State Ex Rel. Crawford v. Guardian Life Insurance Co. of America

1997 OK 10, 954 P.2d 1235, 69 O.B.A.J. 469, 1998 Okla. LEXIS 11, 1998 WL 64061
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 3, 1998
Docket84563
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 1997 OK 10 (State Ex Rel. Crawford v. Guardian Life Insurance Co. of America) 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
State Ex Rel. Crawford v. Guardian Life Insurance Co. of America, 1997 OK 10, 954 P.2d 1235, 69 O.B.A.J. 469, 1998 Okla. LEXIS 11, 1998 WL 64061 (Okla. 1998).

Opinions

[1237]*1237WATT, Justice,

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶ 1 In 1986 Guardian Life Insurance Company and Life Insurance Company of Pennsylvania made a reinsurance agreement. American Standard Life Insurance Company acquired Life Insurance Company of Pennsylvania’s rights and obligations under the Agreement in 1987. On November 1, 1988, an amendment to 36 O.S. § 1928, § 1928.B.4, became effective.1 Prior to this amendment § 1928 mandated that the credits and debts between a failed insurance company and its reinsurer would be offset so that only the balance was owed. The 1988 amendment fundamentally changed the law and deprived such a reinsurer of the right to offset its debts against amounts owed to it by a failed insurer where the insurer’s debt was the result of a reinsurance agreement that was “structured so as to avoid reasonable risk transfer and indemnification criteria.” Id.

¶ 2 The Receiver sued Guardian on July 1, 1992 seeking a declaratory judgment that Guardian had no right to offset claims against premiums under its reinsurancé agreement with American Standard Life, but was obligated to pay one-hundred percent of the claims thereunder, and could only collect premiums far later, if at all, as American Standard Life’s general creditor. The litigation has continued to this day. Because of the narrow issue upon which our decision in this appeal turns, it is necessary to discuss in detail only a few of the many issues of fact and law presented below.

¶ 3 The parties agree that the purpose of § 1928.B.4 was to avoid granting a reinsurer a post-insolvency right to setoff where the true purpose of the reinsurance agreement had been to lend or rent surplus in order to allow an insurer to mask its financial weakness. The trial court found as a fact that Guardian’s reinsurance agreement with American Standard Life was such a lending or renting of surplus, because the Agreement had been “structured to avoid reasonable risk transfer and indemnification criteria.” Id. Thus, held the trial court, Guardian was not entitled to the benefit of the offset provision in its Agreement with American Standard Life. The trial court entered judgment against Guardian for $16,745,636.00, plus interest, and imposed a continuing obligation on Guardian to pay all benefits due on every life insurance policy it had agreed to rein-sure, beginning with the date of the reinsurance agreement, January 28,1986.

¶ 4 The Oklahoma Life and Health Insurance Guaranty Association intervened in the action because it guarantees payment of any claims on American Standard Life policies at issue here, if any, held by Oklahoma residents.

¶ 5 The trial court’s factual finding that the Agreement was a lending and not a reinsurance transaction does not end the inquiry. We must first decide whether § 1928.B.4 can be given retroactive application. If it cannot, Guardian is entitled to prevail as a matter of law. It is undisputed that Guardian’s Agreement with American Standard Life gave Guardian the right to offset, and that this right was created prior to the effective date of § 1928.B.4. Unless § 1928.B.4 can be applied retroactively Guardian is entitled to the fruits of its bargain with American Standard Life.

ISSUE

¶ 6 May § 1928.B.4 be applied retroactively so as to deprive Guardian of its contractual right of offset? We hold that it may not.

DISCUSSION

¶ 7 The Legislature clearly had the power to enact § 1928.B.4 and thereby deprive a [1238]*1238reinsurer of its contractual right to offset prospectively where the reinsurance agreement did not truly transfer risk. The issue here though is whether § 1928.B.4 may be applied retroactively so as to deprive Guardian of its right to offset, which right Guardian had both under the Agreement and Oklahoma law prior to the passage of § 1928.B.4.

Section 1928.B4 Applies Prospectively Only

¶ 8 New legislation operates prospectively only “unless the Legislature clearly expresses a contrary intent. If doubt exists, it must be resolved against a retroactive effect.” Forest Oil Corp. v. Corporation Com’n of Oklahoma, 1990 OK 58 ¶ 11, 807 P.2d 774, 781. There is no indication in the statutory language that the Legislature intended for the statute to apply retroactively. Indeed to have attempted to have the statute destroy vested rights such as Guardian’s would have raised serious constitutional issues. Unit Petroleum Company v. Oklahoma Water Resources Board, 898 P.2d 1275 (Okla.1995).2

¶ 9 The Receiver and the Guaranty Association contend that the amendment to § 1928 was both proper and constitutional. The Receiver claims the transactions giving rise to the claims at issue here arose after the passage of § 1928.B.4 and the application of the statute is, therefore, not retroactive. This argument is unconvincing. The insurance policies upon which premiums were paid after § 1928.B.4 became effective were bought by their owners long before § 1928.-B.4’s passage. Thus, Guardian’s rights and obligations were fixed long before the Legislature passed § 1928.B.4. The mere fact that policy owners continued to pay premiums after the effective date of the act does not change the result.

¶ 10 The Receiver claims that § 1928.B.4 was passed in response to a federal court decision, Grimes v. Crown Life Insurance Company, 857 F.2d 699 (10th Cir.1988), which allowed a reinsurer to offset its obligation to pay claims against its right to receive premiums. While this may be so, it does not show that the Legislature intended that the amended statute should apply retroactively.

¶ 11 The Guaranty Association argues that the statute was not applied retroactively because it could not be applied until after American Standard Life was placed in receivership, and Guardian’s rights against American Standard Life and its rights against the Receiver as receiver of American Standard Life’s insolvent estate are two different things. This argument fails for two reasons: First, it ignores that the effect of applying the statute would have been to rewrite Guardian’s contract. Second, if the statute did not have retroactive application because it did not come into play until American Standard Life’s insolvency it could never apply retroactively. This argument, once again, ignores the fact that Guardian’s rights to setoff were based on a contract made long before the Legislature passed § 1928.B.4.

¶ 12 Both the Receiver and the Guaranty Association argue that the statute could be applied retroactively because it affected only Guardian’s remedies. If a statute affects only a remedy and not a substantive right it will be held to apply retroactively, . Forest Oil Corp. 807 P.2d at 781, but this rule does not apply here because the effect of applying the statute would have been to rewrite Guardian’s contract. Thus, Guardian’s substantive rights would have been affected, not merely its remedies.

¶ 13 In 1997 the Legislature clarified the 1988 amendment to the Guaranty Act upon which the Commissioner relies. The 1988 amendment to the Act, 36 O.S.1988 Supp. § 1928.B.4, prohibits enforcement of setoff rights in reinsurance agreements that were in fact loans. The 1997 amendment provides, “It is the intent of the Legislature that the provisions [of 36 O.S.1988 Supp.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1997 OK 10, 954 P.2d 1235, 69 O.B.A.J. 469, 1998 Okla. LEXIS 11, 1998 WL 64061, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-crawford-v-guardian-life-insurance-co-of-america-okla-1998.