State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance v. Louisiana Insurance Rating Commission

79 So. 2d 888, 1955 La. App. LEXIS 766
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 25, 1955
DocketNo. 3953
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 79 So. 2d 888 (State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance v. Louisiana Insurance Rating Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance v. Louisiana Insurance Rating Commission, 79 So. 2d 888, 1955 La. App. LEXIS 766 (La. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinions

ELLIS, Judge.

The State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. of • Illinois, appellee herein, applied to the Casualty and Surety Insurance Division of the Louisiana Insurance Rating Commission seeking permission to us,e its membership fee plan of operation in the State of Louisiana.

This plan consists of three parts:

[890]*890“1. Deviate 25% from manual rates for casualty insurance.
“2. Issue a six months policy at 50% of the annual rate, the present rule requiring such policies be written on the basis .of 60% of the annual rate.
“3. Charge an initial membership fee in connection with its policy, which charge is to be nonrecurring.”-

The Casualty and Surety Division, on consideration of the application, granted this Company the right to charge a membership fee as set forth in item three above, but denied it the right to use the other two parts of its plan, items one and two above. This ruling was appealed to the Louisiana Insurance Rating Commission, which, after hearing, reversed the ruling and found that the Company was entitled to deviate 25% and to write six months policies without surcharge, items one and two above, but was not entitled to charge membership fees according to item three above.

This last ruling was appealed to'the 19th Judicial District Court for the Parish of East Baton Rouge upon that portion which denied the use of a membership fee charge. This Lower Court reversed the Commission and held that the Company was entitled to charge initial membership fees in Louisiana. Judicial review in the Lower Court was had only as concerns item three, the membership fee, and the judgment below provides that the order of the Commission in all other respects is affirmed. The Louisiana Insurance Rating Commission appealed to this Court and the appellee Company has filed a motion to dismiss upon jurisdictional grounds, the motion stating that the record herein shows the matter involves an amount far in excess of $2,000.

On Motion to Dismiss

The only theory upon which the appellate jurisdiction of this Court is attacked is with respect to the “amount in dispute or fund to be distributed.” Consequently, unless it is affirmatively established by the record that the charging of the membership fee was worth $2,000 or more to the Company’s business in this State, we are the proper Court wherein the appeal should be considered.

Our appellate jurisdiction is set forth in Article 7, Section 29 of the LSA Constitution of 1921, providing:

“Original and appellate and concurrent jurisdiction. — The Courts of Appeal, except as otherwise provided in this Constitution, shall have appellate jurisdiction only, which jurisdiction shall extend to all cases, civil and probate, of which the Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans, or the District Courts throughout the State, have exclusive original jurisdiction, regardless of the amount involved, or concurrent jurisdiction exceeding one hundred dollars, exclusive of interest, and of which the Supreme Court is not given jurisdiction, except as otherwise provided in this Constitution, and all appeals shall be both upon the law and the facts.”

The appellate jurisdiction of the Supreme Court is found in Article 7, Section 10 of the LSA Constitution of 1921. In the case of First National Life Insurance Co. v. City of New Orleans, La., 48 So.2d 145, a comprehensive review of that jurisdiction is found. Therein a declaratory judgment was sought to interpret the provisions of a contract. The subject matter of the contract was admittedly worth $275,000. The Supreme Court held that regardless of the value of the property involved the value of the rights sought to be adjudicated had not and probably could not be established; that the only matter presented to the Court was the question of the validity of the proposed sale without advertisement. The case was ordered transferred to the Court of Appeal.

There áre two transcripts in this case. One was made before the Louisiana Insurance Rating Commission, and the other in the District Court. LSA-Revised Statutes 22:1363 provide that both transcripts, became a. part of this record. Neither transcript shows the value of the right to charge the membershp fee, which is the subject [891]*891matter of this appeal. The right of the Company to charge this fee cannot, be said to be worth any certain amount as it is conjectural as to how many policies would be sold in this State by the Company if its proposed plan be allowed. The appellee suggests that the average term of its policies may be computed to show how many policies can be assumed to be in effect in the future. This is too uncertain upon which to base a jurisdictional amount.

At present the Company is not using the membership fee and it is improbable what the value of its use would amount to. The fee is proposed to be charged only upon the original sale of a policy. Consequently the policies now in effect would not be affected. Appellee maintains that since it will discontinue the payment of dividends to existing policy holders if granted the right to charge an initial membership fee that the amount of such dividends would establish jurisdiction. The payment of dividends is not in dispute here. Consequently this argument is unsound.

Jurisdiction was sought to be established in the Supreme Court by an affidavit in Fireside Mutual Life Insurance Co. v. Martin, 220 La. 794, 57 So.2d 687, 688. In deciding that it had not jurisdiction the Supreme Court used the language following:

“ * * * This conclusion of affi-ants, evidently, is predicated on a sin-, cere belief that possibly a loss at least to that extend will result-to the company from the change. However, an affidavit to a similar effect was, considered in Louisiana Wholesale Distributors Association, Inc., v. Rosenzweig, 212 La. 1015, 34 So.2d 58, and with reference to it we said: ‘We do not in any way question the good faith of the affiant in this affidavit, but it is obvious that the loss claimed is based on conjecture as to future events and conclusions of the affiant from-such conjecture. Undoubtedly such presumptions cannot inject an “amount in dispute or * * fund to be distributed” in excess of $2,000 into this injunction proceeding.’” See also Prampin v. Southern Chemical Works, Inc., 218 La. 392, 49 So.2d 737.

Since the Record herein fails to disclose an “ ‘amount in dispute or * * * fund to be distributed’-” which would properly lodge this appeal in the Supreme Court, the motion to dismiss is overruled.

TATE, Judge.

The-foregoing opinion overruling pi; in-tiff-appellee’s motion to dismiss the appeal contains a statement of all relevant facts.

The sole question before us on appeal is whether the Louisiana ■ Insurance Rating Commission (hereinafter denoted as “Commission”), defendant-appellant, exceeded its authority in refusing to. permit the' State Farm.Mutual Automobile Insurance. Company (hereinafter denoted as “State Farm”), plaintiff-appellee, to- charge an initial membership fee to its policyholders in addition to what State Farm denotes as premium. .

The resolution 'of this controversy involves interpretation’ and correlation of the various statutory provisions in our Louisiana Insurance Code, LSA-R.S." 22:1 ef seq., a comprehensive áttempt at regulation of all phases of the insurance industry doing business in Louisiana.

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Bluebook (online)
79 So. 2d 888, 1955 La. App. LEXIS 766, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-farm-mutual-automobile-insurance-v-louisiana-insurance-rating-lactapp-1955.