A. CAMINETTI, Jr., as Insurance Commissioner, etc., Petitioner, v. SUPERIOR COURT OF THE CITY AND COUNTY OF SAN FRANCISCO, Respondent.
S. F. No. 16479
In Bank
January 6, 1941
Rehearing denied February 5, 1941
For these reasons, I believe the order granting the second motion should be reversed.
John H. Riordan and Knight, Boland and Riordan for Respondent.
THE COURT.--In this original proceeding in prohibition the petitioner, as Insurance Commissioner of the state, seeks to restrain the respondent Superior Court in and for the City and County of San Francisco from proceeding with the hearing and determination of a cause now pending before it.
An alternative writ of prohibition was issued by this court upon a petition alleging that on August 15, 1940, the petitioner, as Insurance Commissioner, caused to be filed with the respondent Superior Court, pursuant to
In defense of its action, the respondent court sets forth in its return and brief in support thereof the contention that it cannot lawfully transfer the conservatorship proceeding to Los Angeles or refrain from hearing the application to terminate the same. The validity of this defense depends upon the proper interpretation of several sections of the Insurance Code.
The issues in this case reduce themselves to one of statutory construction. In enacting the Insurance Code the legislature exercised its power to regulate a business peculiarly charged with a public interest. (Carpenter v. Pacific Mutual L. Ins. Co., 10 Cal. (2d) 307, 329 [74 Pac. (2d) 761]; German Alliance Ins. Co. v. Hale, 219 U. S. 307, 316 [31 Sup. Ct. 246, 55 L. Ed. 229]; In re Bean, 207 App. Div. 276 [201 N. Y. Supp. 827, 828].) In this light the several sections in question must be considered together and not as unrelated provisions.
The respondent court urges that the commissioner, as conservator, having invoked
The rehabilitation sections of our Insurance Code trace their origin to the New York statute whose history is pertinent. That statute originally provided that after commencement of a rehabilitation or conservatorship proceeding in the judicial district in which the involved company had its “principal office” (sec. 408), the superintendent of insurance “may remove the principal office of the insurer to the county of Albany” in the event of which removal “the court shall upon the application of the superintendent, direct the clerk of the county wherein such proceeding was commenced, to transmit all of the papers filed therein with such clerk to the clerk of the county of Albany and the proceeding shall thereafter be conducted in the same manner as though it had been commenced in the county of Albany“. (Chap. 30, sec. 412, Cahill‘s Consol. Laws of New York, 1931-1935.) For all practical purposes, this provision and
This transition of the parent statute from one contemplating the removal of the “principal office” of the insurer to Albany County followed by a transfer of the proceeding to that county, to one permitting the transfer of the proceeding to any county “in the discretion of the superintendent” (without any necessity for the prior removal thereto of the principal office of the company involved) strengthens the belief that the transfer of such a rehabilitation proceeding is intended to facilitate the work of the conservator. The complete removal of the principal office and business of the company to another city might not only handicap his work, but frustrate the whole purpose of the rehabilitation proceeding.
The respondent court also urges that before a removal and transfer may be effected the hearing contemplated by
The statute requires only that the commissioner, as conservator, make application to the court for an order directing the clerk to transfer the proceeding. Such action is purely procedural and has no bearing on due process. Due process is afforded by the hearing authorized in
The respondent court contends further that the removal provision of
The Liquidation Act, as originally enacted (Stats. 1919, p. 268) provided in section 12 that at any time after commencement of a proceeding thereunder the commissioner might remove the principal office of the company involved “to the city and county of San Francisco“. At that time, the only office maintained by the commissioner was located in San Francisco by virtue of statutory requirement. (Sec. 592, Pol. Code.) This section was amended in 1927 by adding thereto “and shall also keep an office in the City of Sacramento“. In 1935 it was codified and became section 12905 of the Insurance Code, at which time there was added thereto “and an office in the City of Los Angeles“. In conformity with such amendment, the legislature amended the 1919 Liquidation Act and incorporated it in the Insurance Code as
Throughout the proceeding in the respondent court the commissioner repeatedly sought to establish a lack of jurisdiction in the respondent court to proceed after his removal of the principal office of the insurer and his application
In any event he has the right “at any time” after his appointment as conservator and subsequent removal of the principal office of the company to apply for a transfer of the proceeding, which the court must grant.
While the conservator has requested only prohibition to stay further proceedings in the respondent court, this court has authority to grant any appropriate relief within the issues presented by the pleadings. (Board of Trustees v. State Bd. of Education, 1 Cal. (2d) 784, 787 [37 Pac. (2d) 84, 96 A. L. R. 775]; 9 Cal. Jur. Ten-Year Supp. 567, sec. 29.) The respondent court is therefore required not only to refrain from further action in the conservatorship proceeding but to transfer that proceeding to Los Angeles County in conformity with the conservator‘s removal of the principal office of the insurer and in pursuance of his application for such transfer, as authorized by the statutes in question.
In determining this matter we have had access to and have considered the briefs filed by the respondents in three companion cases. Nothing in those briefs requires a contrary conclusion herein.
Let peremptory writs of prohibition and mandate issue respectively restraining the respondent Superior Court from taking any further steps or proceedings in the conservatorship proceeding, now pending in that court, and directing that court to transfer the proceeding to the Superior Court of the State of California in and for the County of Los Angeles.
Gibson, C. J., did not participate in the decision.
EDMONDS, J., Dissenting.--I cannot agree that the Insurance Code allows the commissioner, immediately upon his appointment as conservator of a company having its principal office in San Francisco, to remove that office to Los Angeles. Undoubtedly the purpose of
During this time, particularly, his work should be accompanied with a minimum of inconvenience to the company whose assets he is conserving. In organizations of any size there may be many thousands of policyholders and creditors. To allow him to summarily remove the company‘s office from the city where it has been carrying on its business for many years, and where he has a large administrative staff, seems to me to impose hardships which the legislature has not sanctioned.
Until 1935, the Liquidation Act (Stats. 1919, p. 268) authorized the commissioner to remove the principal office of a company whose business he was administering “to the city and county of San Francisco.” When the Insurance Code was enacted, the legislature made a requirement that the commissioner shall maintain an office in Los Angeles and added to the provision authorizing removal the words “or to the city of Los Angeles.” To me, these changes indicate a legislative purpose to broaden his power of removal to include the new office at Los Angeles, but I cannot read into them an intention to authorize the removal of an insurance company‘s office from San Francisco, where the commissioner also maintains an office, to Los Angeles.
For these reasons, I believe that the writs sought by the applicant should be denied.
Rehearing denied. Edmonds, J., voted for a rehearing.
