14 Philippine American Life Insurance Company V Ansaldo

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Jurisdiction of the Insurance Commission; Administrative and Adjudicatory Powers

Philippine American Life Insurance Company v. Hon. Armando Ansaldo

G.R. No. 76452 July 26, 1994

FACTS:

Respondent Ramon M. Paterno filed a letter of complaint against respondent


Commissioner, alleging certain problems encountered by agents, supervisors,
managers and public consumers of the Philippine American Life Insurance Company
(Philamlife) as a result of certain practices by said company. Respondent Commissioner
requested petitioner Rodrigo de los Reyes, in his capacity as Philamlife's president, to
comment on respondent Paterno's letter. Respondent Commissioner received a letter
from Paterno maintaining that his letter-complaint was sufficient in form and substance,
and requested that a hearing thereon be conducted. Petitioner De los Reyes, in his
letter to respondent Commissioner, reiterated his claim that Paterno’s letter did not
supply the information he needed to enable him to answer the letter-complaint.

Subsequently, a hearing on the letter-complaint was held by respondent


Commissioner on the validity of the Contract of Agency complained of by Paterno.
Paterno was required by respondent Commissioner to specify the provisions of the
agency contract which he claimed to be illegal. Petitioner De los Reyes submitted an
Answer, stating that since the Commission's quasi-judicial power was being
invoked with regard to the complaint, Paterno must file a verified formal
complaint before any further proceedings. Paterno asked for the resumption of the
hearings on his complaint. Manuel Ortega, Philamlife's Senior Assistant Vice-President
and Executive Assistant to the President, asked that respondent Commission first rule
on the questions of the jurisdiction of the Insurance Commissioner over the subject
matter of the letters-complaint and the legal standing of private respondent.

 Petitioner’s contention:

Private respondent contends that the Insurance Commissioner has jurisdiction to


take cognizance of the complaint in the exercise of its quasi-judicial powers. The
Solicitor General, upholding the jurisdiction of the Insurance Commissioner, claims that
under Sections 414 and 415 of the Insurance Code, the Commissioner has authority to
nullify the alleged illegal provisions of the Contract of Agency.

ISSUE:
Whether or not the resolution of the legality of the Contract of Agency falls within the
jurisdiction of the Insurance Commissioner.

RULING:

Court grants the petition.

The general regulatory authority of the Insurance Commissioner is described in


Section 414 of the Insurance Code, “The Insurance Commissioner shall have the duty
to see that all laws relating to insurance, insurance companies and other insurance
matters, mutual benefit associations and trusts for charitable uses are faithfully
executed and to perform the duties imposed upon him by this Code, . . . On the other
hand, Section 415 provides: “In addition to the administrative sanctions provided
elsewhere in this Code, the Insurance Commissioner is hereby authorized, at his
discretion, to impose upon insurance companies, their directors and/or officers and/or
agents, for any willful failure or refusal to comply with, or violation of any provision of
this Code, or any order, instruction, regulation or ruling of the Insurance Commissioner,
or any commission of irregularities, and/or conducting business in an unsafe and
unsound manner as may be determined by the the Insurance Commissioner, the
following: (a) fines not in excess of five hundred pesos a day; and (b) suspension, or
after due hearing, removal of directors and/or officers and/or agents.”

A plain reading of the above-quoted provisions show that the Insurance


Commissioner has the authority to regulate the business of insurance - The term "doing
an insurance business" or "transacting an insurance business," within the meaning of
this Code, shall include
(a) making or proposing to make, as insurer, any insurance contract;
(b) making, or proposing to make, as surety, any contract of suretyship as a vocation
and not as merely incidental to any other legitimate business or activity of the surety; (c)
doing any kind of business, including a reinsurance business, specifically recognized as
constituting the doing of an insurance business within the meaning of this Code; (d)
doing or proposing to do any business in substance equivalent to any of the foregoing in
a manner designed to evade the provisions of this Code.

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.

In Great Pacific Life Assurance Corporation v. Judico and Investment Planning


Corporation of the Philippines v. Social Security Commission the Court ruled that that
an insurance company may have two classes of agents who sell its insurance policies:
(1) salaried employees who keep definite hours and work under the control and
supervision of the company; and (2) registered representatives, who work on
commission basis.

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.

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