Title 50 › Chapter CHAPTER 53— - TRADING WITH THE ENEMY › § 4304
Requires enemy or ally-of-enemy insurance or reinsurance companies doing business in the United States to apply to the President for a license within 30 days after October 6, 1917. The President must grant or deny the license within 30 days after the application. Licenses can be temporary and can include rules about how the company runs its business, who manages it, and how its money is controlled. The President can revoke or change a license later. U.S. insurance companies do not have to keep old contracts with those enemy companies and may cancel them by giving 30 days’ written notice to the President. For 30 days after October 6, 1917, and until the President decides, earlier presidential proclamations of April 6, 1917 and July 13, 1917 keep applying to these companies. A licensed enemy insurance company may not send money out of the United States or use its U.S. funds to create credit for an enemy. Non-insurance enemies who apply can keep doing business during that 30-day period, but existing rules banning certain transfers of money or property still apply. If no license is applied for, or if it is refused or revoked, the trade bans take effect at once. Even after refusal or revocation, policyholders and U.S. insurers may still be paid on policies that were in force when the license was refused or revoked, and they may seek payment or sue to recover money held by the government.
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War and National Defense — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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50 U.S.C. § 4304
Title 50 — War and National Defense
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73