the agent of the party
issuing the policy, and this against any provision in the policy to
the contrary; and, even farther, the law makes the person who
receives or receipts for money from the insured to be transmitted
to the insurer the agent of the latter.
Page 250 U. S. 11
There is nothing unreasonable in the conditions; they regulate
the transactions, do not prevent them, or even embarrass them by
ambiguity. A company is informed what it may incur by underwriting
insurance in the state, and it cannot assert surprise or ignorance
-- certainly the insurance company in the present case cannot do
so. It had knowledge, or must be charged with knowledge, of the
law. It dealt through Lowry & Prince during a succession of
years, permitted them to receive and receipt for premiums and
transmit them to it, and consulted with them about the subject
matter and with what companies the risk was divided. It accepted
the benefit of their action while premiums were being received and
new policies were being issued. It is rather late to reject the
consequence. Indeed, the attempt at rejection suggests the
possibility of the occurrence of examples of like kind, and may
indicate the reason for the enactment of the law -- suggests that
its purpose was to preclude confusion and dispute as to the
relation of the broker to the parties respectively, and to preclude
an underwriter, after using the agency, from denying
responsibility.
These deductions are not contravened by the cases cited by the
insurance company. Its basic proposition is that a state has no
jurisdiction of persons or property beyond its borders or of
contracts executed beyond its borders, and it invokes the
proposition by the assertion that the policies were Pennsylvania
contracts, and, being such, were immune from regulation by Florida,
and
New York Ins. Co. v. Head, 234 U.
S. 149, is adduced as typical. In that case, the
principle was expressed that the laws of a state could not be
extended beyond its confines, and it was concretely applied in the
case to deny to the State of Missouri the right to extend its
authority into the State of New York and there forbid a citizen of
New Mexico and a citizen of New York from
Page 250 U. S. 12
making a loan agreement in New York simply because it modified a
contract originally made in Missouri. The difference between that
case and this is manifest, and the other cases relied on are not
nearer in point. The Florida statute does not attempt to invade
Pennsylvania and exercise control there. It stays strictly at home
in this record, and regulates the insurance company when it comes
to the state to do business with the citizens of the state and
their property.
It is true the insurance company contends that its transactions
were all isolated ones, not such as to constitute doing business in
the state, and, besides, that it had no permission to be in the
state, and could not be presumed to be there against its laws; and,
besides, again, its policies declared that they were to be
effective in Pennsylvania. Cases are cited which are assumed to
support these contentions. A review of them is unnecessary. The
contentions confuse a simple situation, and would withdraw from the
jurisdiction of Florida transactions there and give them another
theater and another control. In other words, would displace the law
by the very things it precludes from such operation.
The challenging response of the insurance company is that to
give the law that effect is to bring it under the condemnation of
Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Hilton-Green, 241 U.
S. 613. That case considered the Florida law, but did
not deny its legality nor decide that the state could not make the
local broker, if the designated conditions existed, the agent of an
underwriter. It only decided that the knowledge of the agent of
misrepresentation and fraud by the insured could not be imputed to
the underwriter. It was naturally held that such imputation was a
perversion of the rule which imputes an agent's knowledge to his
principal and its underlying reason
"that an innocent third party may properly presume the agent
will perform his duty and report all facts which affect
Page 250 U. S. 13
the principal's interest."
To so extend the law would be a perversion of it, not a use to
it -- make it not a regulation, but an oppression. The present case
is not open to that condemnation. The lumber company was an
"innocent third party," and could properly presume that Lowry &
Prince would and did perform their duty and report to the insurance
company their knowledge of the concurrent insurance that was
carried on the property, and that the provision requiring it was
equivalently complied with. And there was no dereliction in the
agents; the substituted security was not insufficient. If the power
that was exercised had no binding effect on the insurance company,
it would be difficult to imagine what would have under the Florida
statute. Nor can we yield to the contention that to so construe it
is "to raise special agents with limited authority into general
agents."
The insurance company, however, insists that the policies
constituted the contracts between it and the lumber company, and
that they were not subject to subsequent variation, and
Lumber
Underwriters v. Rife, 237 U. S. 605, is
cited. The case is not apposite. There was an attempt in that case
to vary the written words of a contract by a concurrent parol
agreement; in other words, and to quote those of the case, to
establish "by parol proof that, at the very moment the policy was
delivered," one of its provisions was waived. It was not decided
that there could not be a subsequent waiver of a provision of a
policy, nor that the convention of the parties could not be made
subject to a law of the state.
Finally, the insurance company contends that the Florida law as
aided by the decision of the supreme court of the state, gives
"the agent of the insured unlimited authority to bind the
insurer, and forbids inquiry into the facts, in violation of §
1 of the Fourteenth Amendment."
Phases of the contention are covered by what we have said, and
its main foundation that inquiry into the facts is forbidden
Page 250 U. S. 14
is not tenable. The facts were exhibited in the pleadings, and
they showed that the conditions for the application of the law
existed. They showed insurance effected through the brokers, Lowry
& Prince, their communication with the insurance company, their
transmission of money to it, the payment of their commission by the
company, and the consultation of the company with them as to the
"subject matter insured, and the companies carrying insurance
thereon," to use the language of the rejoinder.
A motion to dismiss is made on the ground that the federal
questions raised were not passed upon by the courts of the state,
but that the courts rested their decision on the fact that the
contracts were made in Florida, rather than in Pennsylvania. That,
however, was a disputed proposition, and the motion so far involved
the merits of the case that we have considered, under such
circumstances, justice would be better served by going into the
merits.
Beaumont v. Prieto, 249 U.
S. 554.
Judgment affirmed.
* A corporation is not a citizen within the meaning of the
provision of the Constitution which secures the privileges and
immunities of citizens against state legislation.
Orient Ins.
Co. v. Daggs, 172 U. S. 557,
172 U. S.
561.