State Comp. Ins. Fund v. Superior Court of Orange Cty.

16 P.3d 85, 103 Cal. Rptr. 2d 662, 24 Cal. 4th 930, 24 Cal. 930, 2001 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 945, 2001 Daily Journal DAR 1253, 66 Cal. Comp. Cases 16, 2001 Cal. LEXIS 421
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 1, 2001
DocketS082133
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 16 P.3d 85 (State Comp. Ins. Fund v. Superior Court of Orange Cty.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Comp. Ins. Fund v. Superior Court of Orange Cty., 16 P.3d 85, 103 Cal. Rptr. 2d 662, 24 Cal. 4th 930, 24 Cal. 930, 2001 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 945, 2001 Daily Journal DAR 1253, 66 Cal. Comp. Cases 16, 2001 Cal. LEXIS 421 (Cal. 2001).

Opinion

Opinion

BROWN, J.

The issue in this case is whether a workers’ compensation insurer is immune from civil liability under Insurance Code 1 section 11758 for allegedly misallocating an insured employer’s expenses and reporting that misinformation to a ratemaking organization, resulting in higher premiums for its insured. The trial court denied petitioner State Compensation Insurance Fund’s (SCIF) motion for judgment on the pleadings, and the Court of Appeal summarily denied the insurer’s petition for writ of mandate and request for immediate stay. While the question is close, we conclude section 11758 does not immunize SCIF from civil liability under these circumstances. We therefore affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeal summarily denying the petition for writ of mandate and discharge the order to show cause.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

Prior to January 1, 1995, minimum premiums for workers’ compensation insurance were set by the Department of Insurance. 2 (Former § 11736, Stats. *933 1977, ch. 459, § 3, p. 1514, repealed by Stats. 1993, ch. 228, § 1, p. 1793.) In calculating premiums, the department relied on the Workers’ Compensation Insurance Rating Bureau (Rating Bureau) to gather and process the relevant financial information from insurers. SCDF is a public enterprise fund, established by law as a competitive insurance carrier. (1 Hanna, Cal. Law of Employee Injuries and Workers’ Compensation (rev. 2d ed., Tancor edit., 2000) Workers’ Compensation System, § 1.20[1], pp. 1-70 to 1-71.)

In April 1994, plaintiffs Schaefer Ambulance Service, Inc., Sectran Security, Inc., and Universal Courier Limited (collectively Schaefer), on behalf of themselves and all others similarly situated, filed a first amended class action complaint against SCDF. Schaefer alleged breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing and negligence, and sought declaratory relief, compensatory and punitive damages, attorney fees, and costs.

Plaintiffs alleged they were “typical members of an ascertainable class of approximately 300,000 business entities within the State of California who have purchased workers’ compensation liability insurance from SCDF during the calendar years January 1, 1984 through December 31, 1992, and who, during that relevant time period, have had claims litigated against them by one or more of their injured workers.” Each insured’s policy for the relevant years was identical. The policy provided that “[a]ll premium[s] for this policy will be determined by the Workers’ Compensation Insurance Rating Bureau’s manuals of rules, rates, rating plans and classifications.”

Schaefer alleged SCDF had misallocated and then misreported the insureds’ financial information to the Rating Bureau. In order to calculate the premium to be charged by SCDF to its insureds, the Rating Bureau considers a variety of factors, including what is known as the experience modification factor. This factor involves in part a comparison of the expected losses of all employers to the actual incurred losses plus reserve estimates of the insured employer at issue.

SCIF forwards the financial information of its insureds to the Rating Bureau in unit statistical reports. Each report contains three columns: indemnity, medical, and defense expense or allocated loss expense. Only the financial information reported in the indemnity and medical expense columns, not in the defense expense column, is used by the Rating Bureau to compute an insured’s experience modification factor. Medical-legal reports requested by the employer or insurer that were not prepared by the attending physician are properly allocated as defense expenses. Nevertheless, SCIF either intentionally or negligently misreported such expenses as medical expenses to the Rating Bureau. Hence, the insureds’ experience modification *934 factor was artificially inflated, which in turn allowed SCIF to collect excessive premiums.

Schaefer further alleged that SCIF had a policy of “refusing to provide to its insuredfs] access to all individual claims files,” “refusing to provide its own insureds ... the ability to audit and/or monitor the manner in which SCIF has represented them in various workers’ compensation actions,” and “barring its own insureds . . . from having access to any information, including a showing of how Medical-Legal reports on workers’ compensation claims ... are reported to the WCIRB.” These policies were “designed by SCIF to prohibit insureds . . . from auditing, questioning, or in any manner attempting to determine whether SCIF performed reasonably in administering the claims of the insureds,” and “to prevent an insured from discovering SCIF’s intentional or negligent manipulation of the reserves” and “misreporting of financial information to the WCIRB.”

In response to SCIF’s motion for summary judgment, the civil action was stayed for several years while Schaefer pursued its administrative remedies. On August 9, 1994, the Rating Bureau determined that SCIF had improperly reported expenses for nonattending physician reports requested by the employer or insurer as incurred medical, not defense, expenses. It stated, “expenses for medical-legal reports prior to January 1, 1993 . . . should (and could) only have fallen within the category of ‘Defense Expense’ for reporting under the Unit Statistical Plan, so long as they did not include expenses for actual medical ‘treatment.’ ” The Rating Bureau directed SCIF to submit revised unit statistical reports for Schaefer Ambulance Service, Inc., Sectran Security, Inc., and Universal Courier Limited for the years January 1, 1988 to January 1, 1989, January 1, 1988 to January 1, 1991, and December 31, 1987 to December 31, 1991, respectively. 3

SCIF appealed the Rating Bureau’s decision to the classification and rating committee of the Rating Bureau,, which on January 13, 1995, after further argument and briefing, upheld the bureau’s determination. SCIF then appealed the decision to the Insurance Commissioner. An evidentiary hearing was held in December 1995 before an administrative law judge, who received numerous documentary exhibits and heard two days’ testimony from the parties’ expert witnesses. On May 8, 1996, the administrative law judge issued a proposed decision affirming the Rating Bureau and stating, “The Bureau correctly determined that the Unit Statistical Plan provisions in *935 effect from January 1, 1983, until January 1, 1993, require the costs of insurer-requested medical examination reports, provided by medical experts other than an attending physician, to be allocated as defense expenses in unit reports to the Bureau.” The Insurance Commissioner adopted the proposed decision on May 28, 1996. According to SCIF, on January 11, 1999, the commissioner made this determination binding on all workers’ compensation insurers.

In September 1996, SCIF filed a petition for writ of mandate in the trial court to direct the commissioner to vacate his order. On March 16, 1999, the trial court denied the petition for writ of mandate and entered judgment in May 1999. In May 2000, the Court of Appeal affirmed. (State Comp. Ins. Fund v. Quackenbush

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16 P.3d 85, 103 Cal. Rptr. 2d 662, 24 Cal. 4th 930, 24 Cal. 930, 2001 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 945, 2001 Daily Journal DAR 1253, 66 Cal. Comp. Cases 16, 2001 Cal. LEXIS 421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-comp-ins-fund-v-superior-court-of-orange-cty-cal-2001.