Ray v. United Family Life Ins. Co., Inc.

430 F. Supp. 1353, 1977 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16085
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. North Carolina
DecidedMay 2, 1977
DocketA-75-93
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 430 F. Supp. 1353 (Ray v. United Family Life Ins. Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ray v. United Family Life Ins. Co., Inc., 430 F. Supp. 1353, 1977 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16085 (W.D.N.C. 1977).

Opinion

ORDER

McMILLAN, District Judge.

Jesse Ray, plaintiff, alleges in his complaint that the defendant, United Family Life Insurance Company, Inc., violated North Carolina General Statutes § 75-1.1, and Sections 1 and 2 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1, 2, by attempting to monopolize the burial insurance business in North Carolina and by terminating Ray as agent for defendant on June 24, 1972, because Ray declined to stop selling burial insurance for companies other than United Family.

The defendant moved for dismissal and for summary judgment on all claims, contending that no material issue of fact is in dispute. Defendant has submitted a number of affidavits and documents in support of its motion. In response to the motion, plaintiff relies on two affidavits in addition to his verified complaint.

Plaintiff’s evidence would permit finding facts as follows:

Jesse Ray operates a funeral home in Asheville, North Carolina. In connection with that business, Ray has, since the early 1950’s, sold what is commonly called “burial insurance” or “funeral insurance.” Such insurance is sold in the form of life insurance with the expectation that the proceeds will be used to pay the funeral expenses of the insured.

The sale of burial insurance grew out of the practice of funeral homes during the ’40’s and '50’s to organize local citizens into burial associations, whose income would be used to pay the funeral expenses of members upon their death. North Caro *1355 lina law limited burial associations’ allowable benefit to $200 or less, and when funeral expenses began to exceed $200, private insurance companies started selling supplemental burial insurance through funeral homes in connection with the burial associations of such homes.

In the typical situation, and in Jesse Ray’s situation, burial insurance is sold by an employee of the funeral home (often the owner or a funeral director) who works as an agent of the insurance company. The agent goes door-to-door and sells the insurance, indicating to the customer that it is being provided as a service of the funeral home. The policy amounts are usually small, between $250 and $1,500. The agent collects the premiums monthly from the policyholders or asks the policyholders to mail premiums to the agent’s funeral home.

Agents are paid a salary. The funeral home receives a renewal commission, but the commission is not sufficient to meet the overhead expenses incurred. Instead, the funeral home reaps its reward in the form of funeral business. In the vast majority of cases, the insured’s funeral is serviced by the funeral home that sold the burial insurance. Beneficiaries are not required to use the proceeds for funeral expenses of the insured, but as a practical matter they usually do. Thus the sale of a burial insurance policy, absent a lapse in premium payments, is tantamount to a deferred sale of a funeral.

Burial insurance is sold in the form of life insurance. A burial insurance policy is easily distinguished from a regular life insurance policy, however, because of the generally low policy amounts, the monthly rather than quarterly premiums, the manner of sale and collection of premiums, and the express representations of the agent-salesman to the customer.

United Family, the defendant, recognizes the distinction between the two types of insurance in its corporate organization by having a separate division the sole responsibility of which is burial insurance.

From 1963 or 1964 until 1967, Jesse Ray sold burial insurance for Consolidated Life Insurance, a company in which he owned stock. United Family, the defendant, purchased Consolidated Life in 1967. United Family also acquired Allied Security Life Insurance Company, another burial insurance company, about that time.

From 1967 until 1972, Jesse Ray worked as an agent for United Family, in the manner previously described.

At a meeting with a United Family officer on June 22, 1972, Ray was told that he would have to discontinue his agency agreement with Northwestern Security Life, a competitor of United Family, or risk termination of his relationship with United Family. Ray declined and by letter of June 24, 1972, was terminated as an agent of United Family. As a result, Ray lost renewal commissions on policies he had previously sold and the deferred funeral business the policies generated. Documents offered by plaintiff tend to show that United Family diverted some of Ray’s former insurance clients to competing funeral homes in Ashe-ville two years after Ray was terminated.

Ray submitted the affidavit of Robert L. Smith, who was Administrative Vice President of United Family from 1968 until 1969. Mr. Smith states that it was the intent of United Family to exclude competition completely in the burial insurance industry in North Carolina by (1) acquiring burial insurance divisions of other companies, (2) taking agents away from other burial insurance companies, and (3) threatening to terminate and, in fact, terminating agency agreements with funeral homes which did not abide by certain restrictions such as dealing exclusively with the defendant.

Smith’s affidavit also supplies statistics which show that United Family has come to dominate the market for burial insurance in North Carolina. According to Smith, United Family, in 1975, collected over $6,000,000 in premiums on policies sold through funeral homes as burial insurance. During the same period, United Family’s two principal competitors, Northwestern Securities and Coastal Plains insurance companies, together collected only $1,750,000 in premiums in that market.

*1356 As further evidence of United Family’s substantial market share, Smith states that 300 or more funeral homes are currently selling and servicing its burial insurance policies, compared to the 35 to 50 homes dealing with Northwestern Securities. Coastal Plains has fewer funeral home agencies than Northwestern.

If the above facts are correct, which for these purposes I find them to be, United Family enjoys a commanding share of the market for burial insurance in North Carolina.

THE NORTH CAROLINA STATUTES

North Carolina General Statutes § 75-1.1 provides in relevant part:

“§ 75-1.1 Methods of competition, acts and practices regulated; legislative policy. — (a) Unfair methods of competition and unfair or deceptive acts or practices in the conduct of any trade or commerce are hereby declared unlawful.
“(d) Any party claiming to be exempt from the provisions of this section shall have the burden of proof with respect to such claim. (1969, c. 833.)”

Persons injured by violations of this section are entitled to treble damages. G.S. § 75-16.

United Family contends that plaintiff cannot recover damages under § 75-1.1 because unfair methods of competition perpetrated by persons engaged in the business of insurance are regulated exclusively by the insurance statutes, G.S. §§ 58-54.1 et. seq., which do not provide for civil damage actions.

Under G.S. §§ 58-54.1 et seq.,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
430 F. Supp. 1353, 1977 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16085, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ray-v-united-family-life-ins-co-inc-ncwd-1977.