FORD MOTOR COMPANY and Ford Motor Credit Company, and the
American Road Insurance Company and Ford Life
Insurance Company, and First Nationwide
Financial Corporation and
First Nationwide Bank
v.
INSURANCE COMMISSIONER OF the COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA.
Appeal of PENNSYLVANIA ASSOCIATION OF INDEPENDENT INSURANCE
AGENTS, Ulrich, John M., Jr., Professional Insurance Agents
Association of Pennsylvania, Maryland and Delaware, Inc.,
Leach, Charles P., Jr., Pennsylvania Association of Life
Underwriters and Alexander, Harold E., (Intervening
Defendants) in 88-1339.
UNITED SERVICES AUTOMOBILE ASSOCIATION, a Texas Reciprocal
Interinsurance Exchange, USAA Casualty Insurance Company, a
Texas Stock Insurance Company, USAA Life Insurance Company,
a Texas Stock Insurance Company, and USAA Annuity and Life
Insurance Comapany, a Texas Stock Insurance,
v.
MUIR, William J., III, Acting Insurance Commissioner of the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
Appeal of PENNSYLVANIA ASSOCIATION OF INDEPENDENT INSURANCE
AGENTS, John Ulrich, Jr., Professional Insurance Agents
Association of Pennsylvania, Maryland and Delaware, Inc.;
Charles P. Leach, Jr.,; Pennsylvania Association of Life
Underwriters; and Harold E. Alexander, in 88-5077.
UNITED SERVICES AUTOMOBILE ASSOCIATION, a Texas Reciprocal
Interinsurance Exchange, USAA Casualty Insurance Company, a
Texas Stock Insurance Company, USAA Life Insurance Company,
a Texas Stock Insurance Company, and USAA Annuity and Life
Insurance Company, a Texas Stock Insurance,
v.
MUIR, William J., III, Acting Insurance Commissioner of the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,
Pennsylvania Association of Independent Insurance Agents,
John Ulrich, Jr., Professional Insurance Agents Association
of Pennsylvania, Maryland and Delaware, Inc.; Charles P.
Leach, Jr.,; Pennsylvania Association of Life Underwriters;
and Harold E. Alexander, Intervenors.
Appeal of Constance FOSTER, in 88-5078.
UNITED SERVICES AUTOMOBILE ASSOCIATION, a Texas Reciprocal
Interinsurance Exchange, USAA Casualty Insurance Company, a
Texas Stock Insurance Company, USAA Life Insurance Company,
a Texas Stock Insurance Company, and USAA Annuity and Life
Insurance Company, a Texas Stock Insurance,
v.
MUIR, William J., III, Acting Insurance Commissioner of the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,
Pennsylvania Association of Independent Insurance Agents,
John Ulrich, Jr., Professional Insurance Agents Association
of Pennsylvania, Maryland and Delaware, Inc.; Charles P.
Leach, Jr.; Pennsylvania Association of Life Underwriters;
and Harold E. Alexander, Plaintiffs/Intervenors.
Appeal of UNITED SERVICES AUTOMOBILE ASSOCIATION, USAA
Casualty Insurance Company, USAA Life Insurance
Company, and USAA Annuity and Life
Insurance Company, in 88-5121.
Nos. 88-1339, 88-5077, 88-5078 and 88-5121.
United States Court of Appeals,
Third Circuit.
Argued Oct. 5, 1988.
Decided May 5, 1989.
Rehearing and Rehearing In Banc in Nos. 88-5077, 88-5078 and
88-5121 Denied June 9, 1989.
William R. Balaban, Balaban & Balaban, Harrisburg, Pa., Jonathan B. Sallet (argued), Miller, Cassidy, Larroca & Lewin, Washington, D.C., for appellants PA Assoc. of Ind. Ins. Agents in 88-1339 and 88-5077, and for appellees, PA Assoc. of Ind. Ins. Agents in 88-5121 and 88-5078.
Harvey Bartle, III (argued), Dechert, Price & Rhoads, Philadelphia, Pa., for appellee Ford in 88-1339.
John B. Knorr, III (argued), Chief Deputy Atty. Gen., Office of Atty. Gen., Harrisburg, Pa., for appellee, Constance Foster in 88-5121, 88-5077 and 88-5078.
Christopher K. Walters (argued), Reed, Smith, Shaw & McClay, Philadelphia, Pa., Robert B. Hoffman, Reed, Smith, Shaw & McClay, Harrisburg, Pa., for appellant United Services Auto. Ass'n, in 88-5121, 88-5077 and 88-5078.
Before HIGGINBOTHAM, MANSMANN and GREENBERG, Circuit Judges.
OPINION OF THE COURT
A. LEON HIGGINBOTHAM, JR., Circuit Judge.
On these appeals we are revisited by significant questions concerning the appropriate applications of the doctrines of abstention and preemption, and of the dormant commerce clause of the United States Constitution. Although all such cases present issues that require delicate balancing, these cases are particularly sensitive because they concern both a federal scheme designed to assist the nation's failing savings and loans companies and the important state interest in regulating the state insurance industry. Upon our review of the contentions raised on these appeals, we conclude: (1) that the principles of Younger do not require abstention in these cases; (2) that Pennsylvania's statute that precludes companies that sell insurance in Pennsylvania from affiliation with savings and loan institutions is preempted to the extent that the state statute is applicable to companies authorized pursuant to federal legislation to purchase failing thrifts and (3) the state statute is not preempted in its application to other than failing thrifts and, in that application, does not violate the Commerce Clause. In our view, that statute neither discriminates impermissibly in favor of in-state residents, nor presents a burden on interstate commerce and, it therefore, does not present harm precluded by the Commerce Clause. Accordingly, we will affirm the decisions of the district courts in these cases in part and reverse in part.
I. Background
These appeals are taken from the judgments of district courts in two declaratory actions that were filed to determine the constitutionality of Sec. 641 of the Insurance Department Act of 1921, as amended, P.L. 1148 (1987), codified at 40 Pa.Stat.Ann. (Purdon 1987 Supp.).1 Although the cases are wholly separate and were filed independently, they were consolidated for the purposes of appeal because of the commonality of the underlying facts and the significant identity of the issues presented for review. The facts of neither case are in dispute. For the purposes of this discussion, we review the facts and procedural histories of each case briefly:
A. Pennsylvania Ass'n of Independent Insurance Agents v. Ford Motor Co. ("Ford")
In December 1985, Ford Motor Company ("Ford") acquired the First Nationwide Financial Corporation ("FNFC") which is a California based savings and loan holding company. Ford also acquired FNFC's subsidiary, First Nationwide Savings which Ford renamed First Nationwide Bank ("FNB"). At that time, FNB had offices located in California, New York, Florida and Hawaii.
In June 1986 Ford, through its new subsidiaries FNFC and FNB, arranged to purchase two Ohio based savings and loan companies, ("S & L's") that were failing and had been placed into receivership with the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation ("FSLIC"). FSLIC had solicited applications for the purchase of these S & L's pursuant to federal statutory guidelines designed to limit liability exposure for these failed companies which were federally insured. See 12 U.S.C. Sec. 1730a (1982).2 The failing Ohio S & L's were merged with FNB to create a larger national savings and loan entity. Subsequently, in February 1987, Ford requested and was granted permission by the Federal Home Loan Bank Board to open two additional branches of the newly constituted FNB. One of these new branches was in Pennsylvania.
Among the numerous subsidiary companies that are owned and controlled by Ford are the American Road Insurance Company ("American Road"), which is a wholly owned subsidiary of Ford, and the Ford Life Insurance Company ("Ford Life"), which is wholly owned by American Road. Both of these companies are licensed to sell insurance in Pennsylvania and have been engaged in that business for over twenty years. Ford's simultaneous ownership of these insurance companies and FNB, however, placed it in violation of Sec. 641 of the Pennsylvania insurance act.
Accordingly, in June 1987, three months after FNB's Pennsylvania branch office was opened, Ford filed a complaint in the United States district court for declaratory relief from Pennsylvania's enforcement of that statute which, Ford alleged, was unconstitutional on several grounds. Ford claimed, inter alia that, to the extent that the statute placed a restriction upon its ownership of a savings and loan institution, it was preempted by 12 U.S.C. Sec. 1730a(m) (1987). Additionally, Ford contended that Sec. 641 was constitutionally infirm because it was violative of the dormant commerce clause of the United States Constitution. The Insurance Commissioner of the State of Pennsylvania ("Insurance Commissioner" or "the Commissioner") filed a reply challenging the merits of the contentions raised by Ford. The Commissioner was joined by the appellants in this case, the Pennsylvania Association of Independent Insurance Agents ("Insurance Agents") who had successfully petitioned the district court for leave to intervene. Together with that motion to intervene, the Insurance Agents also filed a motion to dismiss Ford's complaint in which it petitioned the district court to abstain from adjudication of the complaint pursuant to the Younger doctrine of abstention.3 Prior to intervening in the case, the Insurance Agents had filed a complaint with the Insurance Commissioner initiating an administrative proceeding that sought the revocation of American Road's and Ford Life's insurance licenses because those companies were in violation of Sec. 641. Subsequent to the insurance agents' intervention in this case, Ford filed a motion in the district court seeking an injunction of the state administrative proceedings.
Ford also filed a motion for summary judgement on three grounds: it contended that the statute was unconstitutional as a violation of the equal protection clause, that federal legislation preempted the entire field concerning the acquisition and ownership of savings and loans and that federal legislation that specifically addressed the acquisition of failing savings and loan institutions preempted Sec. 641.
The district court concluded that neither of the first two contentions raised by Ford for summary judgement were meritorious. It concluded, however, that the language and legislative history of Sec. 1730a(m) evinced Congress's clear intent to preempt state laws that hindered the acquisition of failing S & L's and determined, accordingly, that Sec. 641 had been preempted. Because its decision rested on preemption grounds, the district court also held that abstention was improper. The insurance agents challenge each of the district court's conclusions on this appeal.4
B. Foster v. United Services Automobile Ass'n ("USAA")
The United Services Automobile Association ("USAA") is a group of four Texas based insurance companies that are engaged in the insurance business nationwide. It is licensed to sell insurance in Pennsylvania and has been doing so for a number of years. In 1983, USAA was granted permission by the Federal Home Loan Bank Board and FSLIC to create the USAA Federal Savings Bank in Texas. In accordance with all applicable federal regulations, USAA organized and capitalized that bank, which then began doing business in Texas.5 During the following year, the Pennsylvania Insurance Commissioner notified USAA that its simultaneous ownership of the Texas bank and continued sale of insurance policies in Pennsylvania, violated Sec. 641. It advised USAA that pursuant to Sec. 641, it must either cease the sale of insurance in Pennsylvania or divest itself entirely from ownership in the Texas bank. USAA filed a complaint in the district court seeking declaratory relief from enforcement of the statute, which it challenged as unconstitutional on its face and as preempted by federal regulation. Subsequent to that complaint, the insurance department commenced state administrative proceedings for the revocation of USAA's license to sell insurance in Pennsylvania and, in light of those proceedings, filed a motion for dismissal in the district court on abstention grounds. USAA cross-filed a motion for summary judgment on the grounds that Sec. 641 was preempted by Sec. 1730a.
The district court concluded that abstention was appropriate under each of three types of abstention: Younger, Pullman6 and Burford.7 We reversed that decision and held that abstention by the district court under any of these theory was improper. See United Services Automobile Ass'n v. Muir,
On remand, the Insurance Commissioner again petitioned the district court to abstain. The Commissioner limited this request to Younger abstention and contended that this Court's decision in USAA I had been overruled by intercedent precedent of the Supreme Court in the case Ohio Civil Rights Comm'n v. Dayton Christian Schools, Inc.,
The district court agreed that USAA I had been overruled by Dayton Schools regarding the issue of Younger abstention. It concluded, however, that because of the potential for irreparable harm to USAA, abstention was nonetheless improper. In light of that conclusion, the district court evaluated the merits of the constitutional claims presented. It concluded that USAA's claim that Sec. 641 was preempted by Sec. 1730a was without merit, but determined that Sec. 641 was unconstitutional as a violation of the Commerce Clause.
On this appeal, the Insurance Commissioner and the Insurance Agents challenge the district court's decision not to abstain and its determination that Sec. 641 is unconstitutional. USAA cross-appeals from the decision of the district court that enforcement of Sec. 641 against it is not preempted by the federal regulatory scheme.
II. Abstention
Although the analyses of the district courts regarding this issue arise from different circumstances, the threshold concern of both is whether abstention pursuant to Younger was warranted. That doctrine of abstention, characterized as one of equitable restraint, instructs us that due deference must be paid to state proceedings initiated to resolve controversies that raise significant state issues when federal court intervention is sought.8 Deference to state proceedings pursuant to Younger, however, is not absolute. The appropriate focus of a court's inquiry when the question of Younger abstention is raised, therefore, is whether the state proceeding provides an adequate forum for the resolution of the federal claims that have been asserted, see Dayton Schools,
In the present cases, we are persuaded that Pennsylvania maintains the significant interest in the regulation of its insurance industry sufficient to support abstention under this doctrine. In light of the Supreme Court's decision in Dayton Schools, we are also persuaded that the scheme for administrative adjudication and judicial review of the claims presented is adequate for Younger purposes.
A. Abstention And The Adequacy of State Administrative Proceedings
In USAA I, this Court held that "administrative proceedings suffice for Younger purposes only when they 'are adequate to vindicate federal claims.' " USAA I,
Subsequent to our decision in USAA I, the Supreme Court held that state administrative proceedings that do not provide an opportunity for the resolution of the claimant's constitutional contention, are adequate for Younger abstention if the state's judicial review of the administrative proceeding provides opportunity for de novo hearing of the constitutional claim. Dayton Schools,
In the present cases, this conclusion necessarily results in the determination that the Pennsylvania administrative proceeding in question is sufficient for purposes of Younger abstention. The Pennsylvania statutes concerning administrative law and procedure clearly provide for adequate judicial review of state administrative determinations. The statute expressly provides that
[a]ny person aggrieved by an adjudication of a Commonwealth agency who has a direct interest in such adjudication shall have the right to appeal therefrom to the court vested with jurisdiction of such appeals ...
2 Pa. Cons.Stat.Ann. Sec. 702 (Purdon 1988). Significantly, the statute provides further that
[a] party who proceeded before a Commonwealth agency under the terms of a particular statute shall not be precluded from questioning the validity of the statute in the appeal, but such party may not raise upon appeal any other question not raised before the agency (notwithstanding the fact that the agency may not be competent to resolve such question) unless allowed by the court upon due cause shown.
2 Pa. Cons.Stat.Ann. Sec. 703(a) (Purdon 1988) (emphasis added). We read these provisions of the Pennsylvania law to permit the assertion of the unconstitutionality of a statute on judicial review of an administrative proceeding in which that statute has been applied and, in light of Dayton Schools, conclude that the administrative proceedings in this case are sufficient for application of Younger principles.
Our inquiry into the propriety of Younger abstention for the present cases, however, is not terminated here. The district courts in these cases relied on reasons apart from the adequacy of the state proceedings to support their decisions that Younger abstention was improper and, on one of these alternate grounds, we affirm their conclusions.
B. Abstention and "Our Federalism"
In Ford, the district court's decision not to abstain was predicated upon its view that Sec. 641 had been preempted by federal legislation enacted to provide for the acquisition of failing savings and loans. Relying upon this Court's decision in Kentucky West Virginia Gas Co. v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Comm'n,
In this case, as in Kentucky West, we note that there is no absolute rule prohibiting the application of Younger abstention doctrine whenever the Supremacy Clause is invoked. See Kentucky West,
As a preface to our holding on this issue, we note our view that the intent of Sec. 641 is not ambiguous. That section was designed clearly to proscribe affiliations between all state licensed insurance companies and any savings and loans institutions. Accordingly, no detailed factual proceedings are necessary to determine the statute's applicability to Pennsylvania licensed insurance companies that purchase savings and loan institutions pursuant to Sec. 1730a. See Wisconsin v. Constantineau,
In our view, the principles of comity and federalism upon which the Younger doctrine is predicated, are not undermined by federal intervention in these cases, which would forestall the state proceedings in order to determine whether enforcement of the state statute conflicts with an important federal scheme. Cf. Pennzoil Co. v. Texaco, Inc.,
Both Ford and USAA contend that Sec. 641 has been completely displaced by federal legislation and is therefore invalid under the Supremacy Clause of the Constitution. See U.S. Const. art VI, cl. 2.14 They argue that Congress has preempted the field of regulation regarding savings and loan institutions and, thus, that Sec. 641 has been superceded by the federal scheme. To the extent that Sec. 641 applies to the acquisition of failing thrifts we are convinced that it has been preempted by federal law. We are unpersuaded, however, as were the district courts, that Congress intended to preempt entirely the states' authority to impose regulations upon savings and loan institutions that operate within the state's borders, or, as in the present case, to impose regulations upon other financial institutions that seek affiliations with savings and loans.
In reaching this conclusion, we are guided by the Supreme Court's instruction that preemption analysis should be "tempered by the conviction that the proper approach is to reconcile 'the operation of both statutory schemes with one another rather than holding one completely ousted.' " Merrill Lynch v. Ware,
A. Section 641 is Pre-empted Regarding the Acquisition of Failing Thrifts
"The question [of] whether the regulation of an entire field has been reserved by the Federal Government is, essentially, a question of ascertaining the intent underlying the federal scheme." Hillsborough County v. Automated Medical Laboratories, Inc.,
In the present cases, we have no difficulty discerning Congress' intent from the language and legislative history of Sec. 1730a(m) which, in our view, clearly provides that Sec. 641 is preempted to the extent that it applies to Ford's acquisition of failing savings and loans.
In pertinent part, Sec. 1730a(m) provides that "[n]otwithstanding any provision of the laws or constitutions of any State or any provision of Federal law ... [FSLIC] upon its determination that severe financial conditions exist which threaten the stability of a significant number of insured institutions ... may authorize any company to acquire control of said insured institution." 12 U.S.C. Sec. 1730a(m) (Supp.1987) (emphasis added). This language amply demonstrates Congress' intent to preempt all other legislation that might inhibit the purchase of a failing thrift by a FSLIC approved buyer. Although that language, by itself, is sufficient to support our conclusion, Congress has left an even more explicit statement of its intent. In the conference report on the reenactment of 1730a(m), Congress expressly noted that with regard to the circumstances presented by one of these cases
[e]xcept as [limited by other sections of the federal statute] section 408(m)(A)(i) preempts other provisions of Federal and State law that would have the effect of preventing a company from acquiring a failing thrift institution. Thus, for example if a life insurance company invested in or acquired a thrift institution under section 408(m) [enacted and codified as 1730a(m) ], that section would preempt any state law that would prevent the company from continuing to engage in the life insurance business because of that investment or acquisition ...
H.R.Rep. No. 261, 100th Cong., 1st Sess., Cong.Rec. H 6857, H 6895 (daily ed. July 31, 1987) (emphasis added), U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 1987, p. 489. This legislative history provides unmistakable guidance to us for the disposition of this issue. See United States v. Bd. of Comm'rs of Sheffield,
We reach the latter part of this holding in light of the factual finding by the district court that an essential aspect of Ford's agreement with FSLIC to purchase the Ohio thrifts was the authorization that Ford received to open the branch offices of the thrift. Ford,
"the Acquisition and Merger [of FNB and the Ohio thrifts] are of very substantial benefit to the FSLIC in a measure sufficient to constitute a compelling factor in determining to make an award of branching rights in Pennsylvania and Colorado toB "
Id. (quoting Bank Board resolution approving acquisition of Ohio thrifts) (emphasis added). The district court concluded that "FNB would not have acquired the Ohio savings and loan associations if it did not get the right to open branches in these two states in return." Id. We do not find that determination to be clearly erroneous. We are compelled by it, and the rationale underlying Sec. 1730a(m), to preclude application of Sec. 641 to the Pennsylvania or Colorado branches of the thrift. In our view, application of Sec. 641 to these branches would frustrate the intent of the federal legislation just as would the application of the state statute directly to the purchase of the Ohio thrifts themselves. Accordingly, Sec. 641 is preempted as to these authorized branches as well as the Ohio thrifts and enforcement by Pennsylvania of Sec. 641 as to Ford's ownership of these thrifts is precluded.
We do not reach a similar conclusion concerning thrifts acquired or capitalized outside of the purview of Sec. 1730a(m). The legislative intent to preempt the application of Sec. 641 beyond cases involving the acquisition of failing thrifts is not evident, and accordingly, as to those cases, Sec. 641 has not been preempted.
Notes
B. Federal Regulations That Concern The Savings and Loan Industry, Although Comprehensive, Do Not Evidence Congress's Intent to Displace State Regulation Entirely and Do Not Pre-empt Sec. 641
In these cases, USAA and Ford argue that the regulatory scheme that Congress enacted for the savings and loan industry was intended to occupy that field exclusively. They contend that the federal scheme was intended to regulate more than just the operations of savings and loan institutions, but also to regulate every aspect "regarding the organization, ownership, incorporation, and operation of federal savings banks." Appellee (USAA ) Brief at 21. See also, Appellee (Ford ) Brief at 24 ("[section] 641 is preempted as applied ... because it frustrates federal purposes and 'stands as an obstacle' to the broad and pervasive federal regulatory scheme governing the ownership and control of federal S & L's"). They assert that the comprehensiveness of the federal regulatory scheme, together with the significant federal interest in the regulation of savings and loan institutions, evinces congressional intent to preclude supplemental state regulation. We do not agree.
In cases such as these, where Congress has not expressly preempted a state's statute, its "intent to pre-empt all state law in a particular area may be inferred where the scheme of federal regulation is sufficiently comprehensive to make reasonable the inference that Congress 'left no room' for supplementary state regulation." Hillsborough County,
In both cases, the district courts acknowledged the comprehensiveness of the federal regulatory scheme. See USAA,
We reiterate that our conclusion on this issue is informed by the Supreme Court's instruction that "federal regulation of a field of commerce should not be deemed pre-emptive of state regulatory power in the absence of persuasive reasons--either that the nature of the regulated subject matter permits no other conclusion, or that Congress has unmistakenly so ordained." Florida Lime and Avocado Growers, Inc. v. Paul,
Initially we note that the comprehensive nature of the federal regulatory scheme, by itself, is not sufficient to support a conclusion that Congress intended to preempt all state regulation. See Hillsborough,
Moreover, the regulations at issue in the present cases provide explicitly for preemption of state law on two issues, see 12 C.F.R. Sec. 590 (1988) ("Preemption of State Lending Restrictions) (expressly preempting state usury laws and state due on sale laws), but no where indicate that all state regulation is preempted. Indeed, in one section, the regulations clearly demonstrate Congress' recognition that the federal scheme might be supplemented by state regulation. Section 555.17(b) precludes officers or directors of savings and loan associations from referring insurance business generated by members of the S & L to insurance companies with which the officers or directors are affiliated.15 Such referrals would constitute a usurpation of the S & L's corporate opportunity to engage in the insurance business. Significantly, however, Sec. 555.17 is limited by specific exceptions enumerated elsewhere in the section. One of those exceptions provides that
[n]o corporate opportunity for a Federal association to enter the insurance business is deemed to have existed
....
[w]hile a specific State statute or regulation precluded Federal association service corporations ... from engaging in the insurance business
12 C.F.R. Sec. 555.17(c)(iii) (1988) (emphasis added).
Appellees correctly assert that the circumstance provided for in Sec. 555.17 is not at issue in these cases. In our view, however, the existence of this provision provides compelling evidence that Congress did not envision that all state regulations would be in conflict with the federal regulatory scheme. Moreover, the subject matter of Sec. 555.17(c)(iii) is particularly significant because it demonstrates Congress's specific awareness of the existence of state statutes such as Sec. 641. In that light, we cannot conclude that, by these regulations, "Congress 'left no room' for supplementary state regulation." Hillsborough County,
IV. Dormant Commerce Clause
Upon their conclusions that abstention was not warranted and that Sec. 641 was not wholly preempted, the district courts reviewed Ford's and USAA's claim that Sec. 641 was invalid as a violation of the dormant Commerce Clause. See U.S. Const. art. I., Sec. 8, cl. 3.16 On that claim, however, the courts concluded that to the extent that Sec. 641 was not preempted, it was nonetheless constitutionally infirm because it imposed an excessive burden upon interstate commerce.
The courts determined that Sec. 641's proscription of affiliations between Pennsylvania insurance companies and financial institutions--whether or not located in Pennsylvania--indirectly regulated interstate commerce. Accordingly, the district courts held that resolution of the constitutional validity of Sec. 641 turned upon application of the Supreme Court's holding in Pike v. Bruce Church, Inc.,
[w]here the statute regulates evenhandedly to effectuate a legitimate local public interest, and its effects on interstate commerce are only incidental, it will be upheld unless the burden imposed on such commerce is clearly excessive in relation to the putative local benefits
Id. at 142,
In the present cases, the district courts concluded in light of Pike that, although the imposition on interstate commerce that resulted from the enforcement of Sec. 641 is incidental, that burden is still "excessive" because the benefits to Pennsylvania are not sufficiently realized by Sec. 641 to support the burden upon interstate commerce. For that reason, the district courts struck Sec. 641 as unconstitutional. In arriving at this balance between the significance of the state interest in precluding the affiliations between insurers and banking institutions, and the effect of that regulation upon interstate commerce, however, the district courts erred. Because that statute regulated indiscriminately--affording no preference to in-state interests over others--we cannot conclude that it presented a burden to interstate commerce and, in that light, we hold that it did not violate the Commerce Clause.
Indiscriminate Regulation Of Commerce Does Not Necessarily Burden "Interstate Commerce"
The Insurance Commissioner asserts that Sec. 641 effects three important state goals: "to protect the insurance industry from ... unfair concentration; ... to protect consumers from coercive "tie-ins" and other forms of subtle pressure tactics by lending institutions; and ... to protect the ability of the insurance examiners to monitor adequately the insurance industry." USAA,
Resolution of the issue of applicability of the Commerce Clause to these cases is dependent upon the level of scrutiny that is applied to review the Pennsylvania statute. As we have previously noted, three standards of review are applied in performing dormant Commerce Clause inquiry:
1) state actions that purposefully or arbitrarily discriminate against interstate commerce or undermine uniformity in areas of particular federal importance are given heightened scrutiny; 2) legislation in areas of peculiarly strong state interest is subject to very deferential review; and 3) the remaining cases are governed by a balancing rule, under which state law is invalid only if the incidental burden on interstate commerce is clearly excessive in relation to the putative local benefits.
Norfolk Southern Corp. v. Oberly,
In the present cases, heightened scrutiny of Sec. 641 is not warranted because that provision does not discriminate in the manner that it regulates. As we have held "[h]eightened scrutiny is the standard of review for 'simple economic protectionism.' ... [this] category of protectionism includes those state measures that discriminate on their face against out-of-state interests or in favor of in-state interests." Norfolk,
As we have previously noted in performing that inquiry, "[t]he 'incidental burden on interstate commerce' appropriately considered in Commerce Clause balancing is the degree to which the state action incidentally discriminates against interstate commerce relative to intrastate commerce. It is a comparative measure." Norfolk Southern,
The Supreme Court's decision in Exxon Corp. v. Governor of Maryland,
[w]hile the refiners will no longer enjoy their same status in the Maryland market, in-state independent dealers will have no competitive advantage over out-of-state dealers. The fact that the burden of a state regulation falls on some interstate companies does not, by itself, establish a claim of discrimination against interstate commerce.
This Court has similarly concluded that
[w]here the "burden" on out-of-state interests is no different from that placed on competing in-state interests ... it is a burden on commerce rather than a burden on interstate commerce. In such cases, nothing in Commerce Clause jurisprudence entitles out-of state interests to more strict judicial review than that to which the in-state interests are entitled
Norfolk Southern,
The district courts, in reaching the conclusions that the Commerce Clause invalidates Sec. 641, appear to have been most persuaded by the significant economic effect that enforcement of Sec. 641 will have upon Ford and USAA. Indeed, the district court in USAA concluded that "[i]f the Insurance Department enforces Section 641(b) against USAA, USAA will be forced to abandon its insurance business in Pennsylvania or relinquish its interest in the Texas bank. If USAA opts to allow its insurance license to be revoked, this revocation could result in devastating economic consequences." USAA,
We are not unaware, nor are we insensitive to this "burden" that results from the enforcement of the state provision. We cannot say, however, that the dormant Commerce Clause is the proper remedy. Both Ford and USAA appear to have adopted corporate strategies that seek to expand their corporate bases by the acquisition of other companies. That strategy is their own choosing and we express no value judgments concerning it. In making those choices, however, the companies must expect that they will be required to comply with all applicable state as well as federal regulations. They cannot hope to invoke the Constitution at every turn to circumvent state regulation and insure unrestricted expansion and protection of their opportunity to obtain the greatest margin of profit.
On this point we are again guided by Exxon. In that case, the Supreme Court noted arguments that, as the result of the state divestiture regulation, some oil refiners would stop selling in Maryland. See Exxon,
The district courts distinguish Exxon on the grounds that the statute at issue in that case "did not have the practical effect of indirectly regulating the refiners' ownership of other entities outside the state." USAA,
We do not view the Court's decision in Exxon as predicated upon the conclusion that the state statute did not regulate beyond the Maryland borders. Indeed, we note that Justice Blackmun's dissent departs from the Court majority precisely because of the recognition that the Maryland statute had the actual effect of precluding many out-of-state businesses from participating in the retail market in Maryland. See Exxon,
As the Supreme Court has noted, "[t]he Commerce Clause [does not] protect[ ] the particular structure or method of operation in a retail market.... the Clause protects the interstate market, not the particular interstate firms, from prohibitive or burdensome regulations." Exxon,
V. Conclusion
In light of the foregoing, we reach the following conclusions in these cases: In Ford, we will affirm the decision of the district court not to abstain. We will also affirm the district court's decision that Sec. 641 was inapplicable to Ford's acquisition of the two failing Ohio S & L's under the provisions of 12 U.S.C. Sec. 1730a(m) (1982), and the branches authorized in connection with that acquisition, because the state statute has been preempted by the federal law concerning the emergency acquisition of failing thrifts. We will also affirm the district court's conclusion that Sec. 641 is not preempted by federal law in its application to circumstances other than those provided by Sec. 1730a(m). We will reverse, however, the district court's judgment that Sec. 641 is violative of the dormant Commerce Clause.
In USAA, we will affirm the decision of the district court not to abstain, although we will not affirm the rationale upon which it relied. We will also affirm the holding of the district court that Sec. 641 is not preempted by federal law in its application to USAA's establishment of a Texas savings and loan company. We will reverse, however, the district court's judgment that Sec. 641 is violative of the dormant commerce clause and we will remand this matter to the district court for its determination of the viability of USAA's claim that the state statute is otherwise inapplicable to it. See supra, n. 11.
All parties in these cases will bear their own costs.
In pertinent part, Sec. 641 provides that
[n]o lending institution, ... bank holding company, savings and loan company or any subsidiary or affiliate of the foregoing, or officer or employee thereof, may directly or indirectly, be licensed or admitted as an insurer ... in this State
Pa.Stat.Ann. Sec. 281(b)(Purdon 1987 Supp.). Such institutions may be licensed to "sell credit life, health and accident insurance and to sell and underwrite title insurance in accordance with regulations promulgated by the Insurance Commissioner." Id
That statute provides for the "[r]egulation of holding companies." In its several sections, it provides explicit guidelines for, inter alia, the "registration and examination" of holding companies, see Sec. 1730a(b); regulations of "[h]olding company activities," see Sec. 1730a(c); "transactions," see Sec. 1730a(d) and "acquisitions," see Sec. 1730a(e)(1). Significant to the present cases, that statute also provides for "[e]mergency thrift acquisitions." See Sec. 1730a(m). In pertinent part, that section provides that:
[n]otwithstanding any provision of the laws or constitution of any State or any provision of Federal law, except as provided in subsections (c), (e)(2) and (1) of this section, and in clause (iii) of this subparagraph, the Corporation, upon its determination that severe financial conditions exist which threaten the stability of a significant number of insured institutions, or of insured institutions possessing significant financial resources, may authorize, in its discretion and where it determines such authorization would lessen the risk to the Corporation, an insured institution that is eligible for assistance pursuant to section 1729(f) of this title to merge or consolidate with, or to transfer its assets and liabilities to, any other insured institution or any insured bank (as such term "insured bank" is defined in section 1813(h) of this title), may authorize any other insured institution to acquire control of said insured institution, or may authorize any company to acquire control of said insured institution or to acquire the assets or assume the liabilities thereof.
12 U.S.C. Sec. 1730a(m)(1)(A)(i) (1987 Supp.)
See Younger v. Harris,
Ford does not cross-appeal from the decision of the district court concerning the alternate bases on which it sought summary judgment. Accordingly, none of these issues are before us on this appeal. Also, the Insurance Commissioner, although a named defendant, does not join as an appellant in this case
The record does not indicate--and the insurance commissioner does not contend--that this bank has ever solicited deposits from Pennsylvania citizens, or otherwise done any business in Pennsylvania
See Railroad Comm'n of Texas v. Pullman Co.,
See Burford v. Sun Oil Co.,
Younger abstention precludes intervention by federal courts into on-going state proceedings. The doctrine has been extended, however, to apply to circumstances in which the filing of a federal action preceded the initiation of the state proceedings. See Hicks v. Miranda,
This rule has been extended to include non-judicial state court proceedings that provide a full and fair opportunity for hearing of the federal claims. See Dayton Schools,
We note that an alternative argument against abstention, which is not addressed by the district court, is raised in Ford concerning the fact that private individuals--and not the state--initiated the proceedings at issue. This Court has noted that the state's interests in adjudication of a controversy is entitled to less deference in the abstention inquiry where the proceeding was not begun by the state. See Johnson v. Kelly,
USAA reasserts on this appeal its contention that it is not subject to the prohibitions of Sec. 641, even if the constitutionality of that statute is upheld, because it's banking affiliate "neither accepts deposits nor lends money in Pennsylvania and[,] therefore[,] is not a 'lending institution' within the meaning of the statute." Appellee/Cross-Appellant (USAA) Brief at 19 (emphasis in original). The district court's decision on remand from USAA I does not address this contention and, on this record, it is not apparent that the appellee continued to pursue this claim in the district court. We cannot conclude that this issue, which requires factual inquiry as well as the interpretation and application of Pennsylvania state law, is properly before us. Accordingly, we do not reach this issue. We will remand this question to the district court, however, to determine the viability of this claim and, if viable, for initial decision on the merits
Our conclusion that Younger abstention was not warranted in these circumstances applies to each case, despite our holding, that the preemption claim prevails only with regard to one of the transactions in one of the cases. See infra. Sec. III. Our holding regarding Younger is predicated upon the significance of the federal interest invoked in these cases and our determination that the principles of comity and federalism are not undermined by the intervention of the federal court into the state proceedings in these cases. The determination of whether abstention is proper where preemption is alleged does not rest upon whether the preemption claim will ultimately prevail. Accordingly, just as the presence of a claim of preemption will not preclude abstention in every case, the decision that abstention is improper in light of a claim of preemption that has been asserted, need not result in the finding that the state statute has in fact been preempted
Although we have concluded that the district court's decision not to abstain in USAA was appropriate, we are compelled to address the rationale upon which the district court relied. On remand from our decision in USAA I the district court recognized that Dayton Schools overruled our decision with regard to the adequacy of the Pennsylvania proceedings, see USAA v. Foster,
The district court's interpretation of Sullivan was in error. Sullivan did not create a new criterion to be evaluated in the Younger analysis, but rather interpreted--in light of the specific circumstances of the case under review--a factor that has always been an appropriate part of that inquiry. In Younger and in its companion cases, the Supreme Court affirmed a long standing judicial policy that deference to a state action is improper where "extraordinary circumstances [exist] in which ... irreparable injury" to the litigant's ability to vindicate the constitutional claim is demonstrated. Younger,
In Sullivan, we concluded that extraordinary circumstances were present that warranted immediate federal court intervention. That case concerned recovering alcoholics who sought declaratory and injunctive relief--predicated upon claims of constitutional deprivation--from the city of Pittsburgh's decision to close alcoholic treatment centers. The district court had made a factual finding that "if recovering alcoholics at the Center were improperly forced from the center and into a community which cannot provide treatment for their abuse, these alcoholics" might suffer severe injury or death as a result. Sullivan,
[a] wrongful deprivation by the City of Pittsburgh in this case would threaten not only to do harm to appellees' present enjoyment of rights to Equal Protection, Due Process and equal treatment under the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, but to eliminate the possibility of appellees' enjoyment or exercise of any federal constitutional or statutory rights in the future.
Id. (emphasis added). In the present cases, on the records before us, we cannot say with certainty that the same potential for irreparable injury to the appellees' right to vindicate their federal claims exist, and thus that "extraordinary circumstances" are present that compel immediate federal intervention. Accordingly, we will not affirm the district court's rationale in USAA that irreparable harm mandated disregard for Younger. In light of our holding that abstention was nonetheless proper, however, we will uphold the district court's judgment.
In pertinent part, that provision states that the "Constitution, and the Laws of the United States which shall be made in Pursuant thereof ... shall be the supreme Law of the Land ..." U.S. Const. Art. VI cl. 2. See also Gibbons v. Ogden,
In pertinent part, that section provides that
referral of insurance business of an association's members to an insurance agency owned by one or more officers or directors of the association, or by one or more persons having the power to direct its management, constitutes usurpation of the association's corporate opportunity to engage in the insurance business.
C.F.R. Sec. 555.17(b) (1988)
In pertinent part, that clause provides that "Congress shall have Power ... [t]o regulate Commerce ... among the several states." U.S. Const. art. 1 Sec. 8, cl. 3
In light of its conclusion that USAA's creation of a Bank in Texas was not preempted by federal law because it did not fall within the scope of 1730a(m), the district court granted summary judgment to USAA on the grounds that enforcement of Sec. 641 against that insurer violated the Commerce Clause.
In Ford, the district court initially did not reach the merits of this constitutional issue. It's decision held only that federal law preempted application of Sec. 641 to the acquisition of the failing Ohio S & L's and the Pennsylvania and Colorado branches. Subsequent to that decision, the Commissioner moved for amendment of the district court's order because it did not address Ford's acquisition of FNFC and FNB in 1985, which the commissioner asserted was a violation of Sec. 641. The Commissioner contended that application of Sec. 641 was not preempted because those institutions had not been purchased pursuant to the failed S & L provision of federal law. In response to that motion the district court concluded that, although Sec. 1730a did not preempt the application of Sec. 641 to FNFC and FNB, "enforcement of section 641 on insurance companies that own banking affiliates that do not operate in Pennsylvania is invalid as a violation of the commerce clause of the Constitution." Ford Motor Co. v. Insurance Commissioner, No. 87-3241 (Supplemental Memorandum) slip op. at 5,
We do not reach the inquiry of whether Sec. 641 is entitled to the second standard of review set forth in Norfolk Southern. Although Pennsylvania has a significant interest in the regulation of its insurance industry, its concern is not "pecularily local" such that it invokes this most differential standard of review
Our holding in these cases is consonant with the Supreme Court's guidance in this area. The Court has previously noted that where regulations "affect alike shippers in interstate and intrastate commerce in large numbers within as well as without[,] the state is a safeguard against their abuse." South Carolina State Highway Dep't v. Barnwell Bros.,
One possible source of this rationale is the famous "footnote 4" of Carolene Products. See United States v. Carolene Products Co.,
[w]hen states adopt economic regulations that affect out-of-state interests, those out-of-state interests are likely to be shortchanged because they are not represented in the political process that produces the regulations. But everyone who is affected ought to be represented. Therefore we have judicial review of state economic regulation that affects out-of-state interests in order to give those interests "virtual representation."
Regan, The Supreme Court and State Protectionism: Making Sense of the Dormant Commerce Clause, 84 Mich.L.Rev. 1091, 1160 (1986). The value of this analytical approach is debated. Compare id. (asserting that implicit in such an approach is the reliance upon balancing state and federal interests, and arguing that such an approach should be replaced by inquiry of the state legislature's motivation) with Tushnet, Rethinking the Dormant Commerce Clause, 79 Wis.L.Rev. 125 (1979) (discussing a political theory of judicial review in dormant commerce clause cases in which the focus of concern is the adequacy of the legislature to protect important interests). This rationale however, is firmly entrenched in our jurisprudence, see, e.g., Minnesota v. Clover Leaf Creamery Co.,
We are not unaware that, even a statute that is facially indiscriminate may nonetheless be determined to be violative of the Commerce Clause because it has a discriminatory effect. Nothing in the records of the present cases, or in the decisions of the district courts, however, indicates that enforcement of Sec. 641 will have the effect of favoring in-state interests over out-of-state interests
Finally, USAA and Ford argue that heightened scrutiny of Sec. 641 is proper because of the significant need for uniformity in the regulation in this area. Their argument on this point appears, essentially, to be that the prohibition of a "financially sound" institution from eligibility to be a purchaser of a S & L conflicts with the federal policy. They argue that, pursuant to Southern Pacific, the Commerce Clause should render the statute unconstitutional because the "federal government has a compelling interest 'in the uniformity of regulation' in connection with the ownership, acquisition and control of federally insured thrift institutions." Appellee (Ford) Brief at 30 (quoting Southern Pacific,
In our view, the appellees' assertions on this point are merely the preemption argument dressed in different clothing. See Rice,
