Sexton v. Mount Olivet Cemetery Ass'n

720 S.W.2d 129, 1986 Tex. App. LEXIS 9259
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 24, 1986
Docket14579
StatusPublished
Cited by222 cases

This text of 720 S.W.2d 129 (Sexton v. Mount Olivet Cemetery Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sexton v. Mount Olivet Cemetery Ass'n, 720 S.W.2d 129, 1986 Tex. App. LEXIS 9259 (Tex. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

POWERS, Justice.

James L. Sexton, the Banking Commissioner of Texas, appeals from a final judgment rendered by the district court in a suit brought by Mount Olivet Cemetery Association, wherein the Association obtained declaratory and injunctive relief after a *132 non-jury trial. We will reform the judgment of the district court and affirm it as reformed.

THE CONTROVERSY

The Banking Department of Texas is a component of the Finance Commission of Texas and the Commissioner is charged to enforce, through the Department, the provisions of Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 548b (1973 & Supp.1986). See generally, id. at arts. 342-207; 342-101 — 115; 342-201— 211. Article 548b vests in the Department a regulatory power over the business of selling prepaid funeral services and merchandise, a business in which the Association is engaged under a permit issued by the Department. The Association conducts its business according to a plan which was approved by the Department in 1981 after an adjudicative hearing before the Commissioner. No party sued for judicial review of the order and the present case does not involve the issue of whether an agency order may be changed after its affirmance on judicial review.

The controlling issue on appeal is whether the Department has the power to reopen the 1981 administrative proceedings in order to reconsider its previous approval of the Association’s plan — some three years after it had become effective — to determine whether such approval should be modified or rescinded altogether, in light of new evidence, in light of consequences not anticipated in 1981, and, perhaps, in light of changes in administrative policy under a new Commissioner. 1 There is no contention that the Association is conducting its business in violation of any common-law duty, any statute, or any rule or regulation of any administrative authority; and, the parties have stipulated that the Association is conducting its business in accordance with the officially approved plan.

The district court concluded that the 1981 order approving the plan was a final order binding on the Department, and one that may not be modified or rescinded absent a showing by the Department that a material change of circumstances has occurred since 1981; provided, however, any such change may not include issues that might have been raised in the 1981 proceedings but were not. Accordingly, the district court enjoined any administrative proceedings directed at reconsideration of the 1981 order, save on the condition specified. From this judgment the Commissioner appeals raising various assignments of error, all of which depend ultimately on the single issue of whether the Department had jurisdiction to reopen the earlier administrative proceedings to reconsider the previous approval of *133 the Association’s plan, and perhaps to modify or rescind the Department’s approval. 2

THE REGULATORY STATUTE

The Legislature enacted art. 548b for the primary purpose of protecting purchasers who had contracted and paid in advance (ordinarily by installment payments, according to the evidence) for funeral services and merchandise to be supplied by sellers at the death of individuals specified in the contracts. 1955 Tex.Gen.Laws, ch. 512, at 1292; Falkner v. Memorial Gardens Ass’n, 298 S.W.2d 934 (Tex.Civ.App.1957, writ ref’d n.r.e.). The basic statutory method chosen to secure such protection was to withdraw from sellers their otherwise absolute control over sums paid to them by purchasers. There are, however, other familiar aspects of regulation set out in art. 548b: the statute prohibits the sale of prepaid funeral services and merchandise except that it be done under an annual permit issued by the Department to the seller (§§ 1, 3, 9); any contract for such services and merchandise is unenforceable by the seller if the contract was made in violation of the statute; however, the purchaser may in such instances recover from the seller all sums paid under the contract (§ 1); and, the provisions of the statute are enforceable by criminal sanctions and by quo warranto proceedings (§ 9).

Section 5 of art. 548b establishes a basic obligatory scheme for the safeguarding of funds paid to a seller by purchasers:

1. The seller may retain as much as one half of sums paid under a contract until the seller has retained an amount not to exceed 10% of the contract price, such retention being for the purpose of allowing the seller to recoup his selling expenses, servicing costs, and general overhead.

2. The remainder of any sums paid by the purchaser must be deposited, within 30 days of receipt, to the seller’s trust account in a savings and loan association, a bank, or a trust company, the seller being required to account on an individual-contract basis for all sums received and deposited.

3. On the death of the contract beneficiary, the balance of the purchaser’s account “shall be released in fulfillment of the contract,” the seller being required to supply any difference between the total sum paid in by the purchaser and the balance in his account.

4. The seller may, at any time, withdraw from the accrued interest or “income” earned on the principal sums so much as may be necessary to pay reasonable and necessary charges imposed by the depository institution, including trustees’ fees, and “any taxes caused or created by reason of” the account.

5. The seller may, after performing a particular contract or after it has been cancelled by the purchaser, withdraw a proportional part of “any enhanced value, accrued interest, or accrued income of said contract....”

This basic scheme, established in § 5, may be avoided by a seller in only two circumstances. These are specified in § la of art. 548b. First, compliance with § 5 is excused when the seller’s contracts are based upon a plan whereby the sums necessary to pay for the stipulated funeral services and merchandise will be supplied in the form of insurance proceeds payable under “a contract of insurance with an insurance company licensed in Texas,” an evident reference to burial insurance. Second, compliance with § 5 is excused if the seller’s contracts are based upon a plan whereby the necessary sums will be supplied from a

fund, investment, security, or contract ... approved by the Department as safeguarding the right and interests of the *134 [purchasers] to substantially the same or greater degree as is provided with respect to funds regulated by Section 5....

The second, non-insurance alternative allowed by § la is in issue in the present case.

Because the controlling issue in the present appeal depends thereon, we shall set out the specific powers expressly delegated to the Department in art. 548b in order that it might administer the regulatory scheme, as it is directed to do in § 2:

1.

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Bluebook (online)
720 S.W.2d 129, 1986 Tex. App. LEXIS 9259, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sexton-v-mount-olivet-cemetery-assn-texapp-1986.