86 Pa. Commw. 90 | Pa. Commw. Ct. | 1984
Opinion by
The Consumers Life Insurance Company (petitioner) has filed a petition for review of an order of the Pennsylvania Insurance Department (department), the effect of which was to uphold the action of the insurance commissioner disapproving the petitioner’s proposed schedule of premium rates for credit life insurance for the year 1984.
Section 7(a) of the Model Act for the Regulation of Credit Life Insurance and Credit Accident and Health Insurance (Model Act), Act of September 2, 1961, P.L. 1232, as amended, 40 P.S. §1007.7(a), provides that all proposed premium rates for credit life insurance must be submitted to the insurance commissioner for approval prior to use. Section 7(b) of the Model Act, 40 P.S. §1007.7(b) requires the insurance commissioner, in deciding whether to approve or disapprove premium rates, to give consideration to the insurer’s past and prospective loss experience and to allow a reasonable margin for underwriting profit. By Section 12 of the Model Act, 40 P.S.
A department regulation at 31 Pa. Code §73.25 requires that each insurer, as part of its filing of a proposed schedule of premium rates, determine its actual case ratio, defined at 31 Pa. Code §73.25 as the product of its actual ratio of claims incurred to premiums earned at prima facie rates over an experience period, multiplied by its Basic Loss Ratio.
In 1981 the petitioner experienced a large increase in the amount of credit life insurance claims filed. In June, 1982, the petitioner filed its schedule of premium rates proposed for 1983, using data only
The term “experience period” which, as we have seen, is crucial to the determination of an insurer’s actual case ratio and consequently of whether its proposed premium rates are to be approved or disapproved, is defined at 31 Pa. Code §73.21 as:
The most recent three experience years or a lower number of full years which produces a prima facie earned premium volume ... [of $1,000,001 or more]. (Emphasis in original.)
The petitioner contends that because it attained a prima facie earned premium volume of $1,000,001 or more in each of its three most recent experience years, 1980, 1981 and 1982, it has, under the definition at 31 Pa. Code §73.21, the option of selecting data from one
An administrative agency’s interpretation of its own regulation is of controlling weight unless it is plainly erroneous or inconsistent with the regulation. Also, the regulation must be consistent with the statute under which it was promulgated. Department of Public Welfare v. Forbes Health System, 492 Pa. 77, 422 A.2d 480 (1980).
We find that the department’s interpretation of the term experience period is neither plainly erroneous nor inconsistent with the Model Act nor with the regulation at 31 Pa. Code §73.23. The purpose of the Act and the regulation is to assure that the rates charged for credit life insurance are fair to both the consumer and the insurer. As mentioned, the Model Act specifically directs the insurance commissioner in determining whether to approve or disapprove a proposed rate schedule to consider the insurer’s past and prospective loss experience and allow for a reasonable margin of profit. The department has done this by requiring an insurer to use data from its three most recent experience years or a lower number of years which produce an earned premium volume of $1,000,001 or more. The petitioner in this case had an earned premium volume of $1,000,001 or more in each of its three most recent experience years. The department’s interpretation of the term “experience period” to require the petitioner to use as a lower number of these years only its most recent year is
Order affirmed.
Order
And Now, this 8th day of November, 1984, the order of the Insurance Department of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in the above-captioned matter is affirmed.
For no doubt good, but unexplained, reasons the rate year of credit life companies begins on December 1 and ends on November 30 of the following year. To make the opinion easier to read, the rates in effect for the period December 1, 1983 through November 30, 1984 will be referred to as the 1984 rates; those in effect from December 1, 1982 through November 30, 1983, as the 1983 rates; and so on.
Neither the procedure ior determining an insurer’s Basic Loss Ratio nor the department’s Credibility Table needs description in this opinion. The former is set forth at 31 Pa. Code §73.22 and the latter appears at 31 Pa. Code §73.23.