Bullion v. Aetna Insurance

237 S.W. 716, 151 Ark. 519, 1922 Ark. LEXIS 266
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 30, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 237 S.W. 716 (Bullion v. Aetna Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bullion v. Aetna Insurance, 237 S.W. 716, 151 Ark. 519, 1922 Ark. LEXIS 266 (Ark. 1922).

Opinions

Smith, J.

Appellees, who were plaintiffs below, are corporations organized under the laws of the various States of the Union, and all of them are doing a fire insurance business in this State; and all of them were so engaged on December 31, 1919; and most of them have been so engaged for a period of more than five years prior to December 31, 1919. All these corporations are members of the Arkansas Fire Prevention Bureau, and are all the insurance companies now doing a stock fire insurance business in this State.

These corporations brought this suit to have adjudicated the duties of the Insurance Commissioner of the State under act No. 163 of the acts of the General Assembly approved March 3, 1919, and appearing in Crawford .& Moses’ Digest as sections 5962 et seq. This act requires the Insurance Commissioner to compile the figures showing the results of the business of stock fire insurance companies during the five years preceding December 31st of each year, and provides that “if it appears that for such five-year period the stock fire insurance companies doing business in this State have made an aggregate underwriting profit in excess of five per cent., the Insurance Commissioner shall have the power to order such reduction in rates as will reduce the underwriting profit on business thereafter done to five per cent. ’ ’ Sec. 5960, C. & M. Digest. Each five-year period is a unit for the calculation of underwriting profits, and the Commissioner’s finding thereon fixes the insurance rates for the first year after that period; and the rate for each subsequent year thereafter depends on the Commissioner’s finding for the five-year period immediately preceding.

This action of the Commissioner is made “subject to the summary court review as provided in section 7 hereof” (sec. 5969, C. & M. Digest), and pending this court review his orders are superseded.

The present action is such a review, and it is al-. leged in 'the complaint filed for that purpose that the Insurance Commissioner, in the discharge of the duties therein imposed, has attempted to compile the business for the five-year period ending December 31, 1919, but that such tabulation has been made upon an erroneous basis, in this, that the Commissioner has; undertaken to arrive at the underwriting profit by calculating the aggregate premiums received and losses and expenses actually paid during said period and ascertaining the ratio of losses and expenses paid to premiums received, which, according to his • compilation, was 88.79 per cent., and the Commissioner has treated this result as showing an aggregate underwriting profit for that period of 11.21 per cent, or 6.21 per cent, in excess of the 5 per cent, allowed by said act, and on May 13, 1920, he made an order requiring all stock fire insurance companies to make such reduction, on all premiums collected, on all policies written after said date, and, on June 7, 1920, notified the Arkansas Fire Prevention Bureau to take necessary steps to put such reduction in force. The insurance companies applied for a rehearing, which was granted, but after hearing the representatives of the companies the Commissioner adhered to his original ruling.

In filing this suit to have the order of the Commissioner reviewed and set aside, tlie companies alleged that the compilation was made upon an erroneous ¡basis, for the following reasons: Stock fire insurance policies are written for terms from less than a year aiid up to five years, and the full premium for the entire period is collected in advance. The policy used in the State of Arkansas is the standard form, and provides that, for a certain sum (the premium for the entire period), the company insures the insured for a given period. The policy may be canceled at any time at the request of the insured, or by the company by giving five days’ notice. Policies must be carried by the company for the entire period before the full premium is earned, or, if canceled, the unearned portion thereof must be returned to the policy-holder. At the end of the five-year period involved in the compilation a very considerable part of the premiums received by the company was still unearned. To arrive at a correct result for a given period to determine the actual underwriting profit requires the charge against the companies of premiums earned, instead of premiums received.

The national organization of fire insurance commissioners, many years ago, adopted a standard “annual statement” for fire insurance comapnies, which form has been in use in Arkansas for more than ten years. It is insisted that the structure of this statement shows that the 'Commissioner proceeded upon the wrong basis in arriving at the underwriting profit.

The finding of the Commissioner now under review is the second finding made by him under the requirements of the act of 1919 set out above. His first finding covered the five-year period ending December 31, 1919, and in making up this finding the Commissioner employed both methods, but ordered no reduction in the rate, because, from April 1, 1918, to September 1, 1919, the companies 'had imposed a surcharge of 10 per cent, to cover the extra hazard supposed to result from the state of war then existing, and as this surcharge has been annulled the Commissioner ordered no reduction in insurance rates. As the surcharge is now no longer imposed, nothing further will be said about it.

The Commissioner discovered, in compiling his first report, that the basis adopted made quite a difference in the result obtained, lie designates the basis which he adopted as the “paid-for basis,” and under it he has charged the companies with the actual premiums received during the five-year period and has credited them with actual losses paid and actual expenses paid for the five-year period. The companies contend that they should be charged with the premiums earned and credited with losses incurred and expenses incurred, and this method is designated by the witnesses as the premium earned 'basis.

The ■Commissioner testified that, upon discovering that there was a considerable difference in the results reached in the two methods, he submitted the question, as to the proper method to employ in ascertaining underwriting profits, to a meeting of rate experts representing the insurance departments of Kentucky, Oklahoma, Missouri, Minnesota, and Arkansas, held in St. Louis, Mis souri, on November 7 and 8, 1919, and that these gentlemen made the following report: “That premiums received and losses and expenses actually paid should be the basis on which to predicate for determining’ the factors on which to base underwriting profit. In this way calculations will be based on actual facts, whereas, on earned premiums and incurred losses results will flow which will effect a continuance of the very thing it is desired to avoid, namely, obtaining figures 'based upon estimates and assumed amounts. That income ami excess profits taxes are not proper items of expense.” He further testified that he adopted the paid-for basis because it was the easiest to calculate and apparently obtained the best results for the policy-holder, and that he could not make up his report on the premium-earned basis from the records in his office. Another reason assigned by him for the conclusion reached was that, if the companies were allowed credit for losses incurred, they might carry forward, from year to year, these incurred losses until they were, in fact, paid, and might, as the result of that action, obtain credit more than once for the same items.

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Bluebook (online)
237 S.W. 716, 151 Ark. 519, 1922 Ark. LEXIS 266, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bullion-v-aetna-insurance-ark-1922.