Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion

;,, :; .... September 23, 1957 ,, " Hon. William A Harrison Opinion No. WW-261 Commissioner of Insurance International Life Building Re: The amount of real estate Austin, Texas necessary to secure a mort- gage loan made by a life insurance company under the provisions of Section 2.of Article 3.39 of the Insur- Dear Mr. Harrison: ante Code. In your letter of July 8, 1957, you have requested. our opinion as to the proper construction to be given Section 2 of Article 3.39 of the Insurance Code. You have stated in your letter that the departmental practice hasbeen "to construe this language to mean that the real'estate'securlng the loan must be of a value equal to one hundred forty per cent (140$) of the amount of the loan, or stated differently, that the loan may be of an amount equal to 71.42 per cent of the value of the real estate". Section 2 of Article 3.39 of the Texas Insurance Code prescribes the authorized Investments for domestic life Insurance companies. It reads in part as follows: "It may also make loans upon first liens upon real estate/the title to which Is valid anilthe value of which 1s forty per cent (40%) more than the amount loaned thereon, . . ." The question presented is whether such language should be~construed literally thereby fixing the required value of the i%al estate to be one hundredforty per cent (140%) of the amownt of the loan or whether.lt should be construed as meaning that the amount of the loan secured by such real estate must not exceed sixty per cent (60%) of the value of such real estate. This question arises from the legislative history of this particular enactment and from an earlier attorney general's opinion issued by a~predecessor In this office. Prior to the enactment of the Insurance Code of 1951 the rovlslons of Section 2 of Article 3.39 were found In Artl- de &25; R. S. Prior to Senate Bill 218, Acts 42nd Legislature, Hon. William A. Harrison, page 2 (w-261) Regular Session, 1931, Chapter 153, Page 256, Article 4725 read in part as follows: "(Domestic life insurance companies) may also make loans upon first liens upon real estate, the title to which is valid and the value of which is double the amount loaned thereon; . . ." Article 4725 was amended by Senate Bill 218, Acts 42nd Legislature, Regular Session, 1931, Chapter 153, Page 256, so'that it was identical to the present provisions of Section. 2 of Article 3.39 here under consideration. In an opinion by Attorney General James V. Allred dated August 18, 1931, addressed to the Honorable W. A. Tarver, Chairman of the Board of Insurance Commissioners, it was held that Article 4725 as amended, should be construed in the same manner as the previous statute with the only change ,the in- creasing of the maximum amount of a loan from fifty per cent (50%) to sixty per cent (60%) of the value of the property. This opinion was reasoned as follows: "That portion of the old Act above has al- ways been construed to mean that the real estate must be of a value at least fifty per cent (50s) in excess of the amountof the loan.~ The word 'double', as used in the foregoing quotation, could have as well been 'fifty per cent (50%) more than' and the Section would have had the same meaning. It is apparent that the Legislature, by Senate Bill 218, intended to raise the per cent which might be loaned on real estate from fifty (50%) to sixty per cent (60%). An examination of our statute, reference loans that might be made by various com- panies such as insurance, building and loan, etc., clearly reflects that the Legislature has always based'the amount'of the loanpermitted on a percen- tage of the value of the real estate." se of such opinion is ~~& of the-loan was One Thousand Dollars ($1 OOO),- double the amount loaned would be Two Thousand Dollars ,g$~"(JJ: 8 and if the amount loaned may not exceed fifty per cent I the real estate, then the real estate must be equal to Two Thou- sand Dollars ($2,000); "fifty per cent (50%) in excess of the - , -.- Hon. William A. Harrison, page 3 (W-261) amount loaned" and "fifty per cent (50%) more than the amount loaned" would be One Thousand Five Hundred Dollars ($1,500). It is fundamental to the interpretation of statutes that the intention and meaning of the Legislature must be prl- marily determined from the language of the statute itself. Qaddy v. First National Bank of Beaumont, 283 S.W. 277 (Civ. A$;; J.T;3),certified question answered, 115 Tex. 393, 283 . . . The purpose of legislation and general policy of the law affords means for the discovery of legislative intent where the language of a statute is of doubtful, uncertain or ambiguous purport, but such expedient cannot be resorted to where the lan- guage is unambiguous, and its meaning is ciear. Board of Insur- ance Commissioners, et al, v. Guardian Life Insurance Company, 142 Tex. 630 180 S.W.2d gob (1944). The dominant rule control- lina the conitruction of a statute is to ascertain the intention of ihe Legislature expressed in the statute. Brazos River Con- servation & Reclamation District v. Costello, ‘135 Tex. 307, 143 .W .2d 577, (19401. The language we are concerned with, namely, "forty per cent (40%) more than the amount Yloanedthereon", admits to doubt only when it is read~with the old Act and similar enact- ments in the sense that it is a depart.urefrom the normal. Read by'itself,the Act furnishes a clear and concise formula of com- mon usage and experience by which the value of real estate neces- sary to secure a mortgage made by a life insurance company may be determined. We conclude that the legislative intent is clear- ly expressed in the Act and resort may not be had to extraneous matters. McCallum v. Associated Retal. Credit Men of Austin, (Corn.of App. 1931), 41 S.W.2d 45. '.We overrule the previous opinion of August 18, 1931, (Book 324, Page 737). You are advised that under the provisions of Section 2 of'Article 3.39 of the Texas'Insurance Code the value of the real estate securing'such first lien loans must not be less than one hundred and forty per cent (140%) of the amount loaned thereon. Prior opinion of August 18, 1931, re- corded in Book 324 at Page 737 of the Attorney General's Opinions, is over- Hon. William A. Harrison, page 4 (w-261) ruled, The value of real estate securing first lien loans of life insurance com- panies under the provi,sionsof Section 2 of Article 3.39 must be at least one hun- dred and forty per cent (1405) of the amount of the loan. Yours very truly, WILL WILSON ;o~~Q;e~~~ Fred B. Werkenthin Assistant FBw:pc APPROVED: OPINION COMMITTEE: George P. Blackburn,Chairman Mary K. Wall ,Wm. R. Hemphlll Roger I. Daily REVIRWED FOR THE A'PYORRRYGRRRRAL BY: James N. Ludlum