delivered the opinion of the court:
The main question, presented by the record in this case, is whether or not, at the time of the filing of the petition for mandamus herein, and prior thereto, the charter of the Gontinentallnsurance Company hadbecome extinct.
The plaintiff in error claims that he, as insurance superintendent, was under no obligation to issue the certificates of authority applied for, because, under section 3 of the act of 1874 entitled “An act in regard to the dissolution of insurance companies,” in force July 1, 1874, (2 Starr & Curt. Ann.-Stat.—2d ed.—p. 2285), the charter of the Continental Insurance Company was as extinct, as though it had expired by its own limitation.
■ Section 3 of said act of 1874 is as follows: “The charters of all insurance companies incorporated in this State, which, either from neglect or by vote of their members or officers, or in obedience to the decree of any court, have ceased, or shall hereafter cease, for the period of one year, to transact the business for which they were organized, shall be deemed and held extinct in all respects, as if they had expired by their own limitation; and the circuit court shall have authority, upon application, by the petition of the Auditor of State, or of any person interested, to fix, by decree, the time within which such companies shall close their concerns: Provided, that this section shall not be construed to relieve any such company from its liabilities to the assured or any of its creditors.” ' (Ibid. p. 2285).
The amended answer of plaintiff in error to the petition for mandamus alleged, that the Continental Insurance Company had, for a period of more than one year, and for a period of more than one year prior to the beginning of the mandamus suit, ceased transacting the business, for which it was organized; and the amendment to the amended answer alleged that said insurance company, on or about 1887, ceased to transact any business whatever, for which it was organized, and remained out of business for sixteen years thereafter, and abandoned its charter, and ceased, for the period of sixteen years prior to the beginning of the mandamus suit, to exercise any of the corporate powers granted to it by its charter. Defendant in error, the petitioner below, demurred to the amended answer and to the amended answer as amended, and thereby admitted the truth of the allegations, thus made in the answer. In effect, the plaintiff in error, defendant below, elected to stand by his amended answer, after having duly objected and excepted to the ruling of the court sustaining the demurrer thereto. After so sustaining the demurrer to the answer, the judgment or order, allowing the writ of mandamus in accordance with the prayer of the petition, necessarily followed. The court seems to have called the case for hearing, after sustaining the demurrer to the amended answer, as amended, and to have permitted the petitioner below to put in evidence the amended answer of the defendant below, and the amendment thereto. This was unnecessary. It was sufficient to decide the case upon the pleadings. The same result, however, followed, as the consequence of permitting the amended, answer and the amendment thereto to be introduced in evidence, as would have necessarily followed if the cause had been heard merely upon the pleadings after the demurrer to the answer was sustained. The petitioner below having introduced in evidence, as its own proof, the amended answer and the amendment thereto, is bound by the statements therein, that the company had, for a period of more than one year prior to the beginning of the suit, ceased to transact the business, for which it was organized, and had remained out of business for sixteen years after 1887. (Fish v. McGann, 205 Ill. 179).
Did the court below decide correctly in sustaining the demurrer to the amended answer as amended? Defendant in error insists that section 3 of the act of July 1, 1874, as above quoted, has no application here, upon the alleged ground that it impairs the obligation of the contract between the State and the Continental Insurance Company, as embodied in the charter of the latter company; and that, therefore, said section 3, as applied to the company, is unconstitutional. In other words, the doctrine is invoked that the legislature can not repeal, impair or alter the rights and privileges, conferred by the charter of a corporation, against the consent and without the default of the corporation judicially ascertained and declared. (Bruffett v. Great Western Railroad Co. 25 Ill. 310).
It is not necessary here to discuss the question, whether the act of 1874 applies to special charters, like that of the Continental Insurance Company, where legislative control is not reserved in such charter. This is so, for the reason, as will hereafter be seen, that the special charter of the Continental Insurance Company did contain such reservation of legislative control.
In Ward v. Farwell, 97 Ill. 593, the constitutionality of the Insurance act of July 1, 1874, was under consideration by this court, and, in its main features, the act was there held to be constitutional. Subsequently, in Chicago Life Ins. Co. v. Auditor, 101 Ill. 82, we said (p. 87): “The point is made that the statute, under which this proceeding is had, is, as applying to this company, unconstitutional. This question of constitutionality is fully settled by the recent decision of this court in Ward v. Farwell, 97 Ill. 593, where it was decided that this act of 1874 was constitutional, and that it was so as applied to the Republic Life Insurance Company, incorporated under a special charter granted before the passage of the act of 1874, to-wit, March 22,1869, in whose charter no specific reservation of legislative control was contained. By section 5 of an act amending the charter of the present company, approved February 21, 1867, it is provided as follows: ‘This act, and the act to which this is an amendment, shall not be deemed to exempt said company from the operation of such general laws, as maybe hereafter enacted by the General Assembly on the subject of life insurance. ’ Afterward, on March 29, 1867, said amendment to the charter, of which the foregoing was a part, was formally adopted by the company. This strengthens the application of the decision in Ward v. Farwell to the present case.”
Under the decision in the case of Ward v. Farwell, supra, as interpreted by the subsequent case of Chicago Life Ins. Co. v. Auditor, supra, it might well be contended that the act of 1874 is constitutiona], as applied to the Continental Insurance Company, incorporated under a special charter granted before the passage of the act of 1874, even though no specific reservation of legislative control had been contained in that charter. But it is not necessary here to so hold.
By the act of March.7,1867, entitled “An act to amend the charter of the Fire and Tornado Insurance Company,” the name of the latter company was changed to the “Continental Insurance Company,” and section 3 of said act. of 1867 provided as follows: “Nothing in this act, or in the act of which this is an amendment, shall be construed so as to * * * exempt said company from the operation of such general laws, as may hereafter be passed upon the subject of insurance companies.” By adopting the change of name, provided for in the act of 1867, the insurance company adopted the act, and made it a part of its original charter. Indeed, this is not denied by counsel for defendant in error. In the brief of defendant in error it is said: “For the purposes of this argument it may be admitted that the amendatory act of March 7, 1867, was.accepted by the company and its stockholders, and thereby constituted a valid reserve power in the legislature to subject the company to certain legislative control.” Even, therefore, if it were held, that the charter of this Continental Insurance Company was a contract which could not be altered or changed by any subsequent legislature without the consent of the company, yet it must be regarded as a fact that here the company has given such consent. It consented by section 3 of the act of 1867, which was an amendment of its charter, that nothing in the act of 1867, or in the act of which the act of 1867 was an amendment, should be construed to exempt the company from the operation of such general laws, as might thereafter be passed upon the subject of insurance companies. Consequently, the charter of this company stands on the same footing, as though full legislative control had been reserved in the original act. All general laws on the subject of insurance companies are applicable to the Continental Insurance Company. It follows that the act of 1874-^-providing that the charters of all insurance companies, which have ceased for the period of one year to transact the business for which they were, organized, shall be deemed and held extinct in all respects as if they had expired by their own limitation—is fully applicable to the Continental Insurance •Company. The latter company appears upon this record as having ceased for the period of one year to transact the business for which it was organized, and, therefore, under the act of 1874, which was a general law passed after the act of March 7, 1867, its charter must be deemed and held extinct in all respects as if it had expired by its own limitation.
It is said by counsel for defendant in error that the object of section 3 of the amendatory act of March 7, 1867, reserving to the legislature the power of control, was merely to subject the company to legislative control, so far as subsequent legislation might be passed, defining the duties and obligations of the company regarding its business, and the control of its corporate affairs. We think, however, that the language of section 3 is broad enough to indicate something more than legislative control over the mere business of the corporation. By the terms of section 3 of the act of 1867 the company is not to be exempt from the operation of such general laws as may thereafter be passed upon the subject of insurance companies. Surély, the provision in section 3 of the act of 1874 is a g'eneral law upon the subject of insurance companies. It provides that the charter of any company, which from neglect shall cease for the period of one year to transact the business, for which it was organized, shall be deemed and held extinct in all respects, as if it had expired by its own limitation, and,' by accepting the act of March 7, 1867, the Continental Insurance Company consented to be subject to the provisions of this general law. As upon the present record, as it stands, it is admitted to have ceased to transact business for the period of one year, it comes within the terms of section 3 of the act of 1874.
Defendant in error claims that, at the time when plaintiff in error refused a certificate of authority to the Continental Insurance Company, and licenses to its agents, on the ground that the charter of the company was extinct under the act of 1874, the State had waived any right to declare such a forfeiture, if it ever existed. In view of the allegations, contained in the answer, and of the admission of their truth by the filing of a demurrer, it cannot be said that the Continental Insurance Company was in the exercise of the privileges and in the performance of the functions, claimed to have been éxercised and performed by it. Whether or not the nonuser of corporate franchises for a fixed period creates a cause of forfeiture of the charter, so that no advantage Can be taken of such non-user by any one except the State in a suit brought for that purpose, is a question, which does not arise here, because, by the terms of section 3 of the act of March 7, 1867, the Continental Insurance Company consentéd that its charter should become extinct, if it ceased for the period of one year to transact the business for which it was organized.
It is well settled that a writ of mandamus will not be issued, unless the petitioner shows a clear legal right to the writ; nor will such writ be issued, unless the party, applying for it, shall show a clear obligation on the part of the person, or body, sought to be coerced, to do the thing, whose performance is asked for by the issuance of the writ. (People v. Sellars, 179 Ill. 170; People v. Town of Mount Morris, 145 id. 427; People v. Johnson, 100 id. 537; Springfield and Illinois Southeastern Railway Co. v. County Cleric, 74 id. 27). Moreover, “the party who seeks to compel the performance of an act must set forth every material fact, necessary to show that it is the plain duty of such party to act in the premises, before the courts will interfere. ” (People v. Sellars, supra). “In doubtful cases it (the writ of mandamus), should not be granted.” (Springfield and Illinois Southeastern Railway Co. v. County Cleric, supra). Certainly, in view of what is said, it is at least doubtful whether or not the petitioner herein has a clear right to i;he writ, and whether or not the plaintiff in error is under a clear and undoubted obligation to do the thing prayed for in the petition.
For the reasons above stated, we are of the opinion that the court below erred in sustaining the demurrer to the amended answer as amended. Accordingly, the judgment of the court below is reversed, and the “cause is remanded to that court for further proceedings in accordance with the views herein expressed.
Reversed and remanded.