Blood Service Plan Insurance v. Williams

186 So. 2d 33, 1966 Fla. App. LEXIS 5312
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedApril 26, 1966
DocketNo. H-130
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 186 So. 2d 33 (Blood Service Plan Insurance v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blood Service Plan Insurance v. Williams, 186 So. 2d 33, 1966 Fla. App. LEXIS 5312 (Fla. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinion

WIGGINTON, Acting Chief Judge.

Appellant, Blood Service Plan Insurance Company, a corporation, has appealed an [35]*35order rendered by the State Insurance Commissioner denying its application for a Certificate of Authority to engage in the insurance business in this state. It is contended by appellant that it has fully met and complied with all the requirements specified and imposed by the statutes of this state entitling it to a certificate to engage in the insurance business in Florida, and that the appellee Commissioner acted without or in excess of his jurisdiction, or alternatively, in a capricious or arbitrary manner, in denying the application in question.

Appellant is a corporation engaged exclusively in that phase of the disability insurance business which involves the writing of indemnity insurance against the expense and cost of blood transfusions. It is admitted and engages in this business in forty states of the nation. Its contracts of insurance indemnify the insured against all losses incurred for transfusions of whole human blood or blood products, and carries out such indemnity by discharging the insured’s obligation to the blood bank furnishing blood to the insured.

Appellant neither owns nor acquires blood in any form. The hospital or other agency which furnishes blood in any given instance normally desires payment therefor in cash. Ninety-two per cent of all claims serviced by appellant are discharged by the payment of money. Of the remaining eight per cent, approximately two per cent of the agencies supplying blood request that payment to them be made by returning in kind the blood or blood products so furnished. The remaining six per cent request payment partly in kind by blood or blood products, and partly by money. Since most blood required by appellant’s insureds is furnished through blood banks, appellant customarily engages the services of local community or hospital nonprofit blood banks (or persons designated by them) as selling agents, but its sales activities are not confined to such agents.

All premiums charged by appellant for the insurance contracts issued by it are paid and received in cash. In those instances in which appellant conducts its business through agents who are or work in close cooperation with local blood banks, such banks frequently pay to appellant the insurance premium in cash on behalf of acceptable blood donors who are willing to make blood donations to such banks.

At the hearing before the Commissioner, appellant offered, and there was received in evidence, documentary proof showing full and complete compliance by appellant with all requirements imposed by the statutes as a prerequisite for entitlement to a certificate of authority to transact insurance business in Florida.1 The evidence demonstrates without dispute that appellant meets each and all of the statutory standards for admittance, and no issue has been made as to any of them. These relate to the organization of the company, the reserve requirements, the history of operations, Nthe quality of management, the nature of ownership, the capital requirements, and other pertinent and practical aspects of insurance company operation.

At the hearing no direct testimony or evidence of any kind was offered in opposition to the application filed by appellant. There was introduced into the record, however, a series of written communications addressed to the Commissioner by individuals and blood bank organizations expressing hostility toward appellant’s insurance operation, and opposition to the application which it had made. We can appreciate appellant’s dilemma when faced with the necessity of litigating against the Commissioner’s mailbag consisting entirely of unverified correspondence whose authors were not present at the hearing for cross-examination as to their competency. The letters may be roughly categorized in groups as follows: (a) those which assumed that appellant’s business would be in direct competition with the local nonprofit blood banks operated in [36]*36the several communities of the state; (b) those which assumed that the sale of the type of insurance offered by appellant would adversely affect the ability of local community blood banks to procure voluntary donations of blood by donors on whom they depend for an adequate supply of blood to carry on their functions as a bank; and (c) those which generally oppose the idea of equating money with blood, and who feel that insurance of the type offered by appellant would be tainted with commercialism and offensive to the sensibilities of our citizenship.

In the order appealed the Commissioner set forth the findings of fact on which he predicated his denial of the certificate applied for. At the outset the Commissioner found that the financial condition of appellant is satisfactory and that it has a satisfactory history in its domiciliary state as well as in the other states where it has been admitted to transact insurance business, both as to management and plan of operation. The findings on which the Commissioner’s order of denial is based, and the conclusion reached by him on the record made at the hearing, are as follows:

“(3) The applicant company, if admitted, will make available, through blood bank agency plans, contracts of insurance which will provide monetary reimbursement for the costs of human blood as distinguished from the generally accepted practice whereby blood banks are reimbursed in kind, viz. blood for blood.
“(4) Correspondence from major blood bank facilities in this state indicates persons most familiar with the normal operation of blood bank programs are inalter-ably opposed to the establishment of a blood insurance program in this state because of the probable reduction in the supply of available blood where persons using blood may reimburse the supplying blood bank in money as distinguished from blood replacement by donors.
“(5) The company, although presenting evidence of its successful operations through a closely related statewide blood bank program in Colorado and other states wherein it is authorized to do business, admittedly is without blood bank agency facilities necessary for its successful operation in this state.
“WHEREFORE, it is my opinion that the admission to the State of Florida and the granting of a certificate of authority to applicant Blood Service Plan Insurance Company at this time would not be in the best interest of the citizens of the State of Florida because of (a) the unique character of the company’s operation which requires blood bank agency facilities which it does not now possess and (b) the reasonably anticipated impact on the operation of the blood bank program in this state in the reduction of number of blood donors because of cash benefits payable to blood banks under the company’s insurance contracts.”

Commissioner’s finding number three quoted above is technically correct in that the insurance contract issued by appellant provides only that claims will be satisfied by the payment of money. Such finding, however, ignores the undisputed evidence in the record to the effect that in other states where appellant transacts its insurance business the small percentage of cases in which payment of losses is requested to be made in blood or blood products, rather than by the payment of money, such requests are in every instance met by appellant.

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Related

Bay National Bank and Trust Company v. Dickinson
229 So. 2d 302 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1969)
Blood Service Plan Insurance v. Roddis
259 Cal. App. 2d 807 (California Court of Appeal, 1968)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
186 So. 2d 33, 1966 Fla. App. LEXIS 5312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blood-service-plan-insurance-v-williams-fladistctapp-1966.