WESTERN WOOD M. & M. PROD. v. Argonaut Ins. Co.
This text of 572 P.2d 1004 (WESTERN WOOD M. & M. PROD. v. Argonaut Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
WESTERN WOOD MOULDING & MILLWORK PRODUCERS, Inc., an Arizona Corporation, Appellant,
v.
ARGONAUT INSURANCE COMPANY, a California Corporation, Respondent,
Johnson & Higgins of Oregon, an Oregon Corporation, and Johnson & Higgins of California, a California Corporation, Defendants.
Supreme Court of Oregon.
William R. Miller, Jr., William L. Hallmark, and Jones, Lang, Klein, Wolf & Smith, Portland, for the petition.
Thomas S. Moore, and Morrison, Dunn, Cohen, Miller & Carney, Portland, contra.
Before DENECKE, C.J., and HOLMAN, HOWELL, BRYSON, LENT and LINDE, JJ.
On Respondent's Petition for Rehearing October 3, 1977, and Appellant's Response October 31, 1977.
HOLMAN, Justice.
This was an action to recover dividends allegedly declared but not paid by defendant, *1005 a California insurer, on a group policy of workmen's compensation insurance. Defendant claimed the right to withhold from current dividends certain adjustments to dividends paid in all prior years. Our original opinion held that certain evidence was improperly excluded. That evidence, offered by plaintiff, tended to prove an oral agreement that dividends were to be paid in full two years after the close of each policy year, and were not to be recalculated or adjusted thereafter. A judgment for defendant was reversed and the case was remanded for a new trial.
On appeal, defendant had contended that even if the trial court erred in sustaining its objection to the evidence in question, nevertheless that error could not be prejudicial because the evidence tended to prove a dividend agreement which would be illegal and unenforceable under the law of California. We rejected this argument on the ground that the purpose of the relevant California statutes was to protect California workmen. We concluded, therefore, that they did not apply to policies which, like the one involved in this case, covered only workers in other states.
Defendant has filed a petition for rehearing, contending that our disposition of that argument was erroneous. On further reflection, we agree that the California law limiting premium rebates and the payment of dividends by insurers cannot be disregarded in this case. It is designed to protect the financial status of California insurers, and thus the interests of their insureds as a class. The legislative concern expressed in the California insurance statutes, as interpreted by the courts of that state, extends to all types of insurance, not only to workmen's compensation insurance. Therefore, although the parties' briefs provide us with but little assistance on the question, we have examined the California law applicable to insurance policy dividends.
Rebates of insurance premiums are prohibited by Cal.Ins.Code § 750.[1] Section 751 of that code amplifies the general prohibition:
"An insurer * * * shall not offer or pay, directly or indirectly, as an inducement to enter into an insurance contract, any valuable consideration which is not clearly specified, promised or provided for in the policy, or application for the insurance, and any such consideration not appearing in the policy is an unlawful rebate."
The insurance code contains, however, certain qualifications on the prohibition against premium rebates. Section 763 provides:
"The following acts are not unlawful rebates:
"(a) Dividends on participating policies. The return by an insurer issuing policies on a participating plan, of any portion of the premium as a dividend after the expiration of the term covered by such policy."
With specific application to workmen's compensation policies, section 11738 provides:
"Nothing in this article shall affect the right of any insurer to issue compensation participating policies. A refund by reason of a participating provision in a compensation policy shall not be made to policyholders by any insurer except from surplus accumulated from premiums on workmen's compensation policies issued pursuant to laws of this State governing workmen's compensation insurance."
The policy involved in this case is entitled "Standard Workmen's Compensation and Employers' Liability Policy (Participating)." It has two provisions concerning dividends. Paragraph 17 of the "Conditions" provides:
"The named insured shall be entitled to participate in the distribution of dividends to the extent and upon the conditions fixed and determined by the Board of Directors in accordance with law after *1006 expiration of the policy period to which the dividend is applicable."
An endorsement provides:
"Western Wood Moulding & Millwork Producers, Inc. may be entitled to a dividend which shall represent such proportion of any divisible surplus of the company as may be provided in such authorized dividend plan as may hereafter be adopted at the sole discretion of the Board of Directors of the company after the expiration of the policy period to which the dividend is applicable, provided, however (1) such dividend shall be computed on the total premiums earned and losses incurred under this policy and all other policies issued to members of the Association, where such other policies provide for such combination of premium and losses for dividend computation; * * *."
Neither of these provisions sets out the method for computation of dividends in any detail. Defendant contends that "any agreement outside of the policy, which purported to bind defendant insurer as to the method of calculating dividends, was invalid and unenforceable," citing Contractors Safety Association v. California Compensation Insurance Company, 48 Cal.2d 71, 307 P.2d 626 (1957). In that case, the defendant had issued its "standard workmen's compensation policy" to the plaintiff. Plaintiff alleged that as an inducement for the purchase of the policy, defendant had represented that it would pay dividends according to a stated schedule to all insureds having a certain loss-premium ratio, provided that there was surplus available to pay them. It sued to recover the dividends alleged to be due.
The trial court sustained a demurrer to the introduction of any evidence by plaintiff, and the California Supreme Court affirmed. Although the court discussed a number of provisions of the insurance code, its holding is based on the plaintiff's failure to allege that the policy itself contained any provision for the payment of dividends as required by sections 751 and 11738:
"Section 11738, like section 763(a) is limited to participating dividends. Moreover section 11738 expressly requires the participating provision to be `in a compensation policy.'
"It is apparent from a consideration of sections 751, 752, 763, 11736, and 11738 of the Insurance Code and Rule III of the Manual of Rules that the alleged dividend agreement is contrary to law. If the insurance policy which was not pleaded included the agreement and the agreement otherwise conformed to the requirements of the Insurance Code, a different situation would have been presented.
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572 P.2d 1004, 280 Or. 623, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-wood-m-m-prod-v-argonaut-ins-co-or-1977.