Wesley E. Dixon v. Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company, Nationwide Mutual Fire Insurance Company, Nationwide Life Insurance Company, Nationwide General Insurance Company and Nationwide Property and Casualty Company, Wesley E. Dixon v. Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company, Nationwide Mutual Fire Insurance Company, Nationwide Life Insurance Company, Nationwide General Insurance Company and Nationwide Property and Casualty Company, James Lee Beckham, Formerly D/B/A Jim Beckham Insurance Company Jasper N. Watson, Jr. v. Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company, Nationwide Mutual Fire Insurance Company, Nationwide General Insurance Company, Nationwide Property and Casualty Company, and Horace Mann Insurance Company, Horace Mann Life Insurance Company, and Educators Marketing Services Corporation

784 F.2d 1176
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedMarch 25, 1986
Docket85-1106
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 784 F.2d 1176 (Wesley E. Dixon v. Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company, Nationwide Mutual Fire Insurance Company, Nationwide Life Insurance Company, Nationwide General Insurance Company and Nationwide Property and Casualty Company, Wesley E. Dixon v. Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company, Nationwide Mutual Fire Insurance Company, Nationwide Life Insurance Company, Nationwide General Insurance Company and Nationwide Property and Casualty Company, James Lee Beckham, Formerly D/B/A Jim Beckham Insurance Company Jasper N. Watson, Jr. v. Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company, Nationwide Mutual Fire Insurance Company, Nationwide General Insurance Company, Nationwide Property and Casualty Company, and Horace Mann Insurance Company, Horace Mann Life Insurance Company, and Educators Marketing Services Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wesley E. Dixon v. Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company, Nationwide Mutual Fire Insurance Company, Nationwide Life Insurance Company, Nationwide General Insurance Company and Nationwide Property and Casualty Company, Wesley E. Dixon v. Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company, Nationwide Mutual Fire Insurance Company, Nationwide Life Insurance Company, Nationwide General Insurance Company and Nationwide Property and Casualty Company, James Lee Beckham, Formerly D/B/A Jim Beckham Insurance Company Jasper N. Watson, Jr. v. Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company, Nationwide Mutual Fire Insurance Company, Nationwide General Insurance Company, Nationwide Property and Casualty Company, and Horace Mann Insurance Company, Horace Mann Life Insurance Company, and Educators Marketing Services Corporation, 784 F.2d 1176 (4th Cir. 1986).

Opinion

784 F.2d 1176

Wesley E. DIXON, Appellant,
v.
NATIONWIDE MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY, Nationwide Mutual Fire
Insurance Company, Nationwide Life Insurance Company,
Nationwide General Insurance Company and Nationwide Property
and Casualty Company, Appellees.
Wesley E. DIXON, Appellee,
v.
NATIONWIDE MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY, Nationwide Mutual Fire
Insurance Company, Nationwide Life Insurance Company,
Nationwide General Insurance Company and Nationwide Property
and Casualty Company, Appellants.
James Lee BECKHAM, formerly d/b/a Jim Beckham Insurance
Company; Jasper N. Watson, Jr., Appellees,
v.
NATIONWIDE MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY, Nationwide Mutual Fire
Insurance Company, Nationwide General Insurance Company,
Nationwide Property and Casualty Company, and Horace Mann
Insurance Company, Horace Mann Life Insurance Company, and
Educators Marketing Services Corporation, Appellants.

Nos. 84-2364(L), 84-2365 and 85-1106.

United States Court of Appeals,
Fourth Circuit.

Argued Oct. 7, 1985.
Decided Feb. 28, 1986.
Rehearing and Rehearing In Banc Denied March 25, 1986.

Charles F. Cooper, II (David M. Ratchford; Ratchford & Cooper, Columbia, S.C., on brief), for appellant/cross-appellee in 84-2364, 83-2465 and for appellees in 85-1106.

Thornwell F. Sowell, III and R. Bruce Shaw (Joel H. Smith; Nelson, Mullins, Grier & Scarborough, Columbia, S.C., on brief), for appellees/cross-appellants in 84-2364, 84-2365 and for appellants in 85-1106.

Clinch Heyward Belser; Charles E. Baker; Belser, Baker, Barwick, Ravenel, Toal & Bender, Columbia, S.C., on brief, for appellants in 85-1106.

Benjamin A. Johnson; Roddey, Carpenter & White, Rock Hill, S.C., Brooks Goldsmith; Thomas, Goldsmith, Folks & Hodges, Lancaster, S.C., on brief for appellees in 85-1106.

Before PHILLIPS and SNEEDEN, Circuit Judges, and BOYLE, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of North Carolina, sitting by designation.

SNEEDEN, Circuit Judge:

In this case we are asked to interpret a South Carolina insurance statute. We must also decide whether the statute is unconstitutional as an invalid exercise of the state's police power when applied to contracts arising after the statute's effective date.

The statute in question, section 38-37-940(2)1 of the South Carolina Code, forbids automobile insurers to cancel an agent's contract primarily because of the volume of car insurance the agent places with it as a result of a statutory coverage mandate or because of the amount of the agent's car insurance business the insurer has placed in the South Carolina Reinsurance Facility.2 The statute was part of the South Carolina Automobile Reparation Reform Act ("Act 1177"),3 a broad reform of the state's insurance laws which featured mandatory insurance coverage and a uniform rate structure.

In these consolidated appeals, insurance agents who were fired brought wrongful termination suits under section 38-37-940(2).4 The agents contend a trial judge erred in refusing to instruct the jury that it is illegal in South Carolina to fire an agent for unprofitability that chiefly stems from the volume of auto insurance written to comply with statutory coverage mandates or because of the amount of the agent's business that must be placed in the reinsurance facility. The insurance companies have appealed the lower courts' determination that section 38-37-940(2) is constitutional as applied to contracts arising after the effective date of Act 1177.

After reviewing all the evidence and the arguments of the parties, this court concludes that the rulings of the lower courts were correct. Refusal to give the requested jury charge was not error. Nor did the district courts err in concluding that section 38-37-940(2), as applied, was constitutional. We therefore affirm the decisions below.

I. FACTS

Since this is a consolidated appeal, the facts of the several cases will be developed separately.A. Dixon v. Nationwide

Wesley Dixon was employed as an agent for Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company ("Nationwide") from 1962 until 1982. The most recent agent's agreement entered into by Dixon and Nationwide became effective on January 1, 1981.

Most of the business Dixon secured for Nationwide was automobile coverage. This automobile insurance business was extremely unprofitable for Nationwide. The company lost over $400,000 on Dixon's automobile insurance business during the three-year period before the agent was fired. Dixon's automobile line of business was so unprofitable that his collective accounts were unprofitable as a whole. Nationwide lost money on Dixon's accounts since 1977.

Dixon and Nationwide are at odds on the reason for the unprofitability. Nationwide claimed that Dixon failed to follow its directive to actively solicit business in more lucrative market areas to offset the losses incurred in the automobile business. Dixon contended that he could not follow the company's marketing plan because he was required to spend too much time servicing existing insureds.

Countering Dixon's argument, Nationwide pointed to examples of other agents who had higher volumes of automobile insurance, with comparable amounts of business ceded to the reinsurance facility, but who were more profitable in their automobile lines and were profitable overall.5 Dixon was Nationwide's most unprofitable agent.

Dixon filed suit against Nationwide alleging wrongful termination. At trial, he requested a jury charge that it is illegal to fire an agent for unprofitability resulting primarily from the sale of automobile insurance written in compliance with the statutory coverage mandate or for the amount of the agent's business that the company deems necessary to place in the reinsurance facility. He also sought to have the issue of punitive damages submitted to the jury. The Honorable G. Ross Anderson refused both requests and also rejected Dixon's motion for a directed verdict.

Nationwide, meanwhile, sought to have the trial court rule that section 38-37-940(2) was unconstitutional. The company argued that the statute exceeded the state's police power because it was not reasonably related to the public purpose asserted by the legislature for Act 1177. The district court rejected the argument and held that section 38-37-940(2), as applied, was constitutional. The jury returned a verdict for Nationwide. Judgment was entered accordingly.

Both Dixon and Nationwide have appealed. The agent claims the lower court erred by refusing to give the requested jury instruction, by failing to submit the issue of punitive damages to the jury, and by rejecting his motion for a directed verdict. The company appeals the court's ruling on the constitutionality of the statute.

B. Beckham v. Nationwide Mutual Insurance Co.; Watson v. Horace Mann Insurance Co.

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Related

Bulgo v. Munoz
853 F.2d 710 (Ninth Circuit, 1988)
Dixon v. Nationwide Mutual Insurance
800 F.2d 422 (Fourth Circuit, 1986)

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784 F.2d 1176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wesley-e-dixon-v-nationwide-mutual-insurance-company-nationwide-mutual-ca4-1986.