Continental Insurance Co. v. Fishback

282 P. 44, 154 Wash. 269, 1929 Wash. LEXIS 730
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 12, 1929
DocketNo. 21864. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 282 P. 44 (Continental Insurance Co. v. Fishback) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Continental Insurance Co. v. Fishback, 282 P. 44, 154 Wash. 269, 1929 Wash. LEXIS 730 (Wash. 1929).

Opinion

Parker, J.

The plaintiff insurance company commenced this action in the superior court for Thurston county seeking a judgment setting aside an order of the defendant Fishback, as insurance commissioner of the state of Washington, reading as follows:

*271 “July 21, 1928
“Continental Insurance Company,
“New York, N. Y.,
“Gentlemen: "Whereas it is my opinion that the Continental Insurance Company has precipitated and aided in precipitating and conducting a rate war and in so doing has written and is writing fire insurance in the state of Washington at a rate of premium below that which is deemed proper and adequate to cover the classes of risks insured.
“Now, therefore, by authority in me vested by Section 7157, Remington’s Compiled Statutes, it is ordered that your license to do business in the state of Washington and those of your agents be, and the same are, hereby suspended until such time as your company elects to issue policies at a proper and adequate rate of premium.
“Dated at Olympia, Washington, this twenty-first day of July, 1928. H. O. Fishback,
“Insurance Commissioner.”

The cause, being of equitable cognizance, proceeded to trial in the superior court sitting without a jury, resulting in a judgment setting aside the order of the commissioner, from which judgment the commissioner has appealed to this court.

The ground upon which the trial court set aside the order of the commissioner, stated in its judgment, is:

“. . . that the statute under which the commissioner acted in suspending the license of plaintiff herein, being Rem. Comp. Stat., § 7157, is unconstitutional.”

Manifestly, the trial court so ruled upon the theory that the statute violates the constitutional due process of law and equal privilege and immunity guaranties, in that it vests arbitrary power in the commissioner to suspend a license of an insurance company because it prescribed no sufficient standard of cause or causes as ground for such suspension; and in that it makes no provision for any notice to the licensee affording it op *272 portunity of being heard before the commissioner prior to suspension of the license by the commissioner.

The provisions of onr insurance code, referring to sections of Remington’s Compiled Statutes, which it seems necessary for us to here notice, are the following:

“§7039. If the commissioner is of the opinion upon examination or other evidence that any insurance company is in an unsound condition, or that it has failed to comply with the law or with the provisions of its charter or articles of incorporation or association, or that its condition is such as to render its proceedings hazardous to the public or to its policyholders, or that its actual assets exclusive of its capital are less than its liabilities, or if its trustees, directors, officers, or agents refuse to submit to examination or to produce its books, records, accounts, and papers in its or their possession or control relating to its business or affairs, for examination and inspection of the commissioner, his deputy or examiner, when required, or shall refuse to perform any legal obligation relative to such examination, the commissioner shall revoke or suspend all certificates of authority and licenses granted to such insurance company, its officers or agents, and shall cause notice thereof to be given to such company and to each agent of such company in this state, and no new business shall thereafter be done by such company or for such company by its agents, in this state, while such revocation, suspension, or disability continues, nor until its authority to do business is restored by the commissioner.
“Unless ground for revocation or suspension relates only to the financial condition or soundness of the company or to the deficiency in its assets, the commissioner shall notify such company not less than ten days before revoking its authority to do business in this state; and he shall specify in such notice the particulars of the alleged violation of law or of its charter or articles of incorporation or association, or grounds for revocation. The superior court, upon petition of such company, brought within twenty days, shall sum *273 marily hear and determine the question whether such violation has been committed, or whether it is solvent or in an unsound condition or has exceeded its powers or has failed to comply with any provisions of the law or of its charter or articles of incorporation or association, or that its condition is such as to render its further proceedings hazardous to the public and to its policy holders, and the court upon such hearing and determination shall make and enter such order or decree as may be proper in the premises.”
“§7118. Every insurance company, excepting a marine insurance company, before it shall receive a license to transact the business of making insurance as an insurer in this state, must file in the office of the insurance commissioner its rating schedules. Every such company and its agents shall observe its rating schedules and shall not deviate therefrom when making insurance until amended or corrected rating schedules shall have been filed in the office of the insurance commissioner.
“Any company which shall make fire insurance in this state according to the advisory rates, or stated deviation or deviations therefrom, furnished by a rating bureau as provided in the following section, -may receive a license to transact the business of making fire insurance in this state, without filing rating schedules, by filing written notice in the office of the insurance commissioner of its adoption of such advisory rates, stating the deviation or deviations therefrom, if any, at which it will make insurance, which deviation or deviations, if any, shall be uniformly applied to all purchasers of insurance from any such company in this state, in the class or classes to which such deviation or deviations apply.”

Section 7119 provides for the organization of and rendering service by rating bureaus.

“§7157. Any company which precipitates, or aids in precipitating or conducting a rate war and by so doing writes or issues a policy of insurance at a less rate than permitted under their schedules filed with the commissioner, or below the rate deemed by him to be proper and adequate to cover the class of risk in *274 sured, shall have its license, and those of its agents, to do business in this state, suspended until such time as the commissioner is satisfied that it is charging a proper rate of premium.”

This last quoted section, it will be noticed, is the statutory provision which the trial court held to be unconstitutional.

Apparently, the trial judge assumed that § 7157 was to be looked to alone for an answer to the question of whether or not respondent insurance company’s constitutional rights would be violated by the suspension order of the commissioner.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
282 P. 44, 154 Wash. 269, 1929 Wash. LEXIS 730, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/continental-insurance-co-v-fishback-wash-1929.