Michael Holden v. Department of Commerce and Insurance F/K/A Department of Insurance, Financial Institutions and Professional Registration

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 10, 2019
DocketWD82506
StatusPublished

This text of Michael Holden v. Department of Commerce and Insurance F/K/A Department of Insurance, Financial Institutions and Professional Registration (Michael Holden v. Department of Commerce and Insurance F/K/A Department of Insurance, Financial Institutions and Professional Registration) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Michael Holden v. Department of Commerce and Insurance F/K/A Department of Insurance, Financial Institutions and Professional Registration, (Mo. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE MISSOURI COURT OF APPEALS WESTERN DISTRICT MICHAEL HOLDEN, ) Respondent, ) ) v. ) WD82506 ) DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE ) FILED: December 10, 2019 AND INSURANCE f/k/a ) DEPARTMENT OF INSURANCE, ) FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS AND ) PROFESSIONAL ) REGISTRATION, ) Appellant. ) Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cole County The Honorable Jon E. Beetem, Judge Before Division 1: Thomas H. Newton, P.J. and Alok Ahuja and Thomas N. Chapman, JJ. The Director of the Department of Commerce and Insurance (the

“Department”) issued an order refusing to license Michael Holden as a non-resident

title insurance producer.1 Holden petitioned for review of the Department’s decision

by the Administrative Hearing Commission (the “AHC” or “Commission”). After the

AHC upheld the Department’s decision, Holden petitioned the Circuit Court of Cole

County for judicial review. His petition alleged that the licensing proceeding

constituted a “contested case” which was reviewable under § 536.100.2 The circuit

1 The Department was formerly known as the Department of Insurance, Financial Institutions and Professional Registration. 2 Statutory citations refer to the 2016 edition of the Revised Statutes of Missouri, updated through the 2018 Cumulative Supplement. court reviewed the licensing decision based on the record created before the

Commission. Based on that record, and the briefing and oral argument of the

parties, the circuit court found the AHC’s decision was arbitrary and capricious,

unauthorized by law, and violated Holden’s due process rights. The circuit court

remanded the case to the AHC for further proceedings. The Department appeals.

We conclude that the licensing proceeding at issue here is properly

characterized as a non-contested case; it is not subject to judicial review as a

contested case. Because the characterization of the proceeding as contested or non-

contested fundamentally alters the procedures for judicial review in the circuit court

and on appeal, we vacate the circuit court’s judgment, and remand the case to the

circuit court with instructions that it grant Holden leave to amend his petition to

seek review of a non-contested case pursuant to § 536.150.

Factual Background Michael Holden was a licensed Missouri insurance agent from 1990 to

January 1, 2003, when his license was converted to a title insurance producer

license. Holden’s insurance producer license remained active until he cancelled or

surrendered it in 2008.

On May 4, 2009, Holden submitted an application with the Department for a

non-resident title insurance producer license (at that time, Holden was residing in

South Dakota). The Department issued an order refusing Holden a license. The

Department found that Holden’s application had failed to disclose his past

employment as President of Guaranty Land Title Insurance, Inc., and had failed to

disclose three voluntary forfeiture agreements Guaranty entered into when Holden

was employed by Guaranty (two of which he signed as its President). The

Department also found that Holden had violated state law by transacting business

as an insurance producer without a license in 2008 and 2009.

2 Holden appealed the Department’s order concerning his 2009 application to

the AHC. The Commission found that the Department had cause to deny Holden’s

2009 application under § 375.141.1(1) and (2), on the basis that Holden had

previously violated state law, and that he had intentionally provided materially

incorrect, misleading, incomplete, or untrue information in the application. Holden

sought judicial review of the AHC’s decision in the Circuit Court of Cole County,

which affirmed. Holden then unsuccessfully appealed to this Court. Holden v. Dir.

of Dep’t of Ins., Fin. Institutions & Prof’l Registration, No. WD77955, 470 S.W.3d

390 (Mo. App. W.D. Sept. 8, 2015) (mem.).

While Holden’s appeal concerning his 2009 application was pending in this

Court, he submitted a second application to the Department for the same non-

resident title insurance producer license in October 2014. Unlike his 2009

application, Holden’s 2014 application disclosed his previous employment as

President of Guaranty Land Title Insurance from 1990 to 2008, as well as the three

voluntary forfeiture agreements cited by the Department and AHC in denying the

2009 application. The 2014 application also reported information concerning

Holden’s work in the insurance industry since 2009.

Notwithstanding the updated information and additional disclosures in the 2014 application, the Department again refused to issue Holden a non-resident title

insurance producer license. In denying the 2014 application, the Department relied

on the same underlying grounds that supported its earlier license denial: that

Holden had intentionally provided materially incorrect, misleading, incomplete, or

untrue information in the 2009 application; that he had attempted to obtain a

license in 2009 through material misrepresentation or fraud, due to his non-

disclosure of his full employment history and the voluntary forfeiture agreements;

and that he had violated state insurance law by acting as an insurance producer without a license.

3 Holden again sought review by the AHC. The Department filed a motion for

summary decision, arguing that the uncontested facts showed that it had cause to

deny Holden’s 2014 application. Holden responded by arguing that the Department

was required to decide whether to grant or deny the 2014 application based on the

merits of the 2014 application itself, and that the factual findings supporting the

Department’s denial of the 2009 application could not provide cause to deny the

2014 application, at least without consideration of intervening events.

The AHC granted the Department’s motion for summary decision, and found

that the Department had cause to deny Holden’s 2014 application. The AHC

concluded that collateral estoppel applied because the issues raised were the same

as those litigated in connection with Holden’s 2009 application. According to the

Commission, the findings from the 2009 proceeding established that: (1) Holden

had intentionally provided materially incorrect, misleading, incomplete, or untrue

information in his 2009 application by misrepresenting his employment history and

by failing to disclose several voluntary forfeiture agreements; and (2) Holden

violated state insurance law in 2008 and 2009 by acting as an insurance producer

without a license. The AHC concluded that, under these established facts, the

Director had cause to refuse Holden a license under § 375.141.1(1) and (2). Holden filed a petition for judicial review in the Circuit Court of Cole County.

The petition requested review of a contested case pursuant to § 536.100. As is

typical in review proceedings involving contested cases, the circuit court considered

the case on the record developed before the AHC, and took no additional evidence.

The circuit court entered its judgment on December 26, 2018. The judgment found:

The gravamen of [Holden]’s complaint is that the [Department] sought and the AHC sustained a denial of [Holden]’s second application for an Individual Insurance Producer License without consideration of [Holden]’s conduct and potential rehabilitation since the denial of his 2009 application. In that the relevant statutes authorize neither a lifetime ban nor prohibit successive applications, the decision to do so

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Bluebook (online)
Michael Holden v. Department of Commerce and Insurance F/K/A Department of Insurance, Financial Institutions and Professional Registration, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michael-holden-v-department-of-commerce-and-insurance-fka-department-of-moctapp-2019.