14 Philippine American Life Insurance Company V Ansaldo
14 Philippine American Life Insurance Company V Ansaldo
14 Philippine American Life Insurance Company V Ansaldo
FACTS:
Petitioner’s contention:
ISSUE:
Whether or not the resolution of the legality of the Contract of Agency falls within the
jurisdiction of the Insurance Commissioner.
RULING:
Since the contract of agency entered into between Philamlife and its agents is
not included within the meaning of an insurance business, Section 2 of the Insurance
Code cannot be invoked to give jurisdiction over the same to the Insurance
Commissioner. Expressio unius est exclusio alterius.
With regard to private respondent's contention that the quasi-judicial power of the
Insurance Commissioner under Section 416 of the Insurance Code applies in his case,
we likewise rule in the negative. Section 416 of the Code in pertinent part, provides:
“The Commissioner shall have the power to adjudicate claims and complaints involving
any loss, damage or liability for which an insurer may be answerable under any kind of
policy or contract of insurance, or for which such insurer may be liable under a contract
of suretyship, or for which a reinsurer may be used under any contract or reinsurance it
may have entered into, or for which a mutual benefit association may be held liable
under the membership certificates it has issued to its members, where the amount of
any such loss, damage or liability, excluding interest, costs and attorney's fees, being
claimed or sued upon any kind of insurance, bond, reinsurance contract, or membership
certificate does not exceed in any single claim one hundred thousand pesos.”
A reading of the said section shows that the quasi-judicial power of the Insurance
Commissioner is limited by law "to claims and complaints involving any loss, damage or
liability for which an insurer may be answerable under any kind of policy or contract of
insurance, . . ." Hence, this power does not cover the relationship affecting the
insurance company and its agents but is limited to adjudicating claims and
complaints filed by the insured against the insurance company. The Insurance
Code does not have provisions governing the relations between insurance
companies and their agents. It follows that the Insurance Commissioner cannot,
in the exercise of its quasi-judicial powers, assume jurisdiction over
controversies between the insurance companies and their agents.
Under the first category, the relationship between the insurance company
and its agents is governed by the Contract of Employment and the provisions of
the Labor Code, while under the second category, the same is governed by the
Contract of Agency and the provisions of the Civil Code on the Agency. Disputes
involving the latter are cognizable by the regular courts.