Title: John Christie October 6, 2005
1All You Ever Wanted To Know About Rating
Bureaus Presentation To ALTA
John ChristieOctober 6, 2005
2Preface
- a complex subject
- serious antitrust and regulatory issues
- a significant history of both federal and state
litigation/regulation, particularly in your
industry - must proceed with your eyes wide open, with a
knowledgeable appreciation of both the burdens
and the benefits involved
3General Prevailing Antitrust Rule
- Collective ratemaking by competitors in a state
licensed rating bureau context is per se illegal
price-fixing absent an applicable immunity or
exemption - FTC v. Ticor (US Supreme Court)(1992) This
case involves horizontal price fixing . . . . No
antitrust offense is more pernicious than price
fixing. - In re Kentucky Household Goods Carriers
Association (Federal Trade Commission)(2005) We
conclude that the collective ratemaking at issue
here is per se unlawful.
4Federal Antitrust Law Potentially Applicable
Exemptions
- McCarran Ferguson Act, 15 U.S.C. 1011-1015, a
statutory exemption applicable in certain
instances to insurance companies - State Action Doctrine, a creature of the Supreme
Courts interpretation of the scope of the
Sherman Act applicable in certain instances to
entities, including insurance companies, subject
to state regulation - One or both of these federal antitrust exemptions
MAY apply to the activities of a state licensed
rating bureau
5McCarran-Ferguson Act
- Two relevant elements
- activity must embrace the business of
insurance - activity must be regulated by state law
-
6Business of Insurance
- A term of art for McCarran purposes, separate and
apart from state law or industry usage - Defined by the Supreme Court to extend only to
activity involving the transferring or spreading
of a policyholders risk and constituting an
integral part of the policy relationship between
the insurer and the insured -
7Business of Insurance (contd)
- Two federal courts of appeal have told us what
the business of insurance does NOT include - Ticor v. FTC (Third Circuit Court of
Appeals) (1993) The title search and
examination does not itself spread or transfer
risk. At most, title searches identify defects
of title. But see, Commander Leasing Co. v.
Transamerica Title Insurance Co. (Tenth Circuit
Court of Appeals)(1973) Title search and
examination was a condition precedent to the
issuance of title insurance -
8Business of Insurance (contd)
- US v. Title Ins. Rating Bureau of Arizona
(Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals) (1983) We
conclude that the escrow process itself does not
spread or underwrite title insurance risk and
buying escrow services is separate from buying
title insurance.
9Regulation by State Law
- When state legislation generally proscribes,
permits or otherwise regulates the conduct in
question Crawford v. American Title Insurance
Company (Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals)(1975) - The Insurance Unfair Methods of Competition Act,
reaching as it does all unfair methods of
competition, places antitrust price fixing
claims within the ambit of activities over which
the Insurance Commissioner has broad regulatory
control - This same Act is to be found in virtually all of
the states
10 McCarran Act Summary
- Rate filing activities of a title insurance
rating bureau is of some uncertainty at least
with respect to the filing of rates beyond those
relating to the assumption of the risk - Likely to be sufficient regulation by state law
because of the Insurance Unfair Methods of
Competition Act
11State Action Doctrine
- Based on principles of state sovereignty, allows
the states to implement legitimate regulatory
interests even if inconsistent with the goals of
the federal antitrust laws - Appropriately enacted and implemented, state
regulation can operate to displace the federal
antitrust laws otherwise applicable
12State Action Doctrine Two Requirements
- Conduct must be
- clearly articulated and affirmatively expressed
as state policy - and
- actively supervised by the state itself
13State Action Doctrine State Policy
- Conduct in this context is clearly articulated
and affirmatively expressed as state policy if
the state, by statute, affirmatively approves the
existence of title insurance rating bureaus US
v. Southern Motor Carriers (US Supreme Court)
(1985). - Eg. Cooperation among rating organizations,
and among rating organizations and insurers in
rate making . . . is authorized Arizona Revised
Stats. 20-365
14State Action Doctrine Active Supervision
- Conduct in this context is actively supervised
if the state has exercised sufficient
independent judgment and control so that the
details of the rates or prices have been
established as a product of deliberate state
intervention. FTC v. Ticor (US Supreme Court)
(1992). - Characterized the factual record as suggesting
- that the states Montana and Wisconsin at
most checked the rate filings for mathematical
accuracy - and that the bureaus there had not provided
supporting evidence for filings sufficient to
allow the regulators to do their job
15State Action Doctrine Active Supervision
- Ticor itself and cases since have not been
helpful in telling us exactly what constitutes
sufficient independent intervention and control
- the states were either hyper-active, holding
hearings, writing opinions, etc. typically
public utility cases - or the states did little
or nothing at all typically motor carriers
16State Action Doctrine Active Supervision
- However, the standard is clearly more than a
basic level of activity
- The FTC It is essential that the states
chosen procedures allow meaningful review of the
merits of the conduct at issue to ensure that it
comports with the states own normative
standards Kentucky Household Goods Carriers
Assoc. (2005)
17State Action Doctrine Summary
- Therefore, you have to assess whether a states
policy is to permit rating bureaus and whether
the state will be in compliance with the active
supervision requirement and make this
assessment in advance of rating bureau activity - And you have to be prepared to provide the state
with sufficient information to allow them to make
informed regulatory judgments
18State Antitrust Laws
- Generally speaking, they all have laws similar to
the Sherman Act - but they do NOT necessarily have similar
exemptions potentially applicable to rating
bureaus - -- have to consider applicable state law in your
state
19State Antitrust Laws
- Therefore
- Look to whether specific antitrust statutory
exemptions applicable to rating bureau conduct
exist - E.g. The provisions of this state antitrust
law shall apply to licensed insurers . . . to
the extent not regulated by the provisions . . .
of the insurance law Donnelly Act, Art. 22,
340 (2) (New York) - Or
-
20State Antitrust Laws
- Whether, under state law, where there is a
conflict between separate state statutes, the
controlling principle of statutory construction
is that the specific governs over the general - E.g. Conduct which might normally be a
violation of state antitrust statutes is,
nevertheless, permissible if specifically
authorized by other state statutes. Tucson
Unified School District v. Chicago Title
Insurance Company (Court of Appeals of Arizona)
(1991) -
21General Rules of Rating Bureau Conduct
- Evaluate in advance the potential applicability
of both federal and state antitrust exemptions - Evaluate in advance the state regulatory
atmosphere - Adhere to all state law requirements with respect
to the organization and maintenance of a bureau,
including who can be members and required audits - Establish a prior approval procedure for rate
reviews
22General Rules of Rating Bureau Conduct (contd)
- Encourage the establishment of state created
objective criteria for rate review - Be prepared to adequately support rate filings
- Continuously monitor the workings of the bureau
and of state regulators