Gibbs v. United States Guarantee Co.

218 S.W.2d 522, 1949 Tex. App. LEXIS 1607
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 23, 1949
DocketNo. 9769
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 218 S.W.2d 522 (Gibbs v. United States Guarantee Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gibbs v. United States Guarantee Co., 218 S.W.2d 522, 1949 Tex. App. LEXIS 1607 (Tex. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

HUGHES, -Justice.

Appellee, United States Guarantee Company, a corporation authorized to engage in the casualty and bond insurance business in this State, sued J. P. Gibbs, Casualty Insurance Commissioner and member of the Board of Insurance Commissioners of the State of Texas, Marvin Hall, Fire Insurance Commissioner of Texas, George Butler, Life Insurance Commissioner of Texas and Chairman of the Board of Insurance Commissioners of Texas, and Price Daniel, Attorney General of Texas, appellants, in their respective official capacities, for the purpose of obtaining a judgment declaring “that Senate Bill no. 233, Acts 1945, 49th Leg., p. 207, ch. 160 [Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. art. 4698a], does not prohibit the Board of Insurance Commissioners of Texas from approving different rates for different insurers for the same risk or risks on the types of insurance covered by said statute; that said Board is empowered to approve such different rates for different insurers, and is required to approve such rates as filed by any insurer unless it finds that such filing does not meet the requirements of the statute; that the construction placed upon said, statute in Opinion No-. 0-6590 of the Attorney General of Texas is incorrect; and that the bolding contained in said Opinion is erroneous.”

Trial without a jury resulted in a judgment containing the following declarations of law:

“(1) That Senate Bill No. 233, Acts 1945, 49th Leg. p. 207, ch. 160, does not deny to the Board of Insurance Commissioners of Texas the power to approve different rates for fidelity, surety and guaranty bonds for different insurers for the same risk or risks;

“(2) that under said statute said Board is empowered' to approve rates for the plaintiff which are different from the rates approved for other insurers for the same risk or risks, provided that each of such rates conforms to the standards prescribed by said statutes, and particularly by Subdivision 3 of Section 2 thereof;

“(3) that said Board is required to approve rates filed by the plaintiff in the manner required by said statute even though such rates differ from the rates approved for other insurers for the same risk or risks unless the Board finds that the ■rates so filed do not conform to- the standards prescribed by said statute, and partic[524]*524ularly by Subdivision 3 of Section 2 thereof;

“(4) that the requirement in Subdivision 3 of_ Section 2 of said statute that rates shall be ‘non-confiscatory as to any class of ■insurer’ does not authorize or require the Board of Insurance Commissioners to establish a' single or uniform rate for each risk or risks in connection with fidelity, surety and guaranty bonds and to compel all insurers to adhere to such rate;

“(5) and that insofar as Opinion No. 0-6590 of the Attorney General of Texas holds that said statute does not authorize the approval by the Board of different rates for different insurers for the same risk or risks and that said statute would be unconstitutional if construed to authorize such approval, said Opinion No. 0-6590 is incorrect and erroneous.”

Senate Bill 233, supra, appears as Art. 4698a, V.A.C.S., and, generally speaking, authorized control of the business of casualty, fidelity, surety and guarantee insurance by the Board of Insurance Commissioners of Texas.

While the parties are very careful in their choice of words in framing the issue before the court, we have no difficulty in understanding that the Board desires S.B. 233 interpreted so as to permit it t-o prescribe uniform rates for the various kinds of insurance covered by the Act which must be adhered to by all companies who sell such insurance, and that appellee desires a contrary construction.

The controversy, in its practical form, is this: Appellee has had long experience in selling the kinds of insurance covered by S.B. 233. Until 1945 the rates to be charged for such insurance were not regulated by law. After S.B. 233 was enacted the Board fixed rates for all affected insurers to charge which rates were higher than appellee had theretofore charged and were higher than it desired to charge. This seemingly unusual desire is explained by the suggestion that appellee so carefully selects its risks and so efficiently conducts its business that it can afford to sell insurance cheaper than other companies. Of course the ultimate result of this would be that appellee would be in a most favored position to acquire most, if not all, of this type of insurance business.

We are not in the least concerned with the question of whether rates to be charged for these types of insurance should be uniform or competitive. This is a legislative problem., Our only concern is to determine, if we can,'what the Legislature has done in this regard.

Appellee concedes that S.B. 233 is ambiguous and therefore presses upon us matters outside the limits of the Act as bearing upon its proper construction and as evidence of the legislative intent.

S.B. 233 as originally introduced in the Legislature contained this provision:

“The Board shall not approve different rates for risks in a given classification for different insurers or classes of insurers.”
This provision was deleted by an amendment made by the House of Representatives and concurred in by the Senate.
Our attention is also called to a letter written by Hon. W. W. Roark, Chairman of the House Committee on Insurance and author of the amendment which deleted the above provision, to the Attorney General of Texas, in which he stated:
“It was the intent of the author of the amendment and the intent of the Legislature in adopting the amendment herein referred to, that nothing in the act should be construed as preventing the Board from approving different rates for risks in a given classification for different insurers or classes of insurers, or, in other words, that the door to competition should be closed in the making of fidelity and surety bonds in this State.”

Appellants, on the other hand, call our attention to a so-called “Model Bill” which was in existence when S-.B. 233 was passed by the Legislature and which apparently was used by the authors of S.B. 233 as a framework or basis for drafting S.B. 233.

From this it is argued that differences between the Model Bill and S.B. 233 are highly significant and show a legislative ■intent contrary to that expressed by Mr. Roark. It would be very tedious to set out [525]*525all of these differences, such as omissions, additions and alterations and, in our opinion, would serve no useful purpose.

We are of the opinion that no effect can be given to any of the matters referred to above as indicating legislative intent, for the reason that S.B. 233 is by its own terms sufficiently clear to show that uniform, as opposed to competitive, rates were contemplated by the Legislature.

The caption, of S.B. 233 provides, in part, that it is an act “authorizing the control by the Board of Insurance Commissioners of the State of Texas of the business of casualty, fidelity, surety and guaranty insurance; providing for the making and filing and approval or disapproval of rates * *

The emergency clause of this Act pro-rides, in part, that:

“The fact that there is no law enabling the Board of Insurance Commissioners to regulate many of the various lines of casualty, fidelity, surety and guaranty business

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
218 S.W.2d 522, 1949 Tex. App. LEXIS 1607, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gibbs-v-united-states-guarantee-co-texapp-1949.