State Insurance Commissioner v. Baltimore Life Insurance

235 A.2d 537, 248 Md. 120, 1967 Md. LEXIS 306
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 5, 1967
DocketNo. 625
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 235 A.2d 537 (State Insurance Commissioner v. Baltimore Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Insurance Commissioner v. Baltimore Life Insurance, 235 A.2d 537, 248 Md. 120, 1967 Md. LEXIS 306 (Md. 1967).

Opinions

Hammond, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court. Barnes, J., dissents. Dissenting opinion at page 135, injra.

As of December 31, 1965, the Baltimore Life Insurance Company (Baltimore) showed in its statement of condition a “loss or claim reserve” of $530,246.89 to cover unclaimed debts it owed the holders of matured endowment policies. Its surplus account included $665,190 of such unclaimed debts.

After a hearing, Insurance Commissioner Burch on August 23, 1966, ordered Baltimore to restate its accounts to show the $665,190 as a liability rather than a part of surplus and to continue in the future to establish and maintain as a liability the total amounts of such unpaid matured endowments. The company appealed to the Baltimore City Court under Code (1964 Repl. Vol.), Art. 48A, § 40, and Chief Judge Foster held that the Commissioner did not have the authority to pass the order appealed from, and reversed. The Commissioner appealed to this Court.

Baltimore issues both industrial and ordinary twenty and thirty-year endowments, and endowments payable at a specified age. Policyholders often stop paying premiums after a few years. If, in such case, the policyholder does not elect to take the cash value of the policy it becomes a non-premium-paying contract, and by its express terms will provide extended coverage to the extent the premiums theretofore paid allow. If enough premiums had been paid, the policy not only will provide both coverage to its endowment maturity date but also an additional sum which is due the policyholder if he is alive at the maturity date. (If he dies during the period of extended insurance coverage, his named beneficiary receives the specified death benefit, and the company’s liability under the policy ceases.) The additional amount is increased by interest earned and credited thereon, and, as so increased, becomes the “maturity value” which the policy promises to pay the holder of the policy in cash at the end of the endowment period. The average amount so payable is about $30.00 although it may be as small as $3.00 and as great as $500.

Baltimore has been in business since 1882 and apparently has issued endowment policies from its early days. Its procedure in [124]*124the matter of matured endowments has been consistent. When an endowment policy matures, the agent on the debit route is told to make an effort to find the policyholder or his heirs. Often neither a policyholder nor a successor in interest can be found and this has given rise to the current controversy over how the amounts due under matured but unclaimed endowments are to be treated. In states in which the company operates that have escheat laws, Baltimore sets up as a liability the full amounts of unclaimed matured endowments owed policyholders living in such states until the amounts owed them escheat to the state. The amounts thus due policyholders in states not having escheat laws — Maryland was such a state until June 1, 1966, the effective date of the Uniform Disposition of Unclaimed Property Act, now codified as Art. 95C of the Code — are in small part held as claim reserves and in larger part are at each year’s end transferred to surplus.

Baltimore thus takes as its own the part not held as a reserve liability under what in effect is a private escheat practice. The mechanics are these: Baltimore has constructed “continuance tables,” based on its actual experience over the years, which reflect the number of demands for payment of amounts due on matured endowment policies likely to be made from year hr year in relation to the total amounts due under such policies from year to year. In a letter to the Commissioner, Baltimore’s president explained its practice in this way:

“In constructing such continuance tables it is customary to introduce a safety margin for possible differences between the observed experience and the experience to be encountered in the future. In lieu of such a margin, the Company has found that the amount of the current year’s maturities exceeds the amount determined by the application of the continuance table, and has carried the former amount as a liability in its statement. Thus, in 1961, the current year’s maturities amounted to $64,811 and the continuance table liability to only $49,001. In 1965 the current year’s maturities amounted to $44,805 and the continuance table liability to only $39,249.”

[125]*125As of December 31, 1965, Baltimore maintained a “loss or claim reserve” for matured endowments owed of $530,246.89. The Commissioner found that as of that date there was in Baltimore’s surplus a total of $665,190 of debts owed by it to holders of matured endowment policies. The company does not challenge the figures.

In November of 1963 the then Commissioner, after examination of Baltimore by his agents, noted in his Report on Examination of the company as of December 31,1961, that:

“In reporting its claim liabilities, the Company excluded amounts due on matured non-premium paying endowments in those states which do not have escheat laws, except for amounts maturing during the current year.
“Under date of January 18, 1963, the Attorney General of Maryland ruled these endowments were a ‘continuing liability,’ and consequently, the sum of $530,-544.00 representing endowments matured prior to 1961 and unpaid at December 31, 1961, have been included among the liabilities in this report.”

Baltimore neither requested a hearing nor challenged the Commissioner’s report, and continued its practice. On February 8, 1966, Commissioner Burch wrote Baltimore calling its attention to the directive in the 1963 Report on Examination and to the fact that Baltimore’s annual statements for 1963 and 1964 indicated that the company had made no provision for full potential liability to holders of matured endowments. The letter asked Baltimore to explain its failure in 1963 and 1964 to make the suggested change. Baltimore replied by a letter from its president (from which we quoted earlier) in which it took the position that it was required only to set up as much of a reserve as its experience indicated would be necessary to satisfy its obligation to non-premium-paying matured endowment holders. A conference between the company’s president and the Commissioner followed, and the president then wrote the Commissioner that Baltimore declined to follow “the suggestions contained in your letter.” The Commissioner replied that his letter was not intended as a “suggestion” but was a “directive” [126]*126to Baltimore to set up the liability on its books. A hearing before the Commissioner followed, at which the only witnesses were a vice-president-actuary and a vice-president-secretary of Baltimore. They testified as to the long-continued practice and asserted their opinions that it was actuarily and legally sound in theory and worked in practice — that is, the reserve Baltimore maintains has always been more than sufficient to pay the demands actually made for sums due holders of matured endowments, and that if the practice were not followed, earnings, surplus, and dividends to policyholders would be impaired.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
235 A.2d 537, 248 Md. 120, 1967 Md. LEXIS 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-insurance-commissioner-v-baltimore-life-insurance-md-1967.