This is an antitrust action instituted by Ohio AFL-CIO, The United Autoworkers of Ohio, and Ira Thompson as a licensed automobile operator in Ohio carrying automobile liability insurance, against the Insurance Rating Board (IRB), one of its members, United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company (USF&G), and Eugene Brown, the Ohio Superintendent of Insurance, alleging violations of the Sherman Antitrust Act by a combination and conspiracy in the fixing of prices of automobile insurance premiums. It is alleged that rate increases were instituted by the IRB in Ohio in 1965, 1966 and 1968 on a statewide average for automobile liability insurance of 4.47%, 13.5% and for automobile liability and property damage of 7.9% respectively, without any state regulation.
The complaint seeks injunctive relief against the charging of rates other than the rates made effective in November 1966, against the acceptance of any further filing for rate increases during the pendency of the action, and against any combination or conspiracy to restrain trade or to monopolize trade and commerce in violation of the Sherman Antitrust Act. There is also a claim for treble damages and other statutory benefits.
There are general allegations in the complaint to the effect that the IRB and its predecessors and its members and subscribers acting in concert with various departments of insurance among the several states have violated and are now violating the Sherman Antitrust Act by unlawfully contracting, combining and conspiring to restrain trade in interstate commerce with respect to the business of automobile casualty insurance and by unlawfully contracting, combining and conspiring to control, regulate and dictate terms and fix the prices upon which automobile liability and collision insurance shall be sold throughout Ohio and other states.
The district court in its opinion held that the Ohio statutory scheme for regulating the business of insurance constituted regulation within the meaning of 15 U.S.C. Sec. 1012(b), providing that the antitrust laws “shall be applicable to the business of insurance to the extent that such business is not regulated by State law.” Answering the plaintiffs’ argument that the Ohio scheme of regulation was not effective and therefore could not be deemed to constitute the kind of regulation contemplated by the McCarran Act, the district court stated: “A court is not empowered to make a policy judgment as to the type of regulation which is desirable. The Ohio legislature has adopted a statutory scheme which sets standards for insurance rates. This court is not concerned with the wisdom of the standards but with the limited question of whether or not the legislation is regulation under the McCarran Act.”
Citing Federal Trade Commission v. National Casualty Co.,
Upon consideration of the applicable Ohio statutes we conclude that the business of insurance in Ohio is “regulated” to the extent contemplated by the McCarran Act.
In Prudential Insurance Co. v. Benjamin,
This Court is of the opinion that a State regulates the business of insurance within the meaning of § 1012(b) when a State statute generally proscribes (F.T.C. v. National Cas. Co., 1958,357 U.S. 560 ,78 S.Ct. 1260 ,2 L.Ed.2d 1540 ) or permits or authorizes certain conduct on the part of the insurance companies. In F.T.C. v. National Cas. Co., supra, the Court held that there was State regulation within the meaning of § 1012(b) when a State act generally prohibited “certain standards of conduct.”357 U.S. at page 564 ,78 S.Ct. at page 1262 . From the above ease it would seem to follow that if a state has generally authorized or permitted certain standards of conduct, it is regulating the business of insurance under the Mc-Carran Act.
Examining the applicable Ohio statutes, we find that the state has adopted a comprehensive scheme for the regulation of automobile liability and property damage insurance, although concededly its scheme might not be as extensive or as stringent as some of the other states. The conclusory statements of the complaint in this case that Ohio has not regulated this type of insurance business or that it has not effectively done so are, in our view, untenable.
The McCarran Act does not define the term “regulation” and no satis
3937.05(A) (4). Although cooperation among rating organizations or among rating organizations and insurers in ratemaking is expressly authorized, the superintendent may review such cooperative activities and, after hearing, direct the discontinuance of any activity which he feels to be unfair, unreasonable or otherwise inconsistent with statutory regulations. 3937.05(D). Extensive provisions are made to protect the right of members and subscribers of rating organizations relative to reasonableness of activities by the rating organization affecting the member or subscriber and providing for appeals to the superintendent. Secs. 3937.05(B); 3937.07. Both rating organizations and insurers making their own rates are required to furnish to any insured affected by a rate made by it any pertinent information as to such rate and to grant a hearing to such insured if requested. The decision of the rating organization as to its rating system is subject to appeal to the superintendent. 3937.08. At least once in every five years rating organizations are required to be examined, 3937.11, and the officers, agents and employees of the organization may be examined at any time and shall exhibit all books, records, accounts, documents, or agreements governing its method of operation. Other provisions regulate different aspects of automobile insurance in Ohio, but we think that the provisions cited demonstrate beyond doubt that the business of insurance in Ohio is comprehensively and effectively “regulated” so as to qualify such business for the McCarran Act exemption.
Appellants point to certain alleged deficiencies in the Ohio scheme of regulation. For example, it is argued that under the Ohio statutes each filing becomes effective immediately and is deemed to comply with the law unless disapproved by the superintendent, with the result that the rating bureau may put a higher rate into effect without prior approval by the state department of insurance. It is pointed out that the Ohio statutes further provide that after filing the rate remains in effect until an appeal is finally adjudicated. Moreover, if the rates filed are disapproved by the superintendent, the order of disapproval does not affect any policy made prior to the expiration date specified in the superintendent’s order. A further alleged defect is the apparent provisions that no order or decision of the superintendent is effective until after final action or decision by the court on judicial review. If it should happen that the highest court should hold that such rate is excessive, the insurance companies are allowed to retain the excessive amount received.
An ideal type of regulation may possibly envision the removal of the alleged deficiencies in the Ohio statutes referred to by the appellant. Yet the question before us is not whether the Ohio method of regulation compares favorably with the regulations of other states, or whether it is an ideal manner in which to regulate the business of insurance. We are confident that Congress in enacting the McCarran Act did not intend to impose a uniform standard of regulation upon all of the states. It is our view that the congressional intent was to leave to the judgment of each state the specifics of regulation which it should see fit to adopt. Suffice it to say at this point that we are confident that the comprehensive plan adopted by Ohio is fully adequate to meet the requirements of regulation contemplated by the McCar-ran Act.
It is interesting to note that since the passage of the McCarran Act a number of actions have been filed in which the McCarran Act exemption has been examined in terms of state regulation of the business of insurance. Yet in no case has it been decided that the exemption was inapplicable because of a failure of state regulation. In this connection, see North Little Rock Transportation Co., Inc. v. Casualty Reciprocal Ex-
We find no support for the appellants’ argument that the court in this case should inquire into the question as to whether the statutes of Ohio have been effectively enforced in accordance with their terms. As pointed out in the Lynch case, supra, there is nothing in the language of the McCarran Act or in its legislative history to support the thesis that the Act does not apply when the state’s scheme of regulation has not been effectively enforced. The Senate Sub-Committee reviewing the intention of the McCarran Act has so interpreted the decision in the National Casualty case in a report which states in part as follows. (Report of the Senate SubCommittee on Anti-Trust and Monopoly, “The Insurance Industry — Aviation, Marine and State Regulation,” Rep.No.1834, 86th Cong., 2d Sess. (1960) at p. 5):
It now seems evident from this Supreme Court decision that the McCar-ran Act language, ‘to the extent that such business is not regulated by State law,’ restricts Federal authority regardless of whether the States are actively enforcing their regulations. If the States have enacted regulatory statutes, capable of being enforced within their borders, the Federal antitrust laws would apparently not apply. In such cases, no proof would apparently be entertained as to the extent to which the law had been administratively enforced. It also seems doubtful the Court would permit a questioning as to the quality of the State regulatory law.
Moreover in the present case, while the appellants insisted in their appellate brief and in oral argument that the Ohio scheme is a mere “pretense” and “sham”, no such language is employed in the complaint. The nearest thing to an allegation that the Ohio scheme was not enforced is the statement in the complaint that insurance rate increases have never been challenged in Ohio by the Department of Insurance and that the department does not employ an actuary so as to be able to examine rate filings. These statements do not necessarily establish a policy of non-enforcement in Ohio and certainly are insufficient to show that the regulation of insurance in that state is a mere “sham” or “pretense.” 2 It is true that the complaint contains a number of conclusory statements to the effect that the appellees are allowed to control insurance rates in Ohio without state regulation or with no regulation. These conclusions are not only in conflict with the elaborate statutory scheme prescribed by Ohio law, but in any event are not sufficient on a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim to develop a factual issue which the appellees are required to meet.
As we have concluded that the State of Ohio has regulated the business of automobile insurance within the meaning of the McCarran Act exemption, it follows that the district judge was correct in granting the motion to dismiss the complaint. It then became unnecessary for him to consider the motion for summary judgment for, as we have pointed out, the pertinent question before him on the motion to dismiss was the existence in Ohio of a statutory scheme of regulation sufficient to satisfy the McCarran Act and not how the scheme worked in actual practice.
Affirmed.
Notes
. 15 U.S.C. Sec. 1012(a) provides that “the business of insurance, and every person engaged therein, shall be subject to the laws of the several States which relate to the regulation or taxation of such business.” Sec. 1012(b), commonly referred to as the McCarran Act, provides in pertinent part that various antitrust statutes shall be applicable to the business of insurance “to the extent that such business is not regulated by State laws.”
. Cf. Federal Trade Commission v. National Casualty Co.,
