Sierra Life Insurance Co. v. Wigen

286 N.W.2d 296, 1979 N.D. LEXIS 326
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 30, 1979
DocketCiv. 9606
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 286 N.W.2d 296 (Sierra Life Insurance Co. v. Wigen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sierra Life Insurance Co. v. Wigen, 286 N.W.2d 296, 1979 N.D. LEXIS 326 (N.D. 1979).

Opinion

ERICKSTAD, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal by Sierra Life Insurance Company from a judgment of the Burleigh County District Court, entered November 16, 1978, in which judgment the court affirmed the order of the North Dakota Commissioner of Insurance suspending Sierra’s Certificate of Authority to do business in North Dakota “until such time as [Sierra] complies with the applicable provisions of North Dakota law which it was found to be in violation thereof; and it divests itself of those assets which were found to be assets which were not secure, well invested and in the best interest of its policyholders.”

*299 Sierra, an insurance company incorporated in Idaho, was first authorized in 1963 to transact insurance business in North Dakota, and it continued to do so until its Certificate of Authority was suspended by the North Dakota Insurance Commissioner on October 21, 1976.

During 1973 an examination of the affairs and financial condition of Sierra was jointly conducted by the insurance departments of North Dakota and Idaho. This examination culminated with a report stating that Sierra held certain assets in violation of the Idaho Insurance Code and that such assets should be nonadmitted (i. e. treated by the insurance commissioner as having no value). Sierra filed a protest with the Idaho Insurance Commissioner, and the matter was settled on August 17, 1973 by entry of a Stipulation and Order signed by Fred Frazier,. President of Sierra, and Robert Hay, the Idaho Insurance Commissioner. By this Stipulation and Order Sierra agreed to dispose of certain assets in exchange for assets meeting the requirements of the Idaho Code and acceptable to the Idaho Commissioner of Insurance.

During May of 1976 Lloyd B. Schoeder, Chief Examiner of the North Dakota Insurance Department, filed a complaint with the North Dakota Insurance Commissioner alleging that Sierra was holding certain assets in violation of the North Dakota insurance laws and requesting the commissioner to suspend Sierra’s Certificate of Authority. A three-day hearing was commenced on June 28, 1976 at which both the North Dakota Insurance Commissioner and Sierra were represented by legal counsel. The determination of Sierra’s financial condition was based on its status as of December 31, 1975, together with consideration of changes occurring subsequent to that date and prior to the June 1976 hearing having a possible effect on Sierra’s financial condition. The hearing examiner issued his Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law and Order on October 19, 1976, wherein he concluded certain assets owned by Sierra were not secure or well invested and were not the type of assets in which the North Dakota insurance laws permit a life insurance company to invest its funds. The hearing examiner nonadmitted such assets and, as a result, concluded that Sierra was financially in an “unsound condition.” The hearing examiner ordered that Sierra’s Certificate of Authority be suspended until Sierra complied with the provisions of the North Dakota law which it was found to have violated and it divested itself of the questionable assets. On October 21, 1976, the North Dakota Commissioner of Insurance affirmed the decision of the hearing examiner.

Sierra appealed to the Burleigh County District Court, and that court affirmed the order of the North Dakota Insurance Commissioner. Sierra now appeals to this Court from the judgment of the District Court. We affirm.

Sierra first asserts on appeal that the North Dakota Insurance Commissioner is barred from questioning those assets which were allegedly acquired by Sierra under the terms of the August 17, 1973 Stipulation and Order. Sierra bases this assertion on three theories: res judicata; collateral es-toppel; and “common law” estoppel.

The Stipulation and Order was entered as a settlement to proceedings in Idaho and was signed only by the president of Sierra and the Idaho Insurance Commissioner. We conclude, therefore, that the doctrines of res judicata and collateral es-toppel do not apply because the North Dakota Insurance Commissioner was neither a party to the Stipulation and Order nor was he in privity with any party to such agreement. See, Sturdevant v. SAE Warehouse Inc., 270 N.W.2d 794 (N.D.1978).

Sierra also asserts that the North Dakota Insurance Commissioner is estopped from questioning such assets because he orally agreed with the Idaho Insurance Commissioner to be bound by the terms of the Stipulation and Order. To support this assertion Sierra directs us to the following language in a letter written by the North Dakota Insurance Commissioner to the president of Sierra on October 14, 1974, more than one year after the Stipulation and Order was entered,

*300 “In August of 1973, we received a copy of the Stipulation and Order Docket 121 which was drawn up by yourself and then Commissioner Hay. We also had a telephone conversation with the Idaho Department and we agreed to go along with the agreement as stipulated.”

In a subsequent paragraph of that letter the North Dakota Commissioner explains the extent of his oral agreement with the Idaho Commissioner,

“Frankly, Mr. Frazier, we. thought we were quite benevolent and were in fact doing a favor to Sierra Life by agreeing with the proposed informal rehabilitation. In discussions with the Idaho Department, we had agreed that we would not take any drastic steps even to the point of directing Sierra not to write any new business. If you would prefer that we change our present method of regulating your business in North Dakota, we are reasonably certain that we have statutory authority to do so.”

Regarding this issue, the North Dakota Commissioner testified, in relevant part, as follows:

Q. (Mr. Jordan continuing) “Anyway, Commissioner, you agreed with the Idaho Commissioner’s Stipulation and decision at that time; is that correct?
A. At that time, yes, I agreed to go along with it.”
* * * * * *
Q. “You already testified that you agreed to go along with the stipulation and order. Do you not think that Sierra complied fully with it? Do you have any evidence that you can give right now that Sierra did not comply fully with the letter of that stipulation and order as well as the spirit of it?
A. I cannot talk for the Commissioner in Idaho. As far as my verbal agreement with him to go along, I agreed that I would hold everything in abeyance until such time as the matters were fairly well cleared up.”

Based on the foregoing evidence it is unreasonable for Sierra to conclude that the North Dakota Commissioner agreed to prohibit his office or the State of North Dakota from future examinations of Sierra’s assets and financial condition to ascertain its compliance with the North Dakota insur-. anee laws. We conclude that the North Dakota Commissioner did not agree to be bound by the Stipulation and Order to accept, thereafter, without question, the assets of Sierra allegedly acquired under the terms of the Stipulation and Order.

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Bluebook (online)
286 N.W.2d 296, 1979 N.D. LEXIS 326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sierra-life-insurance-co-v-wigen-nd-1979.