Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion

c -. The Attorney General of Texas December 21, 1978 JOHN L. HILL Attorney General Honorable Jose A. Gamez Opinion No. H-- 13 6 6 Brooks County Attorney P. 0. Box 557 Re: Whether counties may pur- Falfurrias, Texas 78355 chase Nonassessable Reciprocal Interinsurance Contracts. Dear Mr. Gamer,: You ask whether a county may become a member of a reciprocal interinsurance exchange under chapter 19 of the Insurance Code. You state that the county would like to purchase a nonassessable insurance contract from a reciprocal, resulting in financial savings to the county. A reciprocal is a method of insurance whereby members of the exchange, called subscribers, agree through an attorney in fact to insure each other against designated risks. The subscribers are both the insured and the insurer. V.T.C.S. arts. 19.01- 19.12; Couch on Insurance 2d, SS 18.ll - 18.37. Article 19.09 provides that “[alny corporation, public, private or municipal, . . . shall . . . have full power and authority to exchange insurance contracts of the kind and character herein mentioned.” In previous cpinions we have said that public bodies may not purchase assessable insurance coverage because this would amount to a lending of credit in contravention of article 3, section 52 of the Texas Constitution. Attorney General Opinions H-755 (1975); H-365 (1974). This section provides that no county has authority to “lend its credit or to grant public money or thing of value in aid of, or to any individual, association or corporation whatsoever.” We believe that an insurance reciprocal is an association within this provision. Highway Insurance Underwriters v. Reed, 221 S.W.2d 925 (Tex. Civ. App. -Austin 1949, no writ) (reciprocal is association for venue purposes). Article 19.03(3) provides that subscribers at such exchange may provide by agree- ment that the premium or premium deposit specified in the policy contract on all forms of insurance except life shall constitute their entire liability through the exchange if the free surplus of such exchange is equal to the minimum capital stock and minimum surplus required of a stock company transacting the same p. 5120 Honorable Jose A. Gamez - Page 2 (H-1300) kinds of business. . . . [Tlhe power of attorney or other authority executed by the subscribers at any such exchange shall provide that such subscribers at such exchange shall be liable, in addition to the premium or premium deposit specified in the policy contract, to a contingent liability equal in amount to one (1) additional annual premium or premium deposit. Such last mentioned provision may be eliminated if the free surplus of such exchange is equal to the minimum capital stock and minimum surplus required of a stock company transacting the same kinds of business. . . . In order for the policy to be nonassessable, the surplus of the reciprocal must be as specified in article 19.03 when the policy is issued. Cf. Ins. Code art. 15.11 (mutual company may issue policies without contingent liability only if it possesses a minimum surplus). If the reciprocal does not have the minimum surplus, we believe that the subscriber would be liable for the additional premium assessment despite a description of the policy as “nonassessable.” Taggart v. George B. Booker eco., 28 A.2d 690 (Supt. Ct. Del. 1942). The mere possibility of assessment is an unconstitutional lending of credit. City of Tyler v. Texas Employers’ insurance 3, 288 S.W. 409 (Tex. 1926). If, however, the reciprocal has the minimum surplus a county may enter into a reciprocal interinsurance exchange on a nonassessable basis as there would be no lending of its credit in violation of article 3, section 52 and article 11, section 3 of the Texas Constitution. Article 3, section 52 also prohibits a county from becoming a stockholder in a corporation, association or company. Similarly, article 2, section 3 provides that :no county, city, or other municipal corporation shall hereafter become a subscriber to the capital of any private corporation or association. . . .‘I The question then is whether subscription to a reciprocal insurance exchange falls within this stockholder prohibition. Section 52 was construed to preclude a school district from acquiring fire insurance from a mutual company because the district would therebv become a stockholder in the comoanv with votine rixhts. Lewis v. lnd. Sch. D&.~of City of Austin, 161S.W.2d 450 [Tex. 1942); see &o-% of Tyler v. Texas Employers’ Insurance Ass’n, w. The purposethese provisions was to prevent public bodies from extending public bodies from extending public funds or credit to private entities through the purchase of capital stock. We believe that there is no purchase of stock or subscription to capital when a subscriber pays a premium to a reciprocal exchange for insurance coverage. Therefore, article 3, section 52 is not violated. But see 1937 Attorney General Opinions, bk. 375, p. 568 (semble). SUMMARY A county may purchase a nonassessable policy from a reciprocal insurance exchange. P- 5121 Honorable Jose A. Gamez - Page 3 (B-13013) Attorney General of Texas APPROVED: C. ROBERT HEATH, Chairman Opinion Committee p. 5122