Lead Opinion
Opinion by
We are required to decide if the. Insurance Commissioner exceeded his statutory authority in disapproving the use of sex as a classification basis for automobile insurance rate differentials, under the Casualty and Surety Rate Regulatory Act of 1947 (Rate Act), Act of June 11, 1947, P.L. 538, 40 P.S. §§1181-1199.
After the Insurance Department had earlier approved a rate classification plan filed on behalf of Hartford Accident and Indemnity Company, Philip V. Mattes, the intervening appellee here, filed a complaint under Section 5(b) of the Rate Act, 40 P.S. § 1185(b), questioning the validity of charging him, a 26-year old male, a $360 premium, while charging a female $212, with no difference other than gender being involved. Mattes’ position was that the sex-based distinction violates his rights under the laws and the Constitution of the Commonwealth, as well as under the United States Constitution.
Following the receipt of evidence by a hearing examiner, Insurance Commissioner Harvey Bartle issued an order disapproving Hartford’s rating plan, with an effective date of April 17, 1981, later extended to April 17, 1982. The Commissioner’s adjudication followed Section 3 of the Rate Act, 40 P.S. §1183, in noting that, under subsection 3(a), due consideration must be given, not only to various actuarial and underwriting factors, but also to “all other relevant factors within
The Commissioner’s adjudication relied in part on this court’s decision in Capital Blue Cross v. Insurance Department,
Notably, in that case we upheld the determination that the rate filing was “inequitable” on a basis much more general than the one present here, where the sex-based distinction has been found to be “unfairly discriminatory” in the words of the Rate Act construed against the background of the Pennsylvania ERA. That provision of the Pennsylvania Constitution must be viewed as a' powerful influence in statutory construction, as the Pennsylvania Supreme Court did in George v. George,
*254 The thrust of the Equal Rights Amendment is to insure equality of rights under the law and to eliminate sex as a basis for distinction. The sex of citizens of this Commonwealth is no longer a permissible factor in the determination of their legal rights and legal responsibilities. The law will not impose different benefits or different burdens upon the members of a society based , on the fact that they may be man or woman.
Equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania because of the sex of the individual. Pa. Const, art. I, §28.
Although the foregoing case clearly involved “state action,” we agree with the Commissioner that there is here no necessity for categorizing insurance companies’ functions or the rate system or the Commissioner’s action as state action, in order to strike down the gender classification as unconstitutional, because we are not presently called upon to determine whether or not there is an abiding unconstitutionality in the rate filing itself, but only whether the Commissioner. exceeded his statutory authority in his affirmative application of its express prohibition of “unfairly discriminatory” rates as the basis for his administrative proscription of sex as a factor.
In this case, the Commissioner’s positive exercise of his authority under the statute, to disapprove rating schemes, is the key distinction between the present situation and that faced by the Pennsylvania Superior Court in Murphy v. Harleysville Mutual Insurance Co.,
Capital Blue Cross, by holding that actuarial soundness cannot be the sole test of validity of a rate,
Insurance Department v. Philadelphia,
"Why should not the risk be spread equally among all males and females in otherwise like circumstances, since admittedly some females also drive while inebriated as well as in heavy traffic?
Indeed, the essential nature of the matter under review is that the Commissioner has exercised his legislatively conferred function of evaluating the rating system by which risks are spread.
Hartford, as its second major issue, argues that the Commissioner exceeded his statutory authority because a regulation, 31 Pa. Code §145.1, provides, in connection with the implementation of the Unfair Insurance Practices Act (UIPA), Act of July 22, 1974, P.L. 589, 40 P.S. §§1171.1-1171.15, that unfair sex discrimination in terms or conditions of insurance is prohibited, but adds:
This Chapter does not prohibit insurers from differentiating in premiums rates between sexes where there is sound actuarial justification.
However, it is clear that the UIPA, and therefore the above regulation which implements it, are distinct and apart from the ratemaking process covered by the Bate Act because the UIPA is intended “to regulate trade practices,” 40 P.S. §1171.2, in that its relationship to “underwriting standards and practices” is expressly stated as not including the promulgation of rates under the Bate Act, 40 P.S. §1171.5(a) (7) (iii). In such context, the regulation, as its words indicate, is not an authorization to use sex classification based on actuarial justification, but is phrased merely as not being a prohibition because it does not -deal with that subject matter.
The Commissioner’s expertise is also important in providing reassurance against Hartford’s claim that
In summary, the courts are not in a position to dispute the Commissioner’s conclusion that, “the use of sex as a rating classification is not a necessary pillar to the automobile insurance system.”
For these reasons, we decide that the Commissioner did not exceed his statutory authority but instead considered the actuarial factors and also, as required by Section 3(a) “all other relevant factors within and outside the Commonwealth,” in determining that the sex-based auto insurance rate classification was “inherently unfairly discriminatory” because it failed to treat “equals equally.”
Order
Now, March 10, 1982, the order of the Insurance Commissioner at his Docket No. R78-7-2, dated April 17, 1980, is affirmed.,
Notes
In addition to the thorough briefs filed on behalf of the original and intervening parties, we have had the benefit of equally thorough briefs of amici curiae, Women’s Law Project, NOW Legal Defense and Education Fund, American Insurance Association, Insurance Federation of Pennsylvania, and Nationwide Insurance Companies. Because of our disposition of the case, we do not reach the consititutional questions raised by Complainant Mattes and covered, inter alia, by the briefs of amici.
The full wording of subsection (a) is:
All rates shall be made in accordance with the following provisions:
(a) Due consideration shall be given to past and prospective loss experience within and outside this Commonwealth, to physical hazards, to safety and loss prevention factors, to underwriting practice and judgment to the extent appropriate, to catastrophe hazards, if any, to a reasonable margin for underwriting profit and contingencies, to dividends, savings or unabsorbed premium deposits allowed or returned by insurers to their policyholders, members or subscribers, to past and prospective expenses both country wide and those specially applicable to this Commonwealth, and to all other relevant factors within and outside this Commonwealth.
The Commissioner’s adjudication here suggested that, even if we assumed the existence of a purely actuarial basis for insurance rate classification based upon racial or nationality groupings, the statistical justification would not suffice legally. Although race and nationality categorizations have the special status of being suspect classifications, and the according of such status to gender remains in dispute, the point illustrates that actuarial justification cannot be regarded as unlimited.
Dissenting Opinion
Dissenting Opinion by
Today’s majority decision unduly extends the Insurancé Commissioner’s authority. The Commissioner is now given judicial imprimatur to impress his social theory upon the insurance rate review process.
It is axiomatic that insurance is an evolved plan with risk distribution as its primary characteristic.
Tbe Legislature recognized tbe importance of predictability and objectivity in tbe rate-making process. Section 3(a) of tbe Rate Act enumerates several factors, all of which can be analyzed with a high degree of objectivity, that tbe Commissioner must consider in reviewing rate proposals. Although tbe Commissioner is given tbe authority to consider “all other relevant factors within and outside tbe Commonwealth,” tbe Legislature must bave meant all other factors which can be subject to the same degree of objective scrutiny.
Tbe majority decision implicitly authorizes tbe Commissioner to inject bis own philosophical views into tbe rate review process; even though tbe source of these views (and consequently tbe views themselves) may change at least as often as tbe Commonwealth’s executive branch of government. Our late President Judge Bowman, dissenting in Capital Blue Cross v. Insurance Department,
I concur with tbe majority that due deference must be given to tbe Commissioner’s judgment. He is presumed to be a specialist in tbe insurance field (although not conclusively so merely because of bis
