National Automobile Underwriters Ass'n v. Day

109 N.E.2d 630, 348 Ill. App. 554
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 12, 1953
DocketGen. 9,831
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 109 N.E.2d 630 (National Automobile Underwriters Ass'n v. Day) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Automobile Underwriters Ass'n v. Day, 109 N.E.2d 630, 348 Ill. App. 554 (Ill. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

Mr. Justice O’Connor

delivered the opinion of the court.

Pursuant to the provisions of the Illinois Insurance Code (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1951, chap. 73, sec. 613 [par. 613, sec. 1] et seq.) [Jones Ill. Stats. Ann. 66.676 et seq.] J. Edward Day, as Director of Insurance of the State of Illinois, hereinafter called the appellant, held certain hearings concerning fleet rates. The hearings culminated in an order dated February 9, 1951, which is as follows:

“ORDER
1. Disapproving, effective april 1, 1951, all motor VEHICLE ‘fleet POLICY’ RATE FILINGS OF RESPONDENTS ; AND
2. Promulgating a rule defining ‘fleet policy’ as A GUIDE FOR FUTURE FILINGS.

The above entitled matter coming on for consideration after a Hearing held in the office of the Director of Insurance, herein referred to as the Director, State House, Springfield, Illinois, on the 28th day of December, 1950, and continued on the 26th day of January, 1951, for the purpose of reviewing all rate filings which provide for or concern ‘fleet policies’ of motor vehicle insurance, the undersigned, J. Edward Day, Director of Insurance, State of Illinois having acted as Hearing Officer at said Hearing and having carefully heard, read and considered the testimony, evidence, and exhibits thereto adduced at said Hearing, and being fully informed, does Find :

FINDINGS.

1. That all companies and rating organizations concerned, hereinafter referred to as Respondents, were given due notice of a hearing to be held on the 28th day of December, 1950; that certain of said Respondents were present or represented at the hearing by counsel; and that the Director has jurisdiction of all the Respondents so notified and of the subject matter of the hearing;

2. That said hearing was held pursuant to Section 458 (3) of Article XXTX of the Illinois Insurance Code, for the purpose of reviewing all rate filings which provide for or concern ‘fleet policies’ of motor vehicle insurance, as defined in Section 456 (3) of said Code;

3. That the term ‘fleet policy’ is defined in Section 456 (3) of Article XXIX of the Code as follows:

‘The term “fleet policy” as used in this subsection (3) shall mean an insurance risk, under any form of motor vehicle insurance, of five or more motor vehicles, all owned by one insured or all under one general management and used principally for business purposes.’

4. That on May 14, 1940, the following bulletin designated AR-40, was promulgated by the then Director of Insurance:

‘There has been some misunderstanding on the part of companies as to the intent of Section 419 of Article XXVI * of the Illinois Insurance Code wherein automobile fleets are defined.

‘The intent of the definition reading—

“an insurance risk of five or more motor vehicles all owned by one insured, or all under one general management ... ”, is to enable corporations and their subsidiaries to insure fleets of automobiles under one policy but it was not the intent that groups of individually owned vehicles under some form of common management could be insured as an automobile fleet. Companies will, therefore, understand that only motor vehicles under one common ownership, as explained above, may be insured under fleet policies.’

This rule, which has continued in effect since that date, by its terms undertook to prohibit use of a fleet policy in any common management situation unless all vehicles involved were under one ownership.

5. That, in accordance with such bulletin, fleet rating plans on file with the Department on behalf of most of the Respondents define ‘fleet’ to require both one ownership and common management. The rate filing of one of the Respondents, which was represented at the hearing, Allstate Insurance Company, contains the following definition of fleet:

‘Fleet is defined as follows:
a. Five or more automobiles,
b. under one ownership, and
c. under one direct operating management.
Automobiles rented or leased by the named insured and operated to all intent and purposes as owned automobiles shall be considered as owned automobiles. ’

6. That in an informal hearing before the Director on November 2,1950, requested by Greyvan Lines, Inc., a motor carrier, and at which representatives of one of the Respondents, National Automobile Underwriters Association, were present, it was contended by Greyvan that the practice of granting fleet rates on motor vehicles only where there is common ownership is unfairly discriminatory in situations where motor vehicles are not under one ownership but are, in fact, under one general management.

7. That at a second informal hearing on the same matter, held November 28, 1950, a transcript of which has, by stipulation, been made a part of this record, the Director submitted a proposed draft rule defining ‘fleet policy’ in terms of the full statutory definition as given in Section 456 (3) of the Code;

8. That the present hearing — Number 1015 — was called for the purpose of reviewing all rate filings involving fleet policies; of hearing all arguments showing why such filings, insofar as they do not provide for common management situations, should not be disapproved as unfairly discriminatory; and for the purpose of considering a proposed draft rule in which ‘fleet policy’ is interpreted in terms of its full statutory definition;

9. That Respondents defended the single ownership rule now in effect with the majority of companies and rating organizations as being:

(a) uniform throughout the different States;
(b) time-tested;
(c) sound from an insurance standpoint and in conformity with the rule promulgated by the Department of Insurance on May 14, 1940; and
(d) the best way to prevent ‘fictitious fleets.’

10. That Respondents, in opposition to the proposed draft rule, maintained:

(a) That, by destroying the uniformity now allegedly in effect in the various states, grave problems in statistical record keeping and administration would be created;
(b) That the rule would be difficult to apply because of ambiguous and vague phrases which would necessitate legal interpretations and active policing methods; and
(c) That it would ‘open the door’ to ‘fictitious fleets. ’

OPINION

The rule which the Department has proposed is a minimum rule under the language of the statute.

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109 N.E.2d 630, 348 Ill. App. 554, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-automobile-underwriters-assn-v-day-illappct-1953.