Texas Commerce Bank v. Garamendi

11 Cal. App. 4th 460, 14 Cal. Rptr. 2d 854, 92 Daily Journal DAR 16157, 92 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 9744, 1992 Cal. App. LEXIS 1393
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 30, 1992
DocketDocket Nos. B064437, B064620, B064871
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 11 Cal. App. 4th 460 (Texas Commerce Bank v. Garamendi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Texas Commerce Bank v. Garamendi, 11 Cal. App. 4th 460, 14 Cal. Rptr. 2d 854, 92 Daily Journal DAR 16157, 92 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 9744, 1992 Cal. App. LEXIS 1393 (Cal. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

Opinion

WOODS (A. M.), P. J.

These consolidated appeals arise from judgment entered in seven underlying consolidated actions for declaratory relief.

The judgment determines that purchasers of “Municipal Bond Guaranteed Investment Contracts” (Muni-GICs) from Executive Life Insurance Company (ELIC) in 1986 have preferred class-5 claim priority as insurance “policyholders,” rather than class-6 “all other claims priority” in ELIC’s pending insolvency proceedings.

The primary issues raised are as follows: (1) whether Muni-GICs were insurance annuities under Insurance Code section 101 1 when they were issued in 1986; (2) whether enactment in 1988 of section 10541 retrospectively alters the status and claim priority of the 1986 Muni-GICs in the ELIC liquidation proceedings; (3) whether the liquidation claim priority of the subject Muni-GICs is determined as of their status when issued in 1986 or, rather, as of April 11,1991, when the order for conservation was entered; (4) whether the Muni-GICs sold in states other than California are exempt from any retroactive effect of section 10541 because their status as insurance annuities is controlled by the laws of the states where sold; (5) whether Muni-GICs are materially distinguishable from “Pension Fund Guaranteed Investment Contracts” Pension-GICs), which the Insurance Commissioner has given “policyholder” liquidation status; (6) whether, assuming the 1986 Muni-GICs were not insurance annuities when issued or are not such for purposes of the ELIC liquidation claim priorities, the Muni-GIC claims are entitled to class-5 priority as claims for “return of unearned premium.”

As we will discuss in detail, we conclude that the 1986 Muni-GICs are insurance annuities-certain entitled to liquidation priority as “policyholder claims.” This conclusion is compelled by the language of section 101, read in light of the historical acceptance of annuities-certain as a traditional form of insurance business, and the conformity of the Muni-GICs to other essential characteristics of insurance.

*466 Facts

The dispute as to liquidation claim priority arises from events commencing in 1986 when ELIC began marketing the subject Muni-GICs in California, Texas, Louisiana, Tennessee, Colorado, and Minnesota.

ELIC marketed the Muni-GICs as an insurance product. ELIC believed that under California law it was not required to file a specimen Muni-GIC for approval, but it did file a specimen Muni-GIC form (form 642) and assumed approval was automatic.

In 1986, for a total consideration of approximately $1.8 billion, ELIC sold eight Muni-GICs to banks in California and the states mentioned above. The banks purchased the Muni-GICs as indenture trustees for the local municipal entities that had issued low-income housing bonds and transmitted the proceeds to the banks for purchase of Muni-GICs.

The Muni-GICs are structured to accumulate at a guaranteed rate and to pay accumulated interest on semiannual payment dates. Two of the Muni-GICs provide for payment of the entire accumulated interest amount semiannually; the owner (trustee) may request a lesser payment by prior notice. The other Muni-GICs require the owner to give prior specification of the amount of the payment (up to the total accumulated interest) before each semiannual payment date.

The GICs also permit the trustees to periodically withdraw specified additional maximum amounts during the contract period. The contracts contain a renewal option. If renewed, the guaranteed contract interest rate must be renegotiated.

The Muni-GICs are comprised of a “funding contract” and an integrated “investment agreement” whereby the insurer and the purchaser agreed to enter into the funding contract. These contracts are separate and independent from, but transactionally related to, corresponding “indenture agreements.”

The “Indenture Agreement” is a contract between a municipal bond issuer and its indenture trustee, a bank. Under the indenture, the bank trustee is obligated to purchase an ELIC Muni-GIC with the proceeds of a municipal bond issuance. Thereafter, indenture trustees are obligated to transmit periodic interest payments, and optional withdrawals, received from the MuniGIC to the bond issuer and to the bondholders to meet the issuer’s obligations on the bonds and to fund construction mortgages pursuant to the bond issuance.

*467 The “Funding Contract” is a contract between an indenture trustee and ELIC whereunder ELIC is obligated, as mentioned above, to make semiannual payments of accrued interest at a guaranteed rate during a certain period. In addition to the periodic interest payments, limited withdrawals on principal and unpaid accumulated interest are permitted. Certain of the Muni-GICs permit such withdrawals only during certain years; others permit more limited withdrawals every year. Withdrawals incur surrender charges. Any balance in the Muni-GIC at the end of the contract is to be paid to the trustee.

In late 1986 ELIC was advised by the California Department of Insurance (the Department) that the Department did not consider the Muni-GICs to be insurance annuities, as defined in section 101, because they are not specifically authorized under the Insurance Code. The Department forwarded an opinion letter to ELIC concluding the GICs are not insurance annuities because they do not have a relation to a human life, do not indemnify the holder or shift risk, and do not provide for accumulation of funds with an option to purchase an annuity in the future (in the manner of a Pension-GIC, which the Department accepted as an insurance annuity).

ELIC ceased marketing Muni-GICs.

In its 1987 biennial examination of ELIC, the Department approved ELIC’s reserve accounting for the Muni-GICs as insurance product (line 10.2) rather than as debt (line 21). This method of reserving under the Standard Valuation Law (§ 10489.6) requires greater reserves for insurance product liabilities than for ordinary debt.

In 1987, the California Life Insurance Company and the Association of California Insurance Companies sponsored Senate Bill No. 901 that was enacted in 1988 as section 10541. (Sen. Bill No. 901 (1987-88 Reg. Sess.) § 1.) It became effective January 1, 1989.

Section 10541 was intended to and did expressly authorize life insurance companies to issue “funding agreements.” Muni-GICs came within the statute’s definition of “funding agreement.” The statute specifies that funding agreements are not insurance business but are nevertheless deemed to be lawful business for life insurers. Section 10541 expressly provides that “funding agreements” are exempt from the California gross premium tax applicable to insurance products.

In 1990, ELIC began experiencing severe financial difficulties. On April 11, 1991, an order commencing conservation proceedings was filed pursuant to section 1011.

*468 In the proceedings, the commissioner, as conservator, assigned the 1986 ELIC Muni-GICs owners (the trustees) “class-6” priority status (all other claims) rather than “class-5” priority status as “policyholders.”

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11 Cal. App. 4th 460, 14 Cal. Rptr. 2d 854, 92 Daily Journal DAR 16157, 92 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 9744, 1992 Cal. App. LEXIS 1393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-commerce-bank-v-garamendi-calctapp-1992.