James M. King & Associates, Inc. v. G.D. Van Wagenen Co.

717 F. Supp. 667, 1989 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7520, 1989 WL 73490
CourtDistrict Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedJuly 5, 1989
DocketCiv. 4-86-461
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 717 F. Supp. 667 (James M. King & Associates, Inc. v. G.D. Van Wagenen Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
James M. King & Associates, Inc. v. G.D. Van Wagenen Co., 717 F. Supp. 667, 1989 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7520, 1989 WL 73490 (mnd 1989).

Opinion

ORDER

DOTY, District Judge.

This action arises out of alleged wrongful actions taken by defendants to prevent plaintiff from selling Collateral Protection Insurance 1 (hereinafter “CPI”) and Residual Value Insurance 2 (hereinafter “RVI”), underwritten by Central National Insurance Company of Omaha (hereinafter “Central National”) or Dependable Insurance Company (hereinafter “Dependable”), to banks in Minnesota. This matter is presently before the Court upon defendants’ motion for summary judgment.

Plaintiff James M. King & Associates, Inc. (hereinafter “King Agency”) is a small general insurance agency located in Bloom-ington, Minnesota. Historically, it has had no experience in marketing insurance to financial institutions. In or about November 1982, it responded to an advertisement placed by Action Financial Services, Inc. (hereinafter “Action”) for subagents, and was put in contact with Joseph Taborek. Taborek was an area representative for Action. He had approximately 30 other subagents who had been recruited in the same way. On May 27,1983, King Agency executed a sub-agency agreement with Action authorizing King Agency to market CPI in exchange for a five percent commission. The effective date of the agreement was April 1, 1983.

Defendant Action was and is an insurance agency with principal offices in Los Angeles, California. Action has used Central National as an underwriter for insurance products marketed to financial institutions and has been a managing general agent for Central National. It was Action’s practice in 1982 to enter into sub-agent agreements with certain independent agents and make them area representatives. Some of these agents, such as Tabo-rek, were authorized to use the title “Regional Vice President,” although they were not actually employees or officers of Action. It was also Action's routine practice to place advertisements similar to the advertisement to which the King Agency responded for additional subagents. The subagent’s function was simply to use per *670 sonal contacts in their area to obtain appointments for sales presentations of Action’s insurance products. The actual presentation would be made by the area representative from Action who would be accompanied and introduced by the subagent.

In June, 1988, Action was put up for sale by its then owner, and was acquired by a St. Regis Paper Company subsidiary, Protective Insurance Underwriters. The president of Action thereafter reported to, and was subject to the supervision of, the Marketing Director at Central National. Central National, a small insurance company specializing in the underwriting of insurance products marketed to financial institutions, was, and is, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Drum, which was in turn owned at the time by St. Regis Paper Company. Central National marketed its products through independent managing general insurance agencies such as Action and G.D. Van Wagenen Company (hereafter “Van Wagenen”). Its managing general agencies, including Van Wagenen, in effect operate as branch offices of Central National.

Defendant Van Wagenen was, and is, an established independent insurance agency with principal offices in Minneapolis, Minnesota. It has specialized in marketing insurance products, including CPI, to financial institutions. Van Wagenen in 1982, used Central National as a primary insurance underwriter and has been a managing general agent for Central National. Van Wagenen has operated in fifteen to twenty states, with primary emphasis in Minnesota. In 1984, Van Wagenen began marketing RVI through Central National.

In essence, the relevant dispute is over the legal significance of certain conduct by Central National after acquiring Action in the summer of 1983. At that time, Central National was concerned that its ten to twelve independent managing general agents might view the acquisition of Action by St. Regis as a threat, in that it gave Central National the ability, for the first time, to market CPI directly to financial institutions. Following the acquisition, however, Central National was still dependent on the sales efforts of its independent agents for much of its gross premium volume. Thus, to alleviate possible concerns, and to avoid the loss of business which would result if the independent agents attempted to transfer their Collateral Protection Insurance accounts to the agents’ other underwriters, Central National claims it adopted a policy that Action representatives would not be permitted to solicit the business of any account which was already written through Central National by any of its independent managing general agents. Central National allegedly announced the adoption of that policy to each of its independent managing general agents, assuring each of the independent agents that Action would not be used as a mechanism for acquiring CPI accounts they had already written for Central National.

After the alleged announcement of Central National’s policy, Action’s agents, on two separate occasions, contacted First Bank Systems in Minneapolis, an existing Central National account handled by Van Wagenen, and made proposals to handle CPI for First Bank. First Bank Systems informed Van Wagenen of the contacts and complained to Central National regarding the CPI sales calls as being an apparent violation of Central National’s announced policy. Central National’s marketing director James Twiss, informed Larry Prob-stein, the president of Action, of the complaint and instructed him again that Action representatives should not solicit business already written by Central National through its independent agents.

Subsequently, in April 1984, King Agency’s agreement with Action was amended to authorize King Agency to market Payment Shaver RVI in exchange for a five percent commission. Action marketed Payment Shaver RVI as a sub-agent for National Underwriters, with Dependable Insurance as the underwriter. In May 1984, however, King Agency was informed that its authorization to market Payment Shaver RVI within the State of Minnesota or to First Banks or Norwest Banks, wherever located, was terminated.

*671 DISCUSSION

Plaintiff's principal claim is that defendants have violated § 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1 and Minn.Stat. §§ 325D.51 and 325D.53, subd. 1(3) (1986). Specifically, plaintiff alleges that Van Wag-enen, Central National, Action, and Drum conspired in restraint of interstate commerce by agreeing to restrict the sale of CPI to Minnesota banks by anyone representing Central National through Action, other than Van Wagenen. Plaintiff has made a similar allegation against Van Wag-enen, Central National, Action, Drum, Dependable, and National Underwriters in connection with Payment Shaver RVI. Plaintiff has also alleged several common law causes of action, namely: that Action breached contracts with the King Agency under which Action was allegedly obligated to provide an underwriter for CPI and RVI policies sold by King Agency; that Van Wagenen, Central National, and Drum interfered with the King Agency’s economic relations by inducing Action to breach its CPI and RVI contracts with the King Agency; and that Van Wagenen, Central, Drum, and Action have engaged in unfair methods of competition.

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717 F. Supp. 667, 1989 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7520, 1989 WL 73490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-m-king-associates-inc-v-gd-van-wagenen-co-mnd-1989.