Louisiana Health Service v. Tarver

635 So. 2d 1090, 1994 WL 128718
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 12, 1994
Docket93-C-2449
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 635 So. 2d 1090 (Louisiana Health Service v. Tarver) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Louisiana Health Service v. Tarver, 635 So. 2d 1090, 1994 WL 128718 (La. 1994).

Opinion

635 So.2d 1090 (1994)

LOUISIANA HEALTH SERVICE AND INDEMNITY COMPANY d/b/a Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Louisiana,
v.
Leon R. TARVER, II, Secretary, Department of Revenue and Taxation.

No. 93-C-2449.

Supreme Court of Louisiana.

April 11, 1994.
Concurring Opinion April 12, 1994.
Rehearing Denied May 12, 1994.

*1091 David G. Radlauer, Edward H. Bergin, Jones, Walker, Waechter, Poitenvent, Carrere & Denegre, for applicant.

Cheryl L. Duvielh, Marlon V. Harrison, for respondent.

Mary E. Arceneaux, for Louisiana Bankers Assn. (Amicus Curiae).

Concurring Opinion by Justice Ortique April 12, 1994.

CHARLES A. MARVIN, Justice Ad Hoc.[*]

In this action under the Uniform Disposition of Unclaimed Property Act, La.R.S. 9:151 et seq., Act 829 of 1986, and after review on plaintiff's application, we affirm the judgment that rejected the demands of plaintiff, hereafter referred to simply as Blue Cross, to obtain a refund of money remitted, as "presumed abandoned property," to the defendant, State Department of Revenue, as the 1986 law requires. 622 So.2d 277

The amount in dispute is the total of health and hospitalization insurance obligations or benefits for which Blue Cross wrote checks to some of its insureds during a period of time after July 10, 1981. None of the checks were presented for payment. On April 10, 1990, Blue Cross initially reported and paid $186,000 under protest in accord with the statute to the defendant, hereafter called the State. Blue Cross instituted its action, seeking declaratory relief and a refund on May 25, 1990. Blue Cross remitted additional amounts under protest during the pendency of the action and eventually sought a total refund of almost $600,000. In accord with the stipulation of the litigants and La.R.S. 9:170(G), any further payments made by Blue Cross under protest also shall be governed by the ruling in this appeal.

The statute mentions two time periods pertinent to this action. One is a prerequisite for presuming intangible personal property abandoned. If such property is "held, issued, or owing in the ordinary course of a holder's business and has remained unclaimed by the owner for more than five years after it became payable or distributable, [that property] is presumed abandoned." § 153. The second is the liberative prescription applicable to actions by the State to enforce the statute: "No action or proceeding may be commenced by the [State] with respect to any duty of a holder [to report and to pay or deliver abandoned intangible personal property] under this Chapter more than ten years after the duty arose." § 180 B.

The issue is whether the liberative prescription, which would bar an action by the insured-payee on each unpresented check that Blue Cross issued, would also apply, either to discharge, extinguish or peremptorily bar the statutorily created cause of action of the State to enforce the duty of Blue Cross to report and pay or deliver unclaimed or presumed abandoned property to the State. See C.C. Art. 3498. Compare La. R.S. 10:3-118(c).

Blue Cross acknowledges that, as a health and hospitalization insurer as defined in *1092 § 152, it is a "holder" obligated to report and to pay or deliver to the State all intangible personal property that was held, issued, or owing by it in the ordinary course of its business and has remained unclaimed by the "owner" of that intangible personal property for more than five years after it became payable. § 153.

THE CONTENTIONS

Louisiana Health Service & Indemnity Co. v. McNamara, 561 So.2d 712 (La.1990), resolved a factually similar dispute between the litigants arising out of unpresented or uncashed checks written to its insureds before July 10, 1981. Relying on McNamara, Blue Cross specifically contends that the payment or delivery it made to the State was of a thing "not due" and that its conventional obligation to an insured-payee, as well as its statutory obligation to the State under La. R.S. 9:151 et seq., was extinguished by the five-year liberative prescription. In the alternative, Blue Cross contends that if a refund is not granted, the State shall have unconstitutionally taken its money.

Blue Cross reasons that the unclaimed property that it is required to "deliver" as presumed abandoned property is not its "money" but simply its "obligation" on the checks that it once "owed" directly to the respective payees and, "derivatively," to the State. This obligation, whether to the insured-payee or to the State, Blue Cross asserts, is "extinguished" by the five-year liberative prescription. Blue Cross's contention, as we less astutely state it, is that the State can take the extinguished obligation that it once owed, but not the money which it now "owns."

Blue Cross suggests that the purpose and effect of Act 829 of 1986 was simply to impose "new [reporting] duties" on the holder of unclaimed or abandoned property that did not exist under the 1972 law. According to Blue Cross, after, but not before, the 1986 law, an insurer in its position cannot avoid "the [statutory] reporting and delivery requirements on the ground that the applicable prescriptive period may have passed, [thereby affording the State] ... the opportunity to safeguard the rights of the apparent owner and its own custodial rights." We do not so narrowly construe the statute. We shall answer Blue Cross's contentions.

HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE

Our Uniform Disposition of Unclaimed Property Act derives from the Uniform Law proposed initially in 1954 and revised in 1966 and again in 1981. Most states have adopted the law in all respects. Some have adopted the law in part. See Table in LSA-R.S. 9:151 et seq., Vol. 8. Act 829 of 1986 adopts the 1981 revision.

Most states adopting the modern custodial escheat or uniform law do so as custodial states. One of two important rationales common to abandoned property legislation is the use of the uniform law to raise revenue to benefit all citizens of the state. Another is that the state becomes the safe custodian of the property for the owner and insures its ability to pay by its taxing power. The acceptable major argument for modern escheat is that unclaimed property should benefit the citizenry rather than remain with the debtor or holder, thus preventing a windfall to the holder and returning the unclaimed property to the stream of commerce. See Chapter 1, Unclaimed Property Law and Reporting Forms, D. Epstein, A. McThenia & C. Forslund, Vol. 1. Courts have rejected the argument that an insurer such as Blue Cross, Being a "non-profit" corporation, should be allowed to retain the unclaimed funds to lower the cost of insurance to its membership. Louisiana Hospital Service, Inc. v. Collector of Rev., 293 So.2d 663 (La. App. 1st Cir.1974).

The "uniform" law applied in McNamara (Act 146 of 1972, as amended) was not truly a "uniform" law or as comprehensive as Act 829 of 1986. Indeed, the 1972 law provided Blue Cross could assert against the State "any period of prescription" that was applicable "with respect to any money or property presumed abandoned." Former La.R.S. *1093 9:168 in part. Former § 168 was an "otherwise express provision" of law that is contemplated by LSA-Const. Art. 12, § 13:

Prescription shall not run against the state in any civil matter, unless otherwise provided ... expressly by law.

Former § 168 of the 1972 law was contrary to § 16 of the uniform acts of 1954 and 1966 and to § 180A in the 1986 comprehensive revision of the Louisiana law.

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635 So. 2d 1090, 1994 WL 128718, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisiana-health-service-v-tarver-la-1994.