Rockland Mutual Insurance v. Commissioner of Insurance

277 N.E.2d 493, 360 Mass. 667, 1971 Mass. LEXIS 764
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedDecember 28, 1971
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 277 N.E.2d 493 (Rockland Mutual Insurance v. Commissioner of Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rockland Mutual Insurance v. Commissioner of Insurance, 277 N.E.2d 493, 360 Mass. 667, 1971 Mass. LEXIS 764 (Mass. 1971).

Opinion

Cutter, J.

The petitioner (Rockland.) seeks a writ of mandamus to compel the commissioner to amend Rock-land’s certificate of authority (see G. L. c. 175, § 32, as amended through St. 1941, c. 342, § 1; see fn. 3, infra) or, in the alternative, to acknowledge by a published ruling that Rockland is authorized (without such an amendment) to transact certain lines of insurance business. See G. L. c. 175, § 113C, as amended through St. 1971, c. 520, § 1.

*668 The pleadings and a stipulation establish the following facts. Rockland is a mutual insurance company incorporated in Massachusetts. It is presently licensed to transact business under G. L. c. 175, § 47, clauses First, Second (b), and Eighth, and also under §§ 54E and 54F. Rockland has formally applied to the commissioner to amend its certificate to include the coverages mentioned in c. 175, § 54C, as amended (see fn. 2, infra). The commissioner denied Rockland’s application and refused to amend its previously held certificate. Rockland presently satisfies the financial requirements to transact business under §54C.

Rockland asserts (and we assume) that in recent years a major part of its business has been automobile property damage insurance (see c. 175, § 47, Second [b]) and that the enactment of the so-called “no fault property damage law” (St. 1971, c. 978, as affected by St. 1971, c. 1079) will result in the “virtual extinction” of this part of Rockland’s business “because it includes the property damage coverage within £or as closely related toj the compulsory bodily injury coverages issued by insurance companies” and referred to in c. 175, §§ 54C, 113A, and 113B. Rockland in its brief concedes that its “present, certificate . . . does not expressly include within its wording the authority to issue compulsory (bodily injury) motor vehicle liability insurance under” § 54C.

A Superior. Court judge ruled on December 14, 1971, that § 54C merely authorizes an insurance company (to the extent provided in § 54C) to conduct specified lines of insurance business without having to amend its articles of organization or purpose clause so as to include such lines, if they had not previously been so included. He referred (a) to c. 175, § 47, as setting forth the “types of insurance business for which a company may be incorporated,” 1 and *669 (b) to § 54, which provides that no domestic mutual company “shall transact any other kind of business than . . . is specified in its . . . agreement of association,” with specified statutory exceptions, which the judge regarded as comparable to § 54C. 2 He ruled that c. 175, § 32, 3 as amended, requires a company to obtain from the commissioner “an amended certificate . . . [under § 32] each time . . . [its] business is expanded to include another type of coverage.” He entered an order that the petition be dismissed. Rockland appealed. 4

1. The principal issue is the proper interpretation of c. 175, § 32 (fn. 3) and § 54C (fn. 2) as applied to Rockland. We proceed on the premise that Rockland is a mutual company which (a) is authorized to write property damage insurance by its existing certificate but not authorized (by any amendment to its certificate) to write compulsory *670 bodily injury policies; (b) meets the policyholders' surplus requirements of $600,000 contained in § 54C; and (c) is considered by the commissioner, in his discretion, to be one which should not be permitted (in “the public interest”) to write bodily injury insurance under § 54C.

Chapter 175, § 54, requires that a domestic mutual company shall be confined to the lines of business specified in its agreement of association, but that in addition it may also carry on certain further lines in circumstances described in later subdivisions of § 54. Section 51 contains somewhat similar provisions with respect to the lines of business of stock companies. Sections 54A to 54F (which relate at least to all domestic companies ¡[whether stock or mutual] meeting the requirements of these sections, respectively) immediately follow § 54. We are of opinion that they are intended to describe additional lines of insurance which the specified stock (see § 51) and mutual (§ 54) companies may write without amendment of their corporate purposes and articles of association. At least as to §§ 54B, 54C, and 54D, authority for these additional powers was introduced in the Commonwealth by St. 1945, c. 384, § 2. This statute was a consequence of the then commissioner's recommendation that there be an expansion of the lines of insurance that certain companies were empowered to write by adopting a program of multiple line underwriting to the extent described in the recommendations. See 1945 House Doc. No. 94, pp. 3-7; 1945 House Bill No. 96. The placement of the new sections in c. 175 immediately after §§51 and 54, is strong indication that they were describing merely additional lines authorized for certain domestic stock and mutual companies, notwithstanding more limited purposes stated in their articles of association.

2. A further question relates to § 32 (see fn. 3, supra). Rockland contends that § 32 has application only to the initial organization of domestic companies. There is much language in the section that points to this conclusion. The first sentence of § 32 and the proviso in the second sen *671 tenee of the section, however, if read by themselves, could reasonably be viewed as requiring a domestic company, undertaking to write new lines of insurance, to secure an amendment of its certificate to include the new lines. The intervening portions of § 32 make such a reading difficult. For example, there is little or no basis for applying to a company already in operation (when it seeks an amendment of its certificate) the provision calling for the commissioner to determine “that the company is without liabilities except” for organization expenses and (for some companies) its liabilities to stockholders for amounts paid in for shares.

Section 32 has not been amended since 1941, four years prior to the enactment of § 54C, and the introduction of multiple line underwriting in 1945. The legislative history of St. 1945, c. 384, § 2, gives slight indication of any legislative intention to affect § 32 or to apply it so as to require amendment of an outstanding certificate under that section when a company holding such a certificate proposes to write policies in a new line of business permitted under the 1945 “multiple line” legislation. The commissioner’s recommendation for the 1945 legislation (1945 House Doc. No. 94, p. 3) starts out (emphasis supplied), “We believe that the privilege of multiple line underwriting, so called, should be afforded companies now in existence as they may see fit to take advantage of the privilege.” There is no mention of the necessity of having a company’s outstanding certificate amended... The recommendations quote (pp. 4-6) the report of an insurance industry committee appointed to report to the National Association of Insurance Commissioners suggesting many of the provisions of § 54C (see p.

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Bluebook (online)
277 N.E.2d 493, 360 Mass. 667, 1971 Mass. LEXIS 764, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rockland-mutual-insurance-v-commissioner-of-insurance-mass-1971.