Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion

TEXEATETORNEYGENERAL OF TEXAS Honorable0. P. Lockhart Eoami of hmranoe Comissioaerw Austin, Texan Dear Sir: CpfnionHoc,O-5765.3. Rer Reconsiderationof Opinion Mo. O-3763:Section17 of Senate grill136, dots 46th Legislrtws. On the 4th day of August, 1941, this deparhent rendered OpinionMe. O-3763 in responseto your requestfor our opinionupon the constitutionalityof Section,17of Senate ail1 136, Aots of the 46th Legislainu-e, wit&outreferenoeto any particularmutual insuranoecontract or mutual insuranoeaasooiation. In deferenoeto the requestof aertain assooiations,the attorneysof which hare submittedbriefs upon the ques- tion involved,we have carefullyreoonsideredthis opinion0 The correotnessof our originalopinionhas been assailedupon variouspropositionsexpressedin differentkriefa as followsa "Sinoethe personsinsuredare also the insurersof themselvesand others in the (organizationand under the policiesinvolvedin this discussion,the mutual :insuranceorganizations under consideration had the legal right, power and duty tc reasonablyinarsaserates or revisebenefits,when neoee- sarg, tnfore and efter &e enaotientof Senate Bill 135." "Beforethe passageof Senate Bill 136, it had been uniformlyheld in this and other jurisdiotionsthat a mutual asaooirtion,has the inherentpower te increaseits assessmentrateswheneverit is rsasonablyneoessaryto en- able It to pey its losses. This right is inherentin tirevery nature ef suoh assooiations,beoause have no capitalstook,and the only souroe tit;hey from which they derivefunds with which to pay benefits is from assessments upon the members. Consequently,if the assessmentsare not sufficientte pay the losses and benefitsprovidedunder poliaies,it is obviousthat the losses oannotbe paid unless the assessmentsprs increased. Furthermore, the history of such lssooiationshas shown that with the Passingof year8 ae the members grow older, there ia a naturalinoreasein the number of deathswhich ultimatelyresultsin eitherdeoreased'benefits or increased assessments." sConseq,uently, ‘beforethe passageof &snots BLll 135, the members of the : assooiationaffeoteddid not have a oontraotwith the assooiationeither that theirrats shouldremain suoh or that the mudmum amount shouldbe Hon. 0. P. Lookhart,page 2 (O-3763-A) shouldbe paid, and under the law prior to the passageof Senate Bill 135, mutual associationsoould not make a oontraotto pay a definiteamount, regardlessof the amountrealizedfromassessments." "Whileother sectionsof Artiole 5066-lmey be unoonstitutional for the very reason8given and under the authoritiesset out in the opinionof your depart ment, it would mean that Seotion17 is not subjectto the objectionwhichis of suoh opinionbeeauso it makes no substsntialohange in the eon- the batsi.8 tractswhich CcwnissionerLeokharb inquiresabout so as to have a retroactive effectupon the rights of the partiesthereunder. Such Seotion17 and Seo- tions 11,and 32 of tie Aotmerely make it mandatoryupon the assooiationto do what they were alreadyauthoriredby their members and the then existingstat- utory law to do prior to the enaotmentof Article 5068-1~s If the premiseof those oontentionsis that any mutual insur- ance asslooiationmay validly,under the law in Texas, both raise rates and reduoe benefits,it is inoorreot. lf, on the other hand, the premiseis that the particularoontraotsof a particularmutual insuranceassooiationexprass- ly, by contraot,authorleethe assooiationeitherto raise rates or to reduce benefits,it is quite obviousthat such contracts would be unaffeotodby Sem- ate Bill 135 and would not require'choauthoritygrantedin Seotion17 of Senate Bill 135 to affect such ohanges. As to the latter contracts,if such do exist, the holdingin our opinionFiat Seotion17:of Senate Bill 135 is unoonstititional would have no signifioanoe. Our originalopinionFloeO-3763did no.trelate to any specif- lo contractor assooiationand, in the abstra&,,opshtod up&: the usual and typicalmutual Insurancecontractand mutual insuranceassociation,regarding which, under the law in Texas,a rednotionin benefitswould oonstitutea re- pudiationof the contraat. NanifortlySeotion17 of Senate Ei.11136 aannotbe held oonsti- tutional.becauseperhapq,asto soms oontraotsaud as to some assoaiations,it euthorieeswhat otherwiseoould be done under the particularaontraotwhen, as to other contracts,It authorlaosan impairmentof the obligationsthereof0 In its broad application,and under the oases In Texas, Seotloa17 of said Bill 135 indisputablyauthorlEesthe impairmentof obligationsof coritsaot.This being true, the fundamentalquestionis whether or net the Aot maybe upheld as a valid exeroiseof the police pewer of the State. Certainly,strong and persuaslvooonsideratlcnaexist in justifioationof the oxerolsoof the pelioopewer representedin Seotion17 of Senate Pill 135. mtthe SupremeCourt of Tens has unequivrrallyheld that the rightsrnd gua~ntoos oxooptedfrom the powers of gororrmkentby the Bill of RQhts, and speoifioallythe prohibitionthereinagainst any law impairingthe obligationof oontraats,is superiorto and is not sub- ject to, the poIioe power of the State. Travelers'InsuranceCompanyv. Marshall,76 S.W. (Zd) 1007, 124 Texas 45. Langeverv. Miller, 76 S.W. (2d) ~-1025,124 Texas 80. In the secondmentionedease, Chief JusticeCureton said8 Hon. 0. Pa Lockhart,page 3 (0.37634) 'In the oasc of Travelers*Dsuranoe'CempanyV. ldarshall, this day deoided (ante p. 45), we held that the existenceof the $resentindustrialdepres- sion, graphicallydescribedin the emergencyclause tothe measure before us, does not authorizethe Legislature&or the police power *one of the general pcwersofgovemment,* to enaeb even emergencylegislationof a lim- ited durationImpairingthe ebligationof oc?Aractsi That opinionis con- tmlling here, and if the lictbefore ue *5m&rs the obligationof contracts' it is unconstitutional and void, regardleseef tie occasionof its enact- ment.* (Cnderscering Itallos) In +As Travelmet Inmraaoe ease Judge Curetondealered: We recognize,ef course,that the police p-r ie broad and comprehensive; but the Constitutionforbidsits exercise when the resultwould 'bethe de- struotionof the rlghts,guaranteoa,privileges , end restrains aaceptedfrom the pcwers of governmentby the Xl1 of Bights. . . . "Sincethe impairmentof tie obligationof contractsis prohibitedby Sec- tion 16, Cuticle 1 of the Roll of Rights,without any specifiedexception in favor of legislativeaction to the contraryduring industrialdepressions or emergencyperiods,We are without~pmer tc write such an exceptioninte the orgraiolaw. A8 said by one of the Toxahrauthoritiespreviouslycited: *The enaotmentof laws Impairingthe obligationof contracts Is farbiddenby Section16 of &tIcle 1 of the Constitution of Texas, . . . The limitationthus ImporodIs cmphatlo, utmm%igueurand without oxooption2it appliesalike to all contracts and proteotnall obllgationucf oeatraotafrcau de- etruotlon or ImpeIrmentby subeequontlegirlation. . . .'" (Uhdemooring ItalIce) And the SuprapeCourt rerohti Itr oonoluslonrin theso two oaaea notr rlthafmding, ad riter rooognirlng tho UnitedBtatea SupremeCourt cake of Home milding and Loan Atm~IatIono. Rlrledell,290 U.'S. 396, 64 Supreme Court 231, 76 L. Rd. 41S, 66 A.L.B. 1461. The rainingof ratoi aride,we aro'beundby the law In Toxar that the roduotionof 'beaefltr I!ia muhtti Inruranoooonfraotoonstltutoran Impair- ment of the obligationaof euch ecntrabtc In SupremeCouncilAmerioanLegI- on of Hcnor V. Ratte, 79 8.W. 629, It was raid: aLa our opinion,h-or, tho enactmentof this by-law constituteda aubsten- tlal regudlatlonof the coatraotr Tho benefit certificateupon its face pro- vided fcsrthe paymentof the suMof #S,W,out of the benefitfund of the order. The by-lawwas, In effect,an announoemcntthat the appellantwould only pay $2,OCO out of the benefitfund, and would only pay the remaining $3,000 providedthat amount couldk, paid out of the emergencyfund of the order e . . The %-y-lawitselfrias,in our opinion,unauthorized,and appelleemight have treatedit a8 void . . ." Hon. 0. Pr Lookhart,page 4,(0-3763-A) Wirtz v. SovereignCamp, W.O.W.,~ 266 S.W. 438, by a specialSupreme Court, expresslyrecognizedand reaffirmedthe doctrineof the &tte case as follow;: "It does not appear to us that the Batte case, 34 Tex. Civ. App. 456, 79 S. W. 629, militatesagainstwhat has been said above. That ease did not di- rectly involvethe questionof the right to increaserates;but the associa- tion had issued a polloyupon which-theyhad agreed te pay, upon the death of the Insured,$5,000,but it subsequentlychanged.thecontractso as to make it liable for only #2,OOC,and the Court of CivilAppeals held -- and we think :?roperly- that therewan a repudIatIonof lhe contract. . . . "Thatthe stipulationer promisein a contraat,suoh as is the basis of this action,that the insuredwIl1 complywith and ba bound by all future regula- t:ons or -v-lawsof the rssooiatlon,does not mean that the societymay in- terfereti.ththe essentialpurposeof the contract,viz., the paymentof the indemnitypromised,or, in otherwords, oannotbe oonstruedas authorizing the socie-tito repudiatea plain contractIs clearlysettledthere is no doubt. . . ." between reduoingby mean8 of a by-law or an amendmentthe "The dist:inction amount stipulatedin the most unqualifiedterm8 to be paid, and merely in- creasing-W a by-lawdues or assessmentsto such extent as is neoessaryto meet the oxigenoyensuingout of the changedfinancialconditionof the associationbroughtabout by deoreaseof membershipor death or other caus- =s is ob-rious. "The first is a violationand repudiationof an untiblguouscontraot,while the other is not." Tha don+rineof the 'Rlrtz0888 wa6 expresslyreoognizedand reaffirmed in Supremc#Lodge Ancient Order of Horkmenv. gemper,155 S.W. (2d) 64, rehear- ing denied C~.:obar6, 1941. Beforequotingwith approvalthe above quoted language:intho WIrtz case,the BeaumontCourt of CivilAppeals said: "The law will enforoethe oontracturalright of a life insuranoecorporation to increa:,ethe amount of its monthly aaressmentsagainetIts members, SupremeLodge H. of P. v. MIm8, Tex. Civ. App., 167 S.W. 635. But the right to inoreaseassessmentsdoes not authorizethe corporationto diminishthe amountpa:rable under Its certificate. .~ . .a ,: Thor&ore, Seation17 of Senate Bill 135 in its expressauthoriz.atLon to mutual insuranoeassooiationsto reduce benefitsauthorizesthe tipair- ment of o'bligationsof contract,is violativeof Section16, Article 1, of the T&as Constitution, and cannot,,underthepronouneementsof the Supreme Court of rexas,be upheldas a valid and constitutional exerciseof the poiioe pafirer of the State. We regard it appropriateto state that we have fully conaidaredthe case of D%nielv. Tyrell and 6arth InvestmentCompany,79 S.W. (2) 153 - - Hon. Oe P. Lockhart,page 6 (0-3763-A) (Opinionby the GalvestonCourt),93 S.W. (2d) 375, 127 Tex. 213 (Opinion by the SupremeCourt),and the oases oited therein,in relationto the cases of Travelercl* Insw!anoeCompanyV. Marshall,and IangeverV. Miller, supra. It ie our conolusionthat this cam may not be aonsidered as overruliwg(or qualifgingthem earlieroases in their applicationto the subjectmatter of this opinion. In come&ion with the Daniel TT.Tyrelland GuthCcmm aas), attentim is oJ.led to the oaee of FidelityBxlldingand Lean Assooiatdon V. Thompson,45 Sew. (2d), 51 8.W. (2d) 578, the opinionin eaoh being by Judge Crib. Wb adhere to our originalopinionin this matte r. Youra very truly AT'XEtNEY GE- OF TEXAS w /a/ Zellie c. steakby Zellis C. Steakley Asaistolt ZcstwFsrcgr APPFXYEDDEC 8, 1941 This Opinionconsideredand /s/Gerald c. fdnnn approvedin limitedconference. ATTOFUVEY GENESALOF TEXAS