Reliance Mutual of America, Inc. v. State ex rel. Hunt

1972 OK 22, 499 P.2d 386
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 8, 1972
DocketNo. 43578
StatusPublished

This text of 1972 OK 22 (Reliance Mutual of America, Inc. v. State ex rel. Hunt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reliance Mutual of America, Inc. v. State ex rel. Hunt, 1972 OK 22, 499 P.2d 386 (Okla. 1972).

Opinion

LAVENDER, Justice:

This appeal, by Reliance Mutual of America, Inc., involves a declaratory judgment rendered, on May 5, 1969, in a cause in which it was the plaintiff and the defendant in error, the State of Oklahoma ex [388]*388reí. Joe B. Hunt, Insurance Commissioner, was named as the defendant.

The plaintiff is a domestic mutual insurance corporation. It was incorporated under the provisions of 36 O.S.1951, §§ 371 through 391, and received its first certificate of authority to transact any kind of insurance in Oklahoma, and a renewal thereof, prior to July 1, 1957, which was the effective date of the 1957 Oklahoma Insurance Code. On that date, it held a valid certificate of authority to transact accident and health insurance, expiring on the last day of February, 1958. The pre-code insurance statutes did not require any domestic insurance company to deposit any of its assets with any state officer, board or commission.

As of November 10, 1960, it had been issued renewal certificates of authority, pursuant to the provisions of the code without having to comply with any “deposit” provisions of the code, for the license-years ending on the last days of February, 1959, 1960, and 1961, authorizing it to transact accident and health insurance. “Accident and health insurance” is one of the kinds of insurance authorized under Section 609 of the code (36 O.S.1961, § 609).

On November 10, 1960, the plaintiff was issued a certificate of authority, for the license-year ending on the last day of February, 1961, authorizing it to transact an additional kind of insurance authorized by Section 609 of the code, which would come within the code definition of “vehicle insurance.” At the time of the trial, it had been issued renewal certificates, covering both kinds of insurance, for the license-years ending on the last days of February, 1962 through 1969.

At least since November 10, 1960, a dispute had existed as to whether or not any provisions of the code requiring a minimum amount of surplus funds, or requiring a minimum “deposit” of surplus funds with the State Treasurer, were applicable to the plaintiff. However, because it was thought that, under one of the sections of the code, as amended in 1961, the plaintiff would have until December 31, 1969, within which to meet any such “surplus” and/or “deposit” requirements, the certificates covering both kinds of insurance had been issued without regard to the requirements which the Insurance Commissioner contended were applicable to the plaintiff.

The plaintiff contended, and contends, that, because of apparent omissions, lack of specificity, ambiguities and conflicts in various provisions of the 1957 insurance code, none of the minimum “surplus” or “deposit” requirements of the code were applicable to a domestic mutual insurer which, as in its case, had been incorporated prior to the effective date of the code and was lawfully authorized to transact insurance in Oklahoma when the code became effective.

The Insurance Commissioner contended, and contends (under one of two theories advanced), that the provisions of Section 2112 of the code (appearing as 36 O.S. 1961, § 2112) were, and are, applicable to the plaintiff with respect to certificates of authority issued on and after November 10, 1960. That statute provides:

“A domestic mutual insurer after being authorized to transact one kind of insurance shall be authorized by the Insurance Commissioner to transact such additional kinds of insurance as are authorized under section 609 of article 6 and [sic] upon otherwise qualifying therefor and depositing and thereafter maintaining on deposit with the State Treasurer through the Insurance Commissioner unimpaired surplus funds in amount not less than the amount of capital required of a domestic stock insurer transacting like kinds of insurance, and subject further to the additional surplus requirements of section 611 or article 6 if applicable (expendable additional surplus in amount of one-half or required surplus if it qualifies to transact more than one kind of insurance within first five years).”

In its journal entry of judgment, the trial court held that the provisions of Sec[389]*389tion 2112 were applicable to the plaintiff, and gave the plaintiff until December 31, 1969, to comply therewith.

The trial court did not pass upon the matter of minimum “surplus” requirements or the matter of whether or not the “additional surplus” requirements of Section 611 of the code, mentioned in Section' 2112, were applicable to the plaintiff. The matter of “surplus” requirements, as distinguished from “deposit” of surplus requirements, is not involved herein.

The trial court did not render judgment concerning the amount of “deposit” of surplus required of the plaintiff under Section 2112. That matter is not involved herein. However, because the plaintiff contends that subsection A of Section 610 of the code (36 O.S.1961, § 610) could have no application to it, we note that, if Section 2112 is applicable to the plaintiff, as held by the trial court, the amount of “capital” required of a domestic stock insurer transacting the same kinds of insurance is provided for in subsection A of Section 610 and in Section 612 of the code (36 O.S. 1961, § 612).

Under the record on appeal herein, the only issue presented to this court is whether or not the “deposit” requirements of Section 2112, supra, or any other “deposit” provisions of the code, are applicable to the plaintiff with respect to certificates of authority issued subsequent to December 31, 1969.

Except for the fact that, of necessity, an insurer would have to possess sufficient surplus funds to make, and maintain, any required “deposit,” the matter of “surplus” requirements of the code are not involved herein.-

We note here that, in its brief in this court, the plaintiff does not even mention Section 2112, supra, although, under the plaintiff’s basic premise, that, ever since the effective date of the code — because of the provisions of Section 707 of the code, hereinafter mentioned — it has been authorized to transact only one kind of insurance, to wit, “casualty insurance,” the provisions of Section 2112 would not be applicable to it.

The 1957 Oklahoma Insurance Code, which, as mentioned above, became effective on July 1, 1957, repealed substantially all, if not all, of the then-existing insurance statutes, and did repeal those that had been applicable to the plaintiff.

The code, as amended in 1961, appears as Chapter 1 of Title 36 of the Oklahoma Statutes 1961, using the corresponding article numbers and section numbers. Unless otherwise indicated, article numbers and section numbers mentioned hereinafter, will refer to those article numbers and section numbers of the code and of Title 36 of the Oklahoma Statutes 1961.

Section 609, which is mentioned in Section 2112, provides that (with certain exceptions not involved in this case) an insurer which otherwise qualifies therefor may be authorized to transact any one “kind” or “combination of kinds” of insurance as defined in Article 7. That article defines the following kinds of insurance: Life insurance” (Section 702), “Accident and health insurance” (Section 703), “Property insurance” (Section 704), “Marine insurance” (Section 705), “Vehicle insurance” (Section 706), “Casualty insurance” (Section 707), “Surety insurance” (Section 708), and “Title insurance” (Section 709).

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1972 OK 22, 499 P.2d 386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reliance-mutual-of-america-inc-v-state-ex-rel-hunt-okla-1972.