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This was an original application to the supreme court of the state of Ohio, in the name of the state on the relation of W. H. Kinder, superintendent of insurance of the state, for a mandamus against the Eagle Insurance Company of Cincinnati, and John K. Green, its president, and Samuel P. Post, its secretary, to compel them to make a statement of the condition of the company. Upon hearing on demurrer to the answer to the petition, the court awarded a peremptory writ. Defendants brought error.
The insurance company, plaintiff in error, was incorporated on March 22, 1850, by an act of the general assembly of Ohio1 (48 Ohio Laws, 498). Sections 3654 and 3655 of the Revised Statutes of Ohio read as follows: [153 U.S. 446, 447] 'Sec. 3654. The president or vice-president and secretary of each insurance company organized under any law of this [153 U.S. 446, 448] state shall, annually, on the first day of January, or within thirty days thereafter, prepare, under oath, and deposit in the [153 U.S. 446, 449] office of the superintendent of insurance, a statement of the condition of such company on the thirty-first day of Decem- [153 U.S. 446, 450] ber, then next preceding, exhibiting the following facts and items, and in the following form, namely:
Under these sections, proper blanks were furnished to the company by the state superintendent of insurance, and, on its refusal to make the returns required by law, proceedings by mandamus were begun against it. The defense was that the above provisions impaired the obligation of the contract which grew out of its charter. Upon the decision of the supreme court of the state making the writ peremptory, the case was brought here by error.
John F. Follett and Thos. H. Kelley, for plaintiffs in error. [153 U.S. 446, 453] J. K. Richards, Atty. Gen. Ohio, for defendant in error.
Mr. Justice WHITE, after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.
The only question presented is whether or not the charter of the plaintiff in error exempted it from obligation to comply with the subsequently established police regulations of the state, contained in sections 3654 and 3655 of the Revised Statutes of Ohio. This subject was fully considered by this court in the case of Insurance Co. v. Needles,
These views are decisive of the issue here. An attempt is made to distinguish that case from this upon the ground that, in the former, the proceedings were for the purpose of compelling the company to cease from business because of insolvency; while, in this case, the question is as to the obligation of the company to make the statements required by the statute. This distinction is without foundation. In the Needles Case, the duty was expressly imposed upon the corporation to make statements identical in form and substance with those which insurance companies are required to make under the Ohio statute we are here considering. Many additional police powers were conferred by the Illinois law, among them being the authority which, as stated above, was given to the state auditor to apply for an injunction restraining a company from continuing its business whenever, by its statement, it appeared to him to be insolvent. It is, indeed, [153 U.S. 446, 456] true, that the relief there invoked was the restraint of the corporation from doing business on the ground of insolvency. But that case substantially involved not only the right to compel the statement, but the greater right to prevent, in case of insolvency, the continuance of the business of the corporation. Hence, as the greater includes the less, the Needles Case necessarily embraces every issue presented here.
Another contention is that compliance with the provisions in regard to statements of its business would bring the company under the operation of the general law of the state relating to corporations, and thus place it in the position of voluntarily subjecting itself to many provisions which would, if applied, impair the obligations of the charter. In March, 1892 (89 Ohio Laws, 73), the general assembly of Ohio specifically enacted that any fire insurance company which should comply with the requirements of sections 3654 and 3655, or any other police regulations contained in chapter 11 of the title relating to corporations, and chapter 8, tit. 3, pt. 1) of the Revised Statutes of Ohio, relating to the insurance department of the state, 'shall not be deemed to have consented to and shall not be affected by the provisions' of the title relating to corporations.
The judgment of the supreme court of Ohio in the case before us expressly finds that, under the operation of this last provision, the plaintiff in error would not subject its charter to any conditions or modifications by making the statement which it now refuses to submit. Judgment affirmed.
[ Footnote 1 ] AN ACT TO INCORPORATE THE EAGLE INSURANCE COMPANY OF CINCINNATI.
Sec. 1. Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the State of Ohio, That George Crawford, Timothy Griffith, Isaac C. Copelen, William Wood, Henry
Kessler, Henry Brachman, George M. Herincourt, and the subscribers of the stock of this association and their successors, shall be and are hereby declared to be a body politic and corporate, by the name and style of the Eagle Insurance Company of Cincinnati, and in that name shall be capable, in law, to sue and be sued, plead and be impleaded, answer and be answered, defend and be defended, in all courts of law and equity and elsewhere, with full authority to acquire, hold, possess, occupy, and enjoy, and the same to sell, convey, and dispose of all such real estate as shall be necessary and convenient for the transaction of its business, or which may be conveyed in said company for the security or in payment of any debt which may become due and owing to the same, or in satisfaction of any judgment of a court of law, or any order or decree of a court of equity in their favor, and to make use a common seal, and the same to alter and renew at pleasure, and generally to do and perform all things relative to the object of this association.
majority of the stockholders composing this association, shall hold a meeting for the first election of directors within one month after the amount of four hundred shares of stock shall be subscribed, and on the first Monday in May in each and every year thereafter, and choose by ballot seven directors, who shall be stockholders, and each share of stock shall entitle the holder thereof to one vote, and the directors so chosen shall serve to the first Monday in May, 1851, and until others are chosen. At their first meeting after every election, they shall choose by ballot a president thus chosen, the directors shall fill the vacancy by ballot as before, and in case of a vacancy in the board of directors, it shall be filled by the remaining directors from the stockholders for the remainder of the year, and the board of directors thus constituted, or a majority of them, when convened at the office of the company, shall be competent to exercise all other powers vested in the board by this act.
the stockholders ten days thereafter, but no dividends shall be paid to any stockholder whose stock is delinquent.
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Citation: 153 U.S. 446
No. 1051
Decided: May 14, 1894
Court: United States Supreme Court
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