Consumer Watchdog: Insurance Commissioner Cannot Force State Farm to Pay Refunds for Overcharges, San Diego Court Says
Rejecting the express language, purposes and intent of voter-approved Proposition 103 – and two previous decisions by the
Also at stake as a result of this decision is an estimated
The court also held that when determining whether to approve a request by
"Californians passed Proposition 103 to protect themselves against arbitrary rates and discriminatory practices by requiring insurance companies to keep rates and premiums fair at all times or else be held accountable by the Insurance Commissioner or in the courts," said
Decision Undermines Critical Proposition 103's Protections Against Insurance Company Profiteering
Under Proposition 103, enacted by
In 2014,
The court decision addresses two of
Refund authority:
Consumer Watchdog and the Commissioner pointed out that
The Court of Appeal rejected these arguments. It imported into Proposition 103 a "rule against retroactive rates" that effectively repeals the voters' explicit directions and bars the Commissioner from requiring refunds. Consumer Watchdog said that the court's decision would create incentives for insurance companies to boost insurance rates unlawfully.
Investment Income: Insurance companies make a large portion of their profits by investing the premiums consumers pay, and the regulations that govern insurance rates under Proposition 103 look at the insurer's entire investment income. The Commissioner and Consumer Watchdog argued that the formula protects Californians against attempts by an insurance company to hide its investment income, that the
But the
Court Says Voters Intended to Protect Insurance Companies
Consumer Watchdog said that the court's decision adopted the insurance industry's argument that the voters intended Proposition 103 to protect insurance companies. The court asserted that Proposition 103's "focus" was "on fairness to both consumers and insurers," and said, "We also are not persuaded by CW's argument that '[f]orcing consumers to pay excessive rates would frustrate the purpose of protecting consumers from arbitrary insurance rates.'" The court also rejected the argument made by Consumer Watchdog and the Commissioner that allowing companies like
Consumer Watchdog objected strongly to the court's interpretation of Proposition 103: "The voters did not pass Proposition 103 to protect the insurance companies. They have enough money and lawyers to protect themselves. The text of the law makes clear its sole focus is to protect consumers against profiteering, discrimination, reckless insurance industry behavior and anything else that might harm consumers. The insurance industry would not have spent
Background on Proposition 103
Proposition 103 was approved by
The measure:
• Mandated an immediate 20% rate rollback and refund;
• Regulates auto, home and business insurance rates by requiring public disclosure and prior approval of rate changes;
• Requires that auto premiums must be based primarily on a motorist's driving safety record rather than zip code;
• Applies California's consumer protection, civil rights and antitrust laws to the insurance industry;
• Authorizes consumers to challenge insurance company violations of the law through civil suits or an administrative hearings process; and,
• Made the insurance commissioner an elected position.
Insurance companies refunded over
Read Consumer Watchdog's legal briefs before the Court of Appeal here.
The Court of Appeal's decision can be found here: https://www.courts.ca.gov/opinions-slip.htm
Read Consumer Watchdog's analysis of how insurance companies overcharged
Read more about Proposition 103: https://www.consumerwatchdog.org/prop-103-california-insurance-reform
View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/consumer-watchdog-insurance-commissioner-cannot-force-state-farm-to-pay-refunds-for-overcharges-san-diego-court-says-301414774.html
SOURCE Consumer Watchdog



What Newlyweds Need to Know About Life Insurance
Alex Murdaugh’s Assets Frozen, To Be Managed By Court-Appointed Receiver
Advisor News
- The best way to use a tax refund? Create a holistic plan
- CFP Board appoints K. Dane Snowden as CEO
- TIAA unveils ‘policy roadmap’ to boost retirement readiness
- 2026 may bring higher volatility, slower GDP growth, experts say
- Why affluent clients underuse advisor services and how to close the gap
More Advisor NewsAnnuity News
- Pinnacle Financial Services Launches New Agent Website, Elevating the Digital Experience for Independent Agents Nationwide
- Insurer Offers First Fixed Indexed Annuity with Bitcoin
- Assured Guaranty Enters Annuity Reinsurance Market
- Ameritas: FINRA settlement precludes new lawsuit over annuity sales
- Guaranty Income Life Marks 100th Anniversary
More Annuity NewsHealth/Employee Benefits News
- Research from Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine Yields New Findings on Managed Care (Systematic Review of Managed Care Medicaid Outcomes Versus Fee-for-Service Medicaid Outcomes for Youth in Foster Care): Managed Care
- Researchers from University of Alabama Report Details of New Studies and Findings in the Area of Managed Care (Nursing leadership in Housing First implementation: A comparative analysis of care coordination approaches across four U.S. states): Managed Care
- Studies from Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health in the Area of Mental Health Diseases and Conditions Described (Mental health care use after leaving Medicare Advantage for traditional Medicare): Mental Health Diseases and Conditions
- New Findings from Robert L. Phillips and Co-Authors in the Area of Health and Medicine Reported (Estimation of Mortality via the Neighborhood Atlas and Reproducible Area Deprivation Indices): Health and Medicine
- Far fewer people buy Obamacare coverage as insurance premiums spike
More Health/Employee Benefits NewsLife Insurance News