Elsom v. Gadd

On Rehearing.

[Decided January 30, 1917.]

Per Curiam.

A petition for rehearing has been filed in this case. The principal reliance of counsel, and the only one which calls for further argument, is that § 36 of the act of 1909, p. 556, Rem. & Bal. Code, §6158, upon which In re Blattner’s Estate, 89 Wash. 412, 154 Pac. 796, is made to rest, was repealed by the act of 1911 [Laws 1911, p. 161; Rem. 1915 Code, § 6059-1 et seq.], which purports to be a revision and rewriting of the insurance code; that if we *608grant the soundness of the court’s holding that the former act, Laws 1895, p. 336 (Rem. & Bal. Code, § 569), exempting the proceeds and avails of all life insurance, was modified by § 36 of the act of 1909, we should at this time, our attention being called to the act of .1911, adhere to our former holding, that is to say, the rule of Flood v. Libby, 38 Wash. 366, 80 Pac. 533, 107 Am. St. 851, and German-American State Bank of Ritzville v. Godman, 83 Wash. 231, 145 Pac. 221. No better statement of the position of counsel can be made than is made by Judge Fullerton in his dissenting opinion in the instant case.

Whether the act of 1911 repeals § 36 of the act of 1909 is a question involving some perplexity and, as we believe, one that should not, and cannot be, determined by reference to the two acts of 1909 and 1911 alone, without a harvest of consequences that would destroy all of the law pertaining to the exemption of the proceeds and avails of life insurance, whether the rule is found in the statutes or the opinions of this court.

The first act exempting the proceeds and avails of life insurance was passed in 1895. It is entitled: “An act

exempting the proceeds of life insurance from liability for debt, and declaring an emergency.” It is provided:

“Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Washington :
“Section 1. That the proceeds or avails of all life insurance shall be exempt from all liability for any debt.” Laws 1895, p. 336.

This act was amended, Laws 1897, p. 70. The amendment is not material to our discussion. It was carried into the codes under the title “Homesteads and Exemptions,” Bal. Code, § 5252; Rem. & Bal. Code, § 569; Rem. 1915 Code, § 569. It found its way to this court for the first time in In re Heilbron’s Estate, 14 Wash. 536, 45 Pac. 153, 35 L. R. A. 602, and was there treated as a remedial statute partaking of the nature of “but not strictly” an exemption *609law, the controlling question being whether the named beneficiary had a property interest in the policy and whether the act of 1895 was retroactive.

In Flood v. Libby, supra, the right of holders of endowment policies as against their creditors was considered. No question of “insurance business” is suggested in the opinion. The present worth of the policies was held to be exempt, the court saying:

“It is within the power of the legislature to declare what property shall be exempt, and we think the language of the statute is too plain to call for controversy.”

In 1909, the legislature passed what is known as the insurance code, Laws 1909, ch. 142, p. 538. While there is no repealing clause, it was intended and accepted as a complete code containing all the law intended for the regulation of the business of life insurance. It is entitled:

“An Act to regulate the business of life insurance, the issuing of policies of endowment or of annuity, and the organization and operations of companies foi’med to transact such business.”

The act of 1909 contained the following provision:

“If a policy of insurance is effected by any person on his own life, or on another life in favor of a person other than himself having an insurable interest therein, the lawful beneficiary thereof, other than himself, or his legal representatives, shall, unless contrary to the terms of the policy, be entitled to its proceeds against the creditors and representatives of the person effecting the same; and the person to whom a policy of life insurance is made payable may maintain an action thereon in his own name.”

Then came Northwestern Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Chehalis County Bank, 65 Wash. 374, 118 Pac. 326, wherein the act was treated as an exemption statute. We shall presently make further reference to this case. The act .was so treated in Reiff v. Armour & Co., 79 Wash. 48, 139 Pac. 633, L. R. A. 1915A 1201. In German-American State Bank of *610Ritzville v. Godman, supra, it was held that the “policies came to the widow . . . as an exempt fund.” The right of any insurance company to the fund involved was in no sense an issue in any of these cases. The controversy in all cases was between third parties.

In 1911, the legislature rewrote the insurance code, providing regulatory measures for all forms of insurance, the title of the act being:

“An Act to provide an Insurance Code for the State of Washington, to regulate the organization and government of insurance companies and insurance business, to provide penalties for the violation of the provisions of this act, to provide for an Insurance Commissioner and define his duties, and to repeal all existing laws in relation thereto.” Laws 1911, p. 161.

It contained a repealing clause:

“This act may be referred to and shall be known as ‘The Insurance Code’ and shall supersede all prior acts on the subject of the organization and government of insurance companies and insurance business, and all such prior acts are hereby repealed.” Laws 1911, p. 298, § 238.

We had theretofore held in the Northwestern Mut. Life Ins. Co. case that the act of 1895 had not been repealed by § 36 of the act of 1909, that the enactments were not inconsistent and were to be construed in pari materia. This holding was adhered to in the Blattner case. In other words, we held the exemption statute of 1895 had been modified by § 36 of the act of 1909 to the extent that, if a policy were made payable to a named beneficiary, the proceeds and avails were exempt to the named beneficiary, but if made payable to the estate, they would not be exempt. Section 36 is plain in its terms. It contains no words inviting construction. We acknowledged its force in the several cases where it is referred to. We treated it as a provision pertaining to the “business of life insurance.”

Having in mind the title of the act of .1909 (Laws 1909, p. 538) : “An act to regulate the business of life insur*611anee” and “the organization and operations of companies formed to transact such business,” the question occurred whether § 36 was repealed by the act of 1911. To engage the subject offhand, accepting the act of 1911 as one intended to cover the whole subject-matter of the old law, and, as we think, without due consideration of the several acts, their titles and subject-matter, and of certain accepted rules of statutory construction, it may be contended with some show of reason that § 36 of the act of 1909 is repealed. That it is not so, seems evident to us. First, the object of the act of 1911 is evidenced by its title and confirmed by a reading of the body of the act. It is to include within the range of the insurance code the regulation of all forms of insurance: Life, health, accident, fire and marine, bonding, casualty, surety, title and fraternal. The repealing clause should not be held to affect any law that does not fall certainly within the definition of insurance business. It may be admitted that the payment of a policy, or the right to sue upon a policy is, in a sense, insurance business. It is not strictly so. It is a mere detail affecting the rights of a claimed beneficiary on the one hand and a creditor on the other. Those engaged in insurance business have no interest in the policy when matured by death or casualty, or in the affairs of creditors of the beneficiary of the estate.

Section 36 of the act of 1909, as well as the act of 1896, goes beyond the limit of “insurance business,” as the term is bounded by ordinary definition. As so frequently suggested in our opinions, these acts relate to, and are intended to preserve, certain exemptions; to protect the proceeds of insurance policies to certain persons from the levy of certain other persons. It is most likely that the true intent of the legislature was not to repeal any part of the life insurance act of 1909 unless clearly repugnant to or inconsistent with that part of the act which was rewritten in 1911, but rather to repeal all “prior acts” upon the subject of the added topics which we have enumerated.

*612The two acts, § 36 and the act of 1895, are so tied together that one cannot be held to be repealed unless we hold that the other is repealed. Such repeal can only be held upon the assumption that the exemption of the proceeds and avails of an insurance policy is “insurance business.” We are thus driven to the extremity of sustaining both or wiping the books clean of all statutes exempting insurance moneys. We are sustained in our conclusion that, although the exemption of the proceeds of insurance was “insurance business” to such collateral extent that a provision to that effect would be treated in pari materia with a prior act, that phase of the question is not in any way treated, either directly or by suggestion, in the act of 1911.

We were face to face with the same assault upon the statute of 1895 that was made in the case of Northwestern Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Chehalis County Bank, supra, where we held that the “insurance” law would be construed with reference to existing statutes, saying:

“The question with us is not what might be held to be within the title if it were the only law upon the statute books, but whether an existing law is repealed by the terms or implications of the later law.”

It will thus be seen, if we deny the two enactments- — the act of 1895 and § 36 — the force of “exemption” statutes, and treat them as incident to “insurance business” only, both would have to fall under the repealing clause of the act of 1911, for the one is just as much “insurance business” as the other.

It is said that § 36 is within the subject-matter of the act of 1911. Exemptions to debtors is a subject-matter in and of itself. It is in no way related to the insurance business, nor should it be included in the subject-matter of insurance. Although in drafting laws it is not an unusual thing for the legislature to touch upon more or less remotely allied subjects, where it does so and afterwards revises the whole act *613without touching the allied subject, the courts will not eliminate the related subject unless the legislative intent is fairly deducible from the act itself.

In the instant case, the legislature did not indicate in the act of 1911, by any affirmative expression, that it intended to revise the law with reference to the exemption of insurance moneys. The argument to sustain the theory of repeal must be found in the repealing clause and that alone. How can it be said that an act intended only to “supersede all prior acts on the subject of the organization and government of insurance companies and insurance business” has to do with the exemption of insurance moneys in suits between third parties. It neither has to do with the organization and government of insurance companies, nor is it even remotely connected with the “organization and government of . insurance business.”

Even under the theory of “complete revision” of the subject-matter of insurance, the position of counsel cannot be any stronger than it would be had the legislature said, in terms: All acts and parts of acts inconsistent with this act are hereby repealed. In such cases the rule is that the express repealing clause implies that the acts and parts of acts not inconsistent are not intended to be repealed, and consequently remain in force. Lewis’ Sutherland, Statutory Construction (2d ed.), § 272. It was in obedience to this rule of construction that our practice act, Laws 1893, p. 407, although purporting on its face to revise the entire procedure in so far as it pertained to the commencement of actions, was held ineffectual to defeat a right to attach property before the service of a summons. Notwithstanding the sweeping range of the act and its evident purpose, the court, in Cosh-Murray Co. v. Tuttich, 10 Wash. 449, 38 Pac. 1134, did not find a specific intent to repeal or make impossible the exercise of an existing right, saying:

“There seems to have been no intention on the part of the legislature to abolish the attachment law to so great, or to *614any, extent, and the new act ought to be construed so as to save the operation of the remedial statute, if possible.”

The repeal, and as it seems to us by judicial process, of the entire law of exemption of the proceeds and avails of insurance moneys, was the consequence alluded to in the fore part of our opinion, and which, considering the avowed policy of the state as evidenced by the two entirely independent acts of 1895 and 1897, we sought to avoid.

We believe our argument is sound. Even zealous counsel will admit, we confidently believe, that we have considered all things and held fast to that which is good; that is, the exemption of the proceeds and avails of insurance policies to the beneficiary selected by the insured as the object of his bounty.

We adhere to our former holding. The petition for rehearing is denied.