Associated Industries of Missouri v. Angoff

937 S.W.2d 277, 1996 Mo. App. LEXIS 1869, 1996 WL 665185
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 19, 1996
DocketWD 52130
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 937 S.W.2d 277 (Associated Industries of Missouri v. Angoff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Associated Industries of Missouri v. Angoff, 937 S.W.2d 277, 1996 Mo. App. LEXIS 1869, 1996 WL 665185 (Mo. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

SMART, Judge.

This case involves the issue of the authority of the Director of the Missouri Department of Insurance to regulate stop-loss insurance coverage, which is indemnity coverage issued to an employer maintaining a self-funded health plan to reimburse the employer for large medical expense losses incurred by the employees protected by the plan.

The State of Missouri, in § 376.421, RSMo 1994 1 , regulates policies of group health insurance delivered in this state. The law provides that policies meeting certain specifications may be issued. The statute also provides that other policies of group health insurance may be issued when the Director of Insurance is satisfied that the policies meet certain standards. The Missouri statutes do not purport to address stop-loss coverage in any way.

In this case, the Director claims that he has authority for 20 CSR 400-2.150, a regulation which purports to regulate certain forms of stop-loss insurance by defining it and *279 treating it as medical expense insurance, when the policy has certain features which, as a practical matter, tend to transfer much of the risk from the employer or the plan to the insurance company. The Director also now seeks to modify the regulation by tightening further the authority over such coverage. In a suit filed by opponents of the Director’s actions, the Circuit Court of Cole County held that the Director had no statutory authority for the rule, either as now extant or as proposed to be amended. The Director appeals, contending that the trial court erroneously declared the law.

STOP-LOSS INSURANCE

The parties agree that there are two general types of stop-loss insurance: aggregate stop-loss coverage and specific stop-loss coverage. In both cases the benefit is paid to the employer (or to the trustees of a self-funded plan). Aggregate stop-loss coverage reimburses the employer for any overage above the expected amount of the aggregate claims. Specific stop-loss coverage pays a benefit after a cap on any individual is exceeded. The cap is, in effect, a deductible. The lower the deductible, the more the risk is shifted to the insurer. The Director suggests that the distinction between health insurance and stop-loss coverage becomes unclear when the insurance company assumes most of the plan’s risk but in form provides coverage only to the employer. The Director believes that it is his responsibility to look to the reality of how the risk is being allocated, and to categorize coverage accordingly, rather than be guided by the apparent form of the coverage. The Director points out that insurance commissioners of other states have contended that, at low deductibles, stop-loss policies are “mere vehicles” designed to avoid compliance with recent health insurance regulation. The Director points to the fact that § 374.045 authorizes the Director to effectuate and to aid the interpretation of the insurance laws.

The opponents of the regulation argue that the Missouri statutes simply do not authorize regulation of stop-loss coverage, at any threshold deductible, regardless of how the risk may be allocated. They argue that there is no need for any interpretation of the insurance laws when the laws are clear, and they contend that the statutes clearly differentiate health insurance from stop-loss coverage by characterizing group health insurance coverage as coverage providing a benefit directly to the employee. The opponents point out that there is an express limitation on rulemaking under § 374.045.3, to wit: that no rule or regulation may conflict with any law of this state. They assert that the Director’s measures conflict directly with § 376.421, which do not permit health insurers to pay a benefit directly to the employer. They point out that this express definitional exclusion is exactly how stop-loss coverage works. The opponents also claim that the Director’s authority is pre-empted by the Federal Employees Retirement and Income Security Act (“ERISA”), 29 U.S.C. §§ 1001, et seq., and that the trial court correctly found that the Director’s authority had been pre-empted.

STANDING

The Director first complains that the plaintiffs have no standing to maintain this action. The petition was filed in the circuit court by four plaintiffs: Associated Industries of Missouri; Missouri Chamber of Commerce; General American Life Insurance Company; and St. Louis Area Business Health Coalition. Associated Industries of Missouri is a Missouri not-for-profit corporation of more than 1,400 members representing all phases of the Missouri business community. Many of these members utilize stop-loss coverage. The Missouri Chamber of Commerce is a Missouri not-for-profit corporation with over 3000 members, many of whom maintain self-funded health plans and utilize stop-loss coverage. General American Life Insurance Company is a Missouri mutual life insurance company which, among other lines of insurance, issues stop-loss insurance coverage to many self-funded non-insured health plans. The St. Louis Area Business Health Coalition is a Missouri not-for-profit corporation comprised of 40 employers and employee organizations in St. Louis who purchase health care for more than 40,000 employees and dependents.

*280 The Director alleges that the trial court erred in issuing any judgment other than one dismissing the petition because none of the respondents have standing to challenge the regulation. The Director points out that Associated Industries of Missouri, the Missouri Chamber of Commerce and the St. Louis Area Business Health Coalition are not insurance companies, are not regulated by this rule and do not plead any facts that would give rise to a legal theory that would give them standing to seek relief on behalf of an insurance company. The Director also challenges the standing of General American Life Insurance Company, claiming that it has not pleaded and proved that it issues policies which are affected by this rule.

The respondents concede that the Director has a valid point as to the three associations as they are not regulated insurance companies and have not shown that they individually utilize stop-loss insurance. 2 General American Life Insurance Company, on the other hand, issues policies of stop-loss insurance coverage. In order to have standing, a party must show only a legally protect-able interest in the relief sought. Neighbors Against Large Swine Operations v. Continental Grain Co., 901 S.W.2d 127, 132 (Mo.App.1995). For a party to have a legally protectable interest, that interest must be one that contemplates an interest, either personal or pecuniary, that is subject to some consequential relief, either immediately or prospectively. Phillips v. Missouri Dep’t of Social Servs., 723 S.W.2d 2, 4 (Mo. banc 1987). General American contends that it has both a present and prospective interest in the declaratory relief. General American issues stop-loss insurance coverage to many self-funded non-insured health plans in Missouri.

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Bluebook (online)
937 S.W.2d 277, 1996 Mo. App. LEXIS 1869, 1996 WL 665185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/associated-industries-of-missouri-v-angoff-moctapp-1996.