Metropolitan Life Insurance v. Durkin

195 Misc. 1040, 91 N.Y.S.2d 26, 1949 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2525
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 1, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 195 Misc. 1040 (Metropolitan Life Insurance v. Durkin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Metropolitan Life Insurance v. Durkin, 195 Misc. 1040, 91 N.Y.S.2d 26, 1949 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2525 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1949).

Opinion

Valente, J.

The plaintiff Metropolitan Life Insurance Company has brought this action for a judgment declaring that sections 213 and 213-a of the Insurance Law of this State prohibit the payment of certain retroactive increases in wages to the company’s agents and for a judgment construing these sections of the law.

The action has been brought as a result of the determination of the United States Circuit Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, reversing the District Court for the Southern District of New York, in the case entitled Paris v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. (167 F. 2d 834, certiorari denied 335 U. S. 827). The Paris case involves substantially the same parties as the present action and was brought by the agents- to compel the payment of the wages in question, the company having deposited in an escrow fund an amount sufficient to cover the disputed payments.

The District Court, after a trial (Mandeleaum, J.) gave judgment for the plaintiffs, holding that the sections of the Insurance Law did not apply to collective bargaining situations and that, furthermore, the operation of these sections was superseded by the order of the National War Labor Board which awarded the increases effective as of the date of certification of the dispute to it. Upon appeal, the Circuit Court of Appeals, in an opinion by Hand, J., unanimously reversed the judgment of the District Court on the ground that the State question, i.e., the construction of sections 213 and 213-a of the New York Insurance Law, should be determined by the New York State Courts, and that until construction by the State [1042]*1042courts, there was no need to consider any of the Federal questions presented. Accordingly, the Circuit Court remanded the case to the District Court, with directions to retain jurisdiction pending the decision of the State question by the New York courts. A petition for a rehearing having been denied, a petition for certiorari was filed in the Supreme Court of the United States and it, too, was denied.

Subsequently, actions were commenced in this court by some of the individual agents for personal judgments against the company for their share of the increased compensation, but the latter, to comply with the direction of the Circuit Court of Appeals, started the present law suit and the individual actions were stayed by order of this court on the ground that the present case is more appropriate for testing the question of which the parties were directed to obtain a solution.

This litigation as well as its predecessor in the Federal courts constitutes in reality the latest battle in a labor conflict which has been raging since about September, 1942, between the plaintiff insurance company and the agents in its employ. The defendant, Local Union 30, was first certified as the bargaining representative of the agents in the metropolitan area in 1938 (Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Labor Rel. Bd., 280 N. Y. 194), and subsequently the defendant United Office and Professional Workers of America was certified as representing the agents outside of New York.

The dispute out of which this case arises revolved principally around the questions of compensation and “ union security ” and, the parties being unable to compose their differences and enter into a collective bargaining agreement, it was taken first to the Federal conciliator, and oil October 24,1942, was certified by the Secretary of Labor to the National War Labor Board. This board had been created by executive order of the President of the United States and had been given jurisdiction over all controversies likely to affect war production (Executive Order No. 9017; 7 Federal Register 237) following the conference held by the President with representatives of management and labor on December 17,1941, at which labor had given its no-strike ” pledge, the purpose of the War Labor Board being to afford a practical means of adjusting labor disputes in wartime. Later on, by act of June 25,1943 (War Labor Disputes Act-; U. S. Code, tit. 50, Appendix, § 1501, et seq.), Congress gave statutory approval to the board.

Hearings in the dispute between the plaintiff and Local 30 were held before the Regional War Labor Board and during [1043]*1043the progress of the hearings, the parties settled all differences except the question of compensation and a collective bargaining agreement was concluded on May 7, 1943, which recited that the question of compensation was “ being submitted to the War Labor Board ”. Subsequently the regional board awarded to the Local 30 agents an increase in compensation of $2.85 a week which was made retroactive to October 24, 1942, the date of certification to the board.

An appeal was taken to the National War Labor Board and similar disputes, limited to the question of compensation, which had arisen between the company and the United Office and Professional Workers involving agents in other States were also certified to the National War Labor Board. The board, after further hearings, on September 18, 1944, issued its order adopting the ruling of the regional board insofar as Local 30 was concerned and prescribing similar prospective increases in the other disputes making them retroactive to the date of certification.

Prior to the order of the National board the company and the union stipulated to submit to judicial decision the question-of whether the New York statutes permitted the giving of retroactive effect to any increases which the board might order, and the company agreed to enter into collective bargaining agreements and to pay prospectively any increases ordered by the War Labor Board.

Following the award by the board collective bargaining agreements were entered into covering the prospective payments and the plaintiff deposited in escrow funds sufficient to meet the retroactive payments in the event such payments were held not to be barred by the sections of the Insurance Law of this State.

The pertinent portion of section 213 of the Insurance Law provides as follows: “No such company * * * shall pay or allow to any agent * * * for procuring an application of or a life insurance policy, for collecting any premium thereon or for any other service the form and connection therewith any compensation greater than that which has been determined by agreement made in advance of the payment of the premium * * ® ”. (Subd. 7.) Section 213-a refers to industrial life insurance and contains substantially identical language with respect to the payment for services in procuring an application for insurance, compensation “ greater than that which has been determined by agreement made in advance of the rendering of such service.” (Subd. 5.)

[1044]*1044These provisions entitled in the law Limitations of Expenses ” or their equivalent, comprising section 97 of the older law, were originally enacted in 1906 (L. 1906, ch. 326), as part of a comprehensive legislative code regulating insurance companies in this State and as the result of an exhaustive investigation and report of a joint committee of the Legislature known as the Armstrong Committee, appointed for the purpose. The investigation disclosed, among other things, improper and discriminatory payments to agents who were related to officers and directors of the companies, as well as payments of unreasonable bonuses to certain agents dependent upon the volume of business obtained by them.

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Metropolitan Life Insurance v. Durkin
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Bluebook (online)
195 Misc. 1040, 91 N.Y.S.2d 26, 1949 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2525, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metropolitan-life-insurance-v-durkin-nysupct-1949.