Williams v. Department of Insurance & Finance

806 P.2d 1161, 106 Or. App. 196, 1991 Ore. App. LEXIS 375
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedMarch 6, 1991
DocketCA A51090; A8902-00727; CA A60946
StatusPublished

This text of 806 P.2d 1161 (Williams v. Department of Insurance & Finance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Department of Insurance & Finance, 806 P.2d 1161, 106 Or. App. 196, 1991 Ore. App. LEXIS 375 (Or. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

RICHARDSON, P. J.

Petitioner appeals from the circuit court’s dismissal of the proceeding that she brought under ORS 732.540(5) to challenge the Insurance Commissioner’s “orders” approving the acquisition of Farmers Insurance Company (Farmers) by BATUS, Inc., see ORS 732.505 et seq, refusing to hold a hearing on the proposed acquisition and denying petitioner’s request to intervene.1 We affirm.

Petitioner is a Farmers policyholder. The focal dispute is over whether the commissioner was required to hold a hearing on the proposed acquisition on petitioner’s request. In her first assignment, she contends that the commissioner erred by not doing so.

ORS 732.523(5) provides:

“Any acquiring party or other person required to file the statement under this section may file with the statement or within 10 days thereafter a written request for a hearing on the acquisition. The insurer to be acquired may file with the director a written request for hearing on the acquisition within 10 days after the filing of the statement.”

Under ORS 732.530(3):

“Any insurer or other party to the [acquisition] plan may, if it so desires, include with the filing, or file within 10 days thereafter, a written request for a hearing on the plan.”

ORS 732.535 provides:

“(1) If a written request for a hearing has been duly filed or if, within 10 days after filing of the plan or statement, the director considers it necessary or advisable to hold a hearing, the director shall direct that a hearing upon the fairness of the proposed acquisition and other matters requisite to the director’s approval be held.
“(2) The hearing shall be held within 30 days after the [200]*200filing of the written request for a hearing or the director’s order directing that a hearing be held at a time and place designated by the director and upon such reasonable notice to the persons described in subsection (3) of this section as the director may order. The notice shall be given by any one or more of the insurers or other parties to the proposed acquisition as directed by the director. The acquiring party shall bear the expense of providing the notice and, as security for the payment of the expense, shall file with the director a bond or other deposit in a form and amount acceptable to the director.
“(3) The following persons shall have an opportunity to be heard at the hearing:
“(a) Each insurer and other party to the proposed acquisition;
“(b) Each person to whom it is proposed to issue securities in connection with the proposed acquisition;
“(c) Each policyholder or shareholder of the insurers or other parties; and
“(d) Each other person who may be adversely affected by the proposed acquisition.”

The commissioner argues that those statutes do not permit a policyholder to request a hearing and do not require him to conduct a hearing or to provide hearing-related procedures when a policyholder so requests. Rather, he argues, the statutes permit only insurers, entities seeking to acquire them and the commissioner to request or initiate hearings.

Petitioner relies on ORS 731.240(1), a section in the chapter relating generally to the administration of the insurance laws:

“The director shall hold a hearing upon written demand for a hearing by a person aggrieved by any act, threatened act or failure of the director to act, or by any report, rule or order of the director.”

Petitioner contends that that general provision includes a right to demand a hearing on a proposed acquisition governed by ORS chapter 732 and that it is therefore of no consequence that she is not among the persons whom the provisions of that chapter allow to demand a hearing. Petitioner states:

“The Director/Commissioner claims that ORS 732.530 somehow overrides and nullifies ORS 731.240(1), although he [201]*201has not attempted to explain why. His position is wrong, for at least 2 independent reasons.”

Her first argument is that there is no conflict between ORS 731.240(1) and the ORS chapter 732 hearing provisions and that they can be “harmonized” in such a way that the hearing rights under them supplement one another. The commissioner responds that the specific provisions in ORS chapter 732 prevail over the general hearing provision in chapter 731. He then states:

“The question is not whether two inconsistent provisions can be harmonized together, as petitioner assumes, but whether the legislature intended that they be. One should not lightly assume, as petitioner does, that the legislature intended that the limitations set out in chapter 732 would be ‘harmonized’ into nonexistence.”

We agree. The provisions in ORS chapter 732 are comprehensive in defining acquisition procedures and who may request a hearing in connection with them. It defies belief that policyholders were intended to come within the category of “aggrieved” persons under ORS 731.240(1) for purposes of the commissioner’s actions regarding acquisitions and thereby obtain the hearing rights that ORS chapter 732 clearly withholds from them.

Petitioner’s second argument is that “ORS 732.535 itself contemplates an opportunity for policyholders to be heard”; therefore, it follows that they may demand hearings. Petitioner states that

“ORS 732.535(1) requires the Director/Commissioner to conduct a hearing ‘[i]f a written request for a hearing has been duly filed.’ It does not state that the written request must come from a party to the merger or acquisition.”

Although petitioner’s point is correct as far as it goes, it does not go far enough. The other provisions in ORS chapter 732 that we have quoted make it clear who may request hearings, and the words “duly filed” in ORS 732.535(1) obviously contemplate filings by those whom the companion statutes allow to file hearing requests.

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Related

§ 732.540
Oregon § 732.540
§ 732.505
Oregon § 732.505
§ 732.523
Oregon § 732.523
§ 732.530
Oregon § 732.530
§ 732.535
Oregon § 732.535
§ 731.240
Oregon § 731.240
§ 735.535
Oregon § 735.535
§ 183.484
Oregon § 183.484
§ 183.482
Oregon § 183.482

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
806 P.2d 1161, 106 Or. App. 196, 1991 Ore. App. LEXIS 375, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-department-of-insurance-finance-orctapp-1991.