08-005624 Dallas National Insurance Company vs. Office Of Insurance Regulation
 Status: Closed
Recommended Order on Wednesday, February 3, 2010.


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Summary: A case of first impression as to Florida's insurance "fronting" prohibition. Explores the interrelationship of carriers, PEOs, and third party administrators.

1STATE OF FLORIDA

4DIVISION OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS

8DALLAS NATIONAL INSURANCE )

12COMPANY, )

14)

15Petitioner, )

17)

18vs. ) Case No. 08-5624

23)

24OFFICE OF INSURANCE REGULATION, )

29)

30Respondent. )

32)

33RECOMMENDED ORDER

35Upon due notice, a disputed-fact hearing was held in this

45case August 10, through 14, August 31, and September 1, 2009, in

57Tallahassee, Florida, before Ella Jane P. Davis, a duly-assigned

66Administrative Law Judge of the Division of Administrative

74Hearings.

75APPEARANCES

76For Petitioner: J. Riley Davis, Esquire

82Edward L. Kutter, Esquire

86Akerman Senterfitt, P.A.

89106 East College Avenue, Suite 1200

95Tallahassee, Florida 32301

98For Respondent: Elenita Gomez, Esquire

103Amanda Allen, Esquire

106Office of Insurance Regulation

110200 East Gaines Street, Room 612

116Tallahassee, Florida 32399

119STATEMENT OF THE ISSUE

123Whether, upon proof of eligibility, pursuant to Sections

131624.401 and 624.404, Florida Statutes, Petitioner may be granted

140a Certificate of Authority to transact business as a property

150and casualty insurer in the State of Florida.

158PRELIMINARY STATEMENT

160Petitioner was denied a certificate of authority by a

169letter dated September 17, 2008.

174The reasons given in the September 17, 2008, letter of

184denial all hinge on past methods of dealing by Petitioner

194corporation, its predecessors and affiliates, and Charles David

202Wood. It reads, in pertinent part, as follows:

2101. [After quoting Section 624.404(3)(a)]

215The Office has not found sufficient evidence

222in any documentation provided by your client

229with this application, in its past

235submission, or at the evidentiary hearing

241held at the Office on September 20, 2006

249that Dallas National’s sole owner and

255Chairman of the Board, Charles David Wood,

262Jr., is consistently competent and

267trustworthy. Further, not only does Charles

273David Wood, Jr. have a pattern of behavior

281which the Office finds untrustworthy, but

287there is “good reason to believe” he has

295acted in bad faith.

299By virtue of his sole ownership and position

307as Chairman of the Board, Charles David

314Wood, Jr. is the ultimate controlling person

321of Dallas National and maintains control

327over the affairs of Dallas National and its

335affiliates. His history and pattern of

341behavior contradicts regulatory compliance

345and trustworthiness, and the basis of our

352finding includes, but is not limited to the

360following:

361a.

362* * *

365Pursuant to audits performed by the Florida

372Division of Workers Compensation, Aspen

377Administrators, Inc. continues to not meet

383the statutory requirements for the timely

389payment of claims, causing the carrier to be

397in violation of Section 440.20(8)(b),

402Florida Statutes. This pattern of

407unsatisfactory performance in the day-to-day

412operational matters is a hazardous practice

418that is harmful to injured workers in this

426state.

427Pursuant to a recent audit performed by the

435Florida Division of Workers’ Compensation,

440AMS Staff Leasing admitted that it failed to

448report claims to its insurer and that the

456claims were handled by AMS Staff Leasing,

463not Aspen Administrators, Inc., the

468contracted claims adjuster. The failure of

474the employer (AMS Staff Leasing) to report

481to the insurer is a direct violation of

489Section 440.185(2), Florida Statutes, and

494the claims adjusting activity of AMS Staff

501Leasing without holding a license is a

508violation of Section 626.8696, Florida

513Statutes. Further, such activity by these

519entities that are controlled by Charles

525David Wood, Jr. results in skewed data for

533the purpose of rate making and may result in

542inadequate rates and inappropriate filings,

547pursuant to Section 627.091, Florida

552Statutes.

553b. The management of Dallas National, and

560in particular, Charles David Wood, Jr.,

566continues to operate in circumvention of

572state regulatory laws wherever contradictory

577with or inconvenient to its own business

584practices and objectives.

587AMS Staff Leasing is presently insured in

594Florida by Companion Property and Casualty

600Insurance company (“Companion”), which is

605domiciled in South Carolina and licensed in

612Florida. One hundred percent (100%) of the

619AMS Staff Leasing workers’ compensation

624business written by Companion is ceded back

631to Dallas National as reinsurer. This is a

639“fronting” transaction, in violation of

644Section 624.404(4), Florida Statutes, and is

650intended to circumvent Florida law requiring

656Dallas National to hold a valid Certificate

663of Authority to transact business in this

670state. This activity is a violation of

677Florida Statutes and is a representative

683example of how the Office perceives that

690Charles David Wood, Jr. and Dallas National

697continue to conduct business affairs.

702Several other such examples were cited in

709the Office’s letter dated December 1, 2006,

716which are further incorporated by reference

722herein.

723c. Documentation has been given to the

730Office by other regulatory agencies of the

737examinations of claims and underwriting

742practices by Dallas National and/or its

748affiliated third-party administrator, Aspen

752Administrators, Inc., which have continually

757produced unsatisfactory performance results.

761. . .

764d. While the Office acknowledges that

770Dallas National has shown that it appears to

778be in good financial standing at this time,

786it is rather the management decision-making

792practices that are of utmost concern to the

800Office.

801* * *

8042. The Office finds it necessary to restate

812from item number 1 of the Office’s letter

820dated December 1, 2006, and do so for

828purpose of the conclusion reached in the

835paragraph that follows:

838“Dallas National is a member of an insurance

846holding company system that is focused on a

854business model centered on personnel

859staffing related services, particularly

863staff leasing and professional employer

868organizations (“PEO”). The business

872relationships between Dallas National and

877the affiliated PEOs it insures are deemed by

885the Office to not be at “arms length,” to

895the detriment of Dallas National. There is

902an insufficient “firewall” between Dallas

907National, as insurer, and the affiliated PEO

914it insures. For example, Dallas National

920relies upon the PEO to perform certain

927underwriting, coding, loss control, auditing

932and other functions that should be performed

939and/or verified by the insurer. This lack

946of control is a material weakness in Dallas

954National’s business plan and is a hazardous

961business practice that could leave injured

967workers without full compensation for their

973injuries. Because the workers compensation

978line of business is ‘long-tailed’ by nature,

985the full effects of this lack of control may

994not be realized for decades and could very

1002well leave the insurer with insufficient

1008assets to satisfy all of its obligations to

1016injured workers. In a truly arms-length

1022transaction, it would be expected that the

1029PEO would perform most of these functions on

1037its own, but that the insurer would also

1045maintain these controls in a redundant

1051manner.”

1052* * *

1055The management of Dallas National has made

1062material misrepresentations in its

1066presentation and response to critical items

1072that lie at the heart of the issues raised

1081by the Office, leading the Office back to

1089Section 624.404(3)(a). (Bracketed material

1093supplied)

1094Petitioner timely requested a disputed-fact hearing.

1100On November 10, 2008, the cause was referred to the

1110Division of Administrative Hearings. The file of the Division

1119reflects all pleadings and Division notices and orders.

1127At final hearing, Petitioner presented the oral testimony

1135of Chris Nehls, Laura Wehrle, James Pickens, Charles David Wood,

1145Jr., William Reid, Ray Neff, and Robert Meyer, and had 12

1156exhibits admitted in evidence.

1160Respondent presented the oral testimony of Alison Barber,

1168Susan Bernard, Stephen Yon, Robin Westcott, Steve Szypula,

1176Joseph Boor, and Belinda Miller, and had nine exhibits admitted

1186in evidence. Three additional exhibits were proffered.

1193Five joint exhibits were also admitted in evidence.

1201The exhibits contain multiple pages and sub-parts.

1208An eleven-volume Transcript, totaling 1525 pages, was filed

1216on September 22, 2009.

1220Each party timely-filed its respective Proposed Recommended

1227Order on November 5, 2009, as provided for by the stipulated

1238extended timeframe and appropriate Order.

1243FINDINGS OF FACT

12461. Petitioner Dallas National Insurance Company (Dallas

1253National) is a Stock Insurance Company, domiciled in Texas, with

1263headquarters in Dallas, Texas. It writes predominantly small

1271business liability insurance and workers’ compensation

1277insurance, both of which fall in the property and casualty

1287classification of insurance, generally.

12912. Respondent Office of Insurance Regulation (OIR) is the

1300State Agency responsible for licensing and regulating insurance

1308in Florida. Absent a Florida license, Petitioner Dallas

1316National cannot legally write or sell insurance in this state.

13263. Dallas National is a successor in interest to Dallas

1336Fire Insurance Company (Dallas Fire) and California Indemnity

1344Insurance Company (California Indemnity).

13484. California Indemnity was previously licensed to do

1356business in Florida. Its license to do business in Florida was

1367revoked by OIR in 2006, while Dallas Fire and California

1377Indemnity were transitioning into Dallas National, as more fully

1386described infra .

13895. In 2006, Petitioner Dallas National filed an

1397application for a certificate of authority as a foreign property

1407and casualty insurer to write lines of workers' compensation and

1417employer’s liability insurance in Florida. That application was

1425denied on December 1, 2006. Petitioner reapplied for a Florida

1435license in 2008, and was denied by a letter from Respondent,

1446dated September 17, 2008. It is this letter and present

1456application and denial that are at issue herein. The

1465September 17, 2008, denial letter incorporated parts of the

1474earlier December 1, 2006, denial letter. ( See Preliminary

1483Statement).

14846. Dallas Fire was a property and casualty insurer

1493authorized to do business in Texas and Oklahoma, which was

1503acquired by Charles David Wood in July 2002.

15117. In December 2003, Dallas Fire, by consent of Mr. Wood

1522and its Board of Directors, was placed under administrative

1531supervision by the Texas Office of Insurance Regulation. By

1540mutual agreement, the Texas regulatory agency’s oversight was

1548not made public, and Mr. Wood continued to manage the company

1559through his own staff, while taking instruction and advice from

1569the Texas regulator. Texas lifted its oversight after

1577approximately 19 months. During this period of time, and for

1587years before and after, Betty Patterson was a Texas Deputy

1597Commissioner of Insurance.

16008. At about the same time in 2002, that Mr. Wood accepted

1612Texas’ regulatory oversight, a search was conducted and

1620Chris Nehls was ultimately selected as a replacement corporate

1629president for the company that ultimately became Dallas

1637National.

16389. Mr. Nehls continues as president of Dallas National and

1648has final responsibility for all operations, underwritings,

1655claims handling, profits and losses, accounting and finance, and

1664any of the operation and technical functions within the company.

1674He had oversight of Dallas National’s successive license

1682applications to OIR in 2006 and 2008.

168910. In 2005-2006, Mr. Wood, with approval by the Texas and

1700California insurance regulatory agencies, acquired California

1706Indemnity, a property and casualty insurer licensed in the State

1716of California and 30 other states.

172211. When purchased, California Indemnity had a number of

1731old regulatory actions pending against it by California’s

1739Department of Insurance. California’s insurance regulator’s

1745agreement/acquiescense in Mr. Wood’s purchase of California

1752Indemnity was conditioned on (1) Mr. Wood ’ s transferring

1762California Indemnity to Texas, where it would be merged with

1772Dallas Fire to become Dallas National; (2) Dallas National’s

1781removing the word “California” from its corporate name by

1790December 31, 2005; and (3) the re-domesticated company’s not

1799writing any insurance in California until California’s insurance

1807regulatory agency approved. This agreement has kept Dallas

1815National under California regulatory scrutiny since that time.

1823Dallas National continues to invite California to inspect its

1832offices, its books, and its business activities, but Dallas

1841National has yet to formally petition for a license in

1851California. 1/

185312. On January 2, 2006, effective December 31, 2005, the

1863merger of Dallas Fire and California Indemnity into Dallas

1872National Insurance Company was approved by the Texas Department

1881of Insurance. This effected the name change in a timely manner

1892under Dallas National’s agreement with California.

189813. However, Dallas National did not fulfill the letter of

1908its agreement with the California regulator, because the

1916paperwork for finally divesting itself of the word “California”

1925was not completed and filed with California until September 12,

19352007. California has neither prosecuted nor fined Dallas

1943National for this delay, and despite a 2003, California

1952violation by Dallas Fire, continues to be willing to work with

1963Dallas National towards California licensure. ( Cf. Findings of

1972Fact 66-70).

197414. At the present time, Dallas National is licensed as a

1985property and casualty insurer in 39 states and the District of

1996Columbia.

199715. Respondent correctly points out that because Dallas

2005National acquired approximately 30 states’ licenses at the same

2014time it re-domesticated California Indemnity and renamed Dallas

2022Fire, Dallas National and Mr. Wood have not proven themselves in

2033the same way as if Dallas National had acquired 30 new licenses

2045on its own. Even so, it appears that, since 2003, at least six

2058states have found Dallas National, and derivatively Mr. Wood, to

2068be honest, competent, and trustworthy enough for licensing

2076purposes.

207716. In direct contrast, OIR has pronounced Mr. Wood and

2087Dallas National not sufficiently honest, competent, and

2094trustworthy to be licensed to write insurance in Florida. ( See

2105Preliminary Statement).

210717. After forming Dallas National in 2002-2003, its

2115principals concentrated on a business model wherein Dallas

2123National would provide workers’ compensation insurance coverage

2130business theory is that Dallas National benefits from more

2139timely and effective underwriting and claims processing because

2147of its access to a PEO’s payroll and computer systems and

2158otherwise benefits from close communication with staff leasing

2166personnel.

216718. Mr. Wood owns PEOs operating in many of the states in

2179which Dallas National does business. He opened his first PEO in

21901991, and his first PEO in Florida in 1998. AMS Staff Leasing,

2202Inc., AMS Staff Leasing II, Inc., and Equity Group Leasing I,

2213Inc., are PEOs catering to different types of small businesses

2223and authorized and licensed to do business in Florida. They are

2234all owned 100 per cent by Mr. Wood. AMS Staff Leasing, Inc.,

2246does most of the staff leasing business in Florida. (Hereafter,

2256AMS Staff Leasing Inc., and AMS Staff Leasing II, Inc., will be

2268referred to as “AMS” and Equity Group Leasing I, Inc., will be

2280referred to as “Equity.”)

228419. Companion Property and Casualty Insurance Company

2291(Companion) is domiciled in South Carolina and is an OIR-

2301authorized property and casualty insurer in Florida. Companion

2309currently provides workers’ compensation coverage to Mr. Wood’s

2317Florida PEOs, AMS and Equity.

232220. At the present time, DNIC Insurance Holdings, Inc., a

2332holding company owned 100 per cent by Mr. Wood, owns Jefferson

2343Life Insurance Company and, through another entity, owns

2351Petitioner herein, Dallas National Insurance Company.

235721. At the present time, Aspen Administrators, Inc.

2365(Aspen), is a Florida-licensed “third party administrator.”

2372Aspen is owned 100 per cent by Mr. Wood. Aspen now processes

2384workers’ compensation claims for Companion in Florida.

2391Previously, it processed claims for Providence Property and

2399Casualty Insurance Company (Providence) in Florida. Aspen also

2407handles workers’ compensation claims on behalf of Dallas

2415National in a number of other jurisdictions.

242222. Dallas National or Companion can cease to do business

2432with Aspen and hire another third party administrator at any

2442time. However, due to Mr. Wood ’ s and Dallas National’s

2453preferred business model, that is an unlikely prospect for

2462Dallas National.

246423. Florida PEOs provide a valuable service for small

2473business owners. A PEO can obtain affordable workers’

2481compensation coverage for a large group of employees and lease

2491those employees to several small businesses which otherwise

2499could not operate. PEOs, like other employers, frequently

2507contract for provided bundled services by third party

2515administrators who perform all the claims handling, payroll tax,

2524human resources services, and other personnel services for the

2533PEO-employer.

253424. In Florida, as in most states, a PEO or staff leasing

2546company must obtain workers’ compensation coverage through a

2554master policy covering all employees the PEO employs and then

2564leases to small businesses. California has no PEO/staff leasing

2573law, and individual workers’ compensation policies must be

2581purchased by the PEO to cover each entity to whom the PEO leases

2594employees. This difference has caused both California and Dallas

2603Fire/Dallas National some problems in the past. ( See Finding of

2614Fact 67).

261625. Although common ownership of an insurer and affiliated

2625PEOs is not prohibited by Florida statute or rule, and although

2636Lion Insurance Company, Southern Eagle Insurance Company, and

2644Frank Crum Insurance Company are all licensed in Florida as

2654property and casualty insurers providing workers’ compensation

2661coverage to employers located in Florida, and although each of

2671these companies, like Petitioner Dallas National, is owned by a

2681single person or entity and is affiliated with a PEO which the

2693100 per cent individually-owned insurer insures in the State of

2703Florida, OIR is concerned about the inter-relationships of the

2712various entities in this case and with the fact that, as 100 per

2725cent shareholder of all of those entities, Mr. Wood is the

2736“controlling shareholder.” OIR witnesses testified that the

2743Agency views it as critical that a PEO and its insurer be

2755separated so that claims are handled and reported properly. OIR

2765also asserted that all three of the other similarly structured

2775companies and affiliates differ from Dallas National because

2783they use unaffiliated third party administrators, but that was

2792demonstrated only as to one such insurer, a start-up company

2802with no compliance history.

280626. PEOs obtain their own Florida licenses, subject to

2815regulatory oversight. ( See §§ 468.524—468.535, Fla. Stat.).

2823Third party administrators obtain their own Florida licenses,

2831subject to regulatory oversight. ( See §§ 626.8805 and 626.891,

2841Fla. Stat.). Insurance companies obtain their own Florida

2849licenses, subject to regulatory oversight. ( See Conclusions of

2858Law).

285927. No Florida statute or rule prohibits 100 percent

2868ownership of the stock of an insurance company by a single

2879individual.

288028. In short, there is no Florida statute or rule that

2891prohibits Petitioner’s business model, but it is clear from the

2901testimony, and the candor and demeanor of OIR’s witnesses while

2911testifying, that although the Legislature has authorized

2918PEOs/staff leasing companies, OIR’s in-house witnesses see them

2926as opportunities for abuse, and they simply do not like the

2937concept of PEOs, which have been a legitimate business model in

2948Florida since the 1990 ’ s.

295429. Having e liminated those statements attributed to

2962Agency employees in the course of litigation settlement

2970negotiations and relying only upon their testimony at the instant

2980hearing and statements made during the course of the two

2990licensing processes related to this particular Petitioner, which

2998statements reasonably constitute either Agency admissions against

3005interest or the Agency’s rationale in the licensing process, it

3015is clear that Respondent’s reviewers are holding any entity

3024associated with Mr. Wood or with PEOs to a higher, or at least

3037different, standard than other applicants for a Florida workers’

3046compensation insurance carrier’s license. 2/

305130. OIR’s Property and Casualty Financial Oversight

3058Division’s review of the current Dallas National application

3066raised concerns about Dallas National’s relationship with its

3074affiliated PEOs.

307631. OIR wants assurance that there are sufficient checks

3085and balances between the affiliated entities. “An adequate

3093firewall,” was the term repeatedly used. What the desired

3103“firewall” is supposed to accomplish was explained only to the

3113extent that the Agency wanted to be certain that injured workers’

3124compensation claimants (employed by AMS) would be timely and

3133correctly paid their workers’ compensation (indemnity), that

3140their medical bills (medical) would be timely and correctly paid

3150to their medical practitioners, and that Dallas National’s

3158underwriting practices must provide sufficient reserves to cover

3166the “long tail” of workers’ compensation injuries. 3/ However,

3175there is no OIR or Division of Workers’ Compensation rule

3185defining an adequate “firewall.” The Agency just believes it is

3195safer, or at least easier, to deny an out-of-state application

3205than it is to monitor a questionable non-domiciliary carrier

3214after licensing, even though Florida can, and does, audit out-of-

3224state insurers.

322632. In 2006, Florida cancelled California Indemnity’s

3233license to do business in Florida and required that Dallas

3243National re-apply in its own name, which Dallas National

3252promptly did.

325433. On December 1, 2006, Respondent OIR denied Petitioner

3263Dallas National’s first application for Florida licensure. A

3271formal proceeding under Section 120.57(1), Florida Statutes,

3278ensued, and Petitioner Dallas National ultimately dismissed that

3286proceeding and withdrew its 2006 application on the belief that

3296if Dallas National reconstituted its Board of Directors with

3305persons who were not already employees of Dallas National, OIR

3315would grant its next application for a certificate of

3324authority. 4/

332634. I n 2007, Dallas National reconstituted its Board of

3336Directors. All current members are highly qualified in the field

3346of insurance. None have any adverse criminal or regulatory

3355history. Five-ninths of the Board (a majority) are not Dallas

3365National employees and not previously associated with any Wood

3374enterprise. These new members are Laura Wehrle, Mike Pickens,

3383Mick Thompson, Marta Prado Butterworth, and Betty Patterson. Ms.

3392Wehrle was a senior vice-president of Liberty Mutual Insurance

3401Company, which at the time of her service there had the largest

3413book of workers’ compensation business in Florida. Ms. Wehrle’s

3422area of expertise within Liberty Mutual was PEOs. Mike Pickens

3432is the former Arkansas Commissioner of Insurance, who described

3441Petitioner’s prior problems in that state as extremely minor.

3450(In 2002, while Mr. Pickens was Arkansas Insurance Commissioner,

3459Arkansas disciplined AMS for operating without a license for

3468eight months). Mick Thompson is the current Oklahoma

3476Commissioner of Banking. Marta Prado Butterworth is a

3484successful, self-made business-woman in the health care industry.

3492Betty Patterson was the Texas Deputy Commissioner of Insurance

3501who oversaw Dallas National and who graduated Dallas National

3510from that agency’s oversight.

351435. Ms. Patterson and Mr. Pickens have been accredited,

3523active members of the National Association of Insurance

3531Commissioners (NAIC) for many years. Ms. Patterson is a

3540consistent award-winner in that society of state regulators.

3548Both Patterson and Pickens joined Dallas National’s Board quite

3557some time after the end of their terms of office in their

3569respective states (after retirement for Ms. Patterson) and well

3578their respective regulatory agencies.

358236. Charles David Wood is Chairman of the Board of Dallas

3593National, but he is currently semi-retired and has been semi-

3603retired from all of his businesses since early 2006. Neither

3613he, the new five Board members, nor Mr. Nehls, who also

3624currently sits on the Board, has ever declared bankruptcy or

3634been arrested, indicted, or convicted of any crime. There also

3644is no evidence that either of the other two members of the

3656Board, who have personal and business relationships with

3664Mr. Wood, has any adverse bankruptcy, criminal, or regulatory

3673history.

367437. The Board members who testified herein vigorously

3682defended their own integrity and that of Mr. Wood. All

3692described Mr. Wood as the equivalent of a member emeritus or a

3704supportive, but non-initiating, member of the Board who attends

3713meetings on an irregular basis. All agreed that, with the

3723exception of Mr. Wood, Dallas National now has a dynamic Board

3734that has considerable regular “hands on” expertise and

3742involvement in making Dallas National a better insurer, which is

3752compliant with all regulatory agencies in each of the 39

3762different regulatory environments where Dallas National

3768operates. None has found that any information has been withheld

3778from the Board by any of Mr. Wood's enterprises. None has found

3790it difficult to get any information sought from Dallas National

3800employees.

380138. Except for Mr. Wood’s presence on the Board, the

3811credentials and integrity of the new Board members are

3820apparently not an issue for OIR, but OIR’s regulators are

3830concerned because Dallas National’s by-laws permit removal of

3838any director by a majority vote of the shareholders (that is,

3849unilaterally by Mr. Wood) at any special meeting of the Board

3860called for that purpose. There is no reason to suppose this is

3872a situation unique to Dallas National. ( See Finding of Fact

388325).

388439. OIR also considers it “problematic” that several of

3893Mr. Wood’s companies are housed on several floors of the same

3904building at the same corporate address in Dallas Texas. Of

3914particular concern were the first-hand observations of

3921Susan Bernard, Bureau Chief of the San Francisco and Sacramento

3931Offices of the Field Examination Division of the California

3940Department of Insurance. She observed that administrators for

3948Aspen were located in an open area of the same floor (or perhaps

3961two floors below) Dallas National’s offices; that AMS employees

3970were on the same floor as Dallas National; and that all shared

3982the same computer systems. Added to other factors, Ms. Bernard

3992and OIR interpret the foregoing as amounting to “comingling" and

4002located in the same Dallas office building with Dallas National

4012probably is more than just AMS’s and Aspen’s Texas operations,

4022( see infra ) but clearly, AMS and Aspen have offices in Florida

4035and in other states in which they do business.

404440. Both Ms. Bernard and Stephen Yon, Senior Management

4053Analyst II with the Florida Division of Workers’ Compensation,

4062now part of OIR, testified that it was hard to distinguish where

4074Aspen or AMS left off and Dallas National began in the various

4086computer functions in the Dallas offices, but obviously, both

4095regulators were eventually able to make distinctions, because

4103each prepared reports based on doing so, and Mr. Yon was able to

4116assess Florida fines accordingly. ( See Findings of Fact 53-56).

412641. That said, computers undoubtedly link Dallas National

4134with all its affiliates in every state, and there is no reason

4146to suppose that computers do not link other insurance companies,

4156to some degree at least, with the employers they insure, with

4167their insured PEOs (such as AMS) if they have them, and possibly

4179with the third party administrators (such as Aspen) for those

4189PEOs.

419042. Aspen’s past reporting problems are a big part of

4200OIR’s denial letter for Dallas National’s current application,

4208as are violations of the Florida Workers’ Compensation Statute

4217by both AMS and Aspen ( see Findings of Fact 52-56), but no

4230significant comparison was made at hearing between Aspen’s

4238historical past errors and omissions and the historical accuracy

4247of any other third party administrators. Also, no significant

4256comparison was shown with regard to AMS’ past errors and

4266omissions and those of any other PEOs.

427343. Another of OIR’s reasons for denying Dallas National’s

4282current application was the alleged incompetency,

4288untrustworthiness and/or “bad faith” performance of Mr. Wood in

4297relation to a 16 days' gap of workers’ compensation coverage of

4308AMS in Florida which occurred in 2002.

431544. Over the years, AMS has sequentially obtained workers’

4324compensation coverage in Florida from several insurance

4331companies, among them Reliance National Insurance Company, CNA

4339Insurance Company (CNA), Insurance Companies of America (ICA),

4347Providence, and Companion.

435045. Relevant to OIR’s mistrust of Mr. Wood and its

4360concerns with the 2002 gap of AMS coverage, were a one-million

4371dollar deductible workers’ compensation policy for AMS issued by

4380CNA prior to Mr. Wood's acquisition of Dallas Fire in July 2002.

4392In the last quarter of 2001, CNA had advised AMS that CNA was

4405preparing to stop insuring PEOs but that AMS’ CNA policy would

4416be renewed for the period of September 1, 2001, through

4426September 1, 2002, without cancellation during that period, but

4435without renewal at its end. Nonetheless, in late February, or

4445in March 2002, CNA issued a 30-day cancellation notice to AMS.

4456AMS sued CNA, and the suit was settled with an agreement for CNA

4469to continue workers’ compensation coverage in Florida for AMS

4478through the end of June 2002.

448446. To eliminate any potential for a gap in coverage, AMS

4495attempted to arrange for a replacement policy to be issued by

4506Bankers Insurance Company (Bankers), based in St. Petersburg,

4514Florida. At all times material, Bankers was a Florida insurer

4524licensed by OIR. As part of this 2002 transaction, Bankers

4534essentially mortgaged or pledged a stock it owned to Mr. Wood as

4546security or collateral for a five-million dollar loan from him,

4556and in turn, Bankers was to provide workers’ compensation

4565coverage to AMS as of June 20, 2002, so that AMS would have no

4579gap in coverage when CNA pulled out. However, Bankers never

4589issued a workers’ compensation policy to AMS, and OIR submits

4599that a “handshake deal” with Bankers demonstrated Mr. Wood's bad

4609business judgment. 5/

461247. AMS next attempted to obtain its workers’ compensation

4621coverage from Guerling Insurance Company. Guerling required a

4629five-million dollar down payment of premium to issue a

4638certificate of insurance to AMS for a policy to take effect at

4650midnight on June 20, 2002. The down payment was made, but after

4662relying for two weeks on the certificate of coverage obtained,

4672AMS (in the persons of Mr. Wood and his personal attorney

4683Mr. Reid) discovered that the certificate, purportedly from

4691Guerling, was a fake. 6/

469648. As a result of the fake certificate of insurance, AMS

4707had operated in Florida during a 16-day gap in its workers’

4718compensation coverage, so even though Mr. Wood personally paid

4727all workers’ compensation claims which arose during the gap,

4736AMS, as the employer of those workers’ compensation claimants,

4745was required to cease business in Florida under a Division of

4756new Florida workers’ compensation coverage from yet another

4764source and also had to pay a mandatory $189,000, fine to the

4777Division of Workers’ Compensation, based on one-and-a-half times

4785the premium AMS would have had to pay if it had been covered.

4798Dallas National was not a party to any of the “gap” events.

481049. Settlements were reached with CNA and a lawsuit

4819recovered Mr. Wood’s money from Bankers. Dallas National was

4828not a party to any of the lawsuits.

483650. All of the foregoing events involving CNA, Bankers,

4845Guerling Insurance, and Mr. Wood (with the exception of the

4855ultimate recovery of Mr. Wood’s money) occurred in June-July

48642002. The Texas regulatory agency did not approve Mr. Wood’s

4874acquisition of Dallas Fire until later. See supra .

488351. Given the timing of events and the extraordinary

4892efforts of AMS and Mr. Wood to ensure uninterrupted workers’

4902compensation coverage for AMS, plus Mr. Wood's covering AMS’

4911losses to workers’ compensation claimants out of his own pocket,

4921the undersigned is not persuaded that AMS, Dallas National,

4930Mr. Wood, or Mr. Reid evidenced any untrustworthiness, bad

4939faith, or incompetence as alleged by OIR in relationship to

4949these 2002, events.

495252. In 2005, while Providence was AMS’ workers’

4960compensation carrier, the third party administrator, Aspen, which

4968was not then incorporated and licensed to adjust claims in

4978Florida, illegally adjusted claims for Providence.

498453. Stephen Yon, Senior Management Analyst II, is aware

4993that Aspen is now a Florida-licensed third party administrator

5002servicing several workers’ compensation insurance carriers doing

5009business in Florida. However, Mr. Yon’s 2005 audit of Aspen’s

5019processing of claims for Providence showed a “no license” period

5029and also showed late filings of various workers’ compensation

5038forms with the Division and late payments to claimants. A

5048mandatory fine was imposed. The same situation with late form

5058filings and late payments was found by Mr. Yon’s audits of Aspen,

5070working for Providence and then Companion in 2007, and fines were

5081again paid. Although efforts have been made in 2007-2008, by

5091Dallas National, through Board member Ms. Wehrle, to create a

5101diary system that would reduce these timeliness errors, there has

5111been little improvement to date. Apparently, there were 10

5120filings that were only one day late out of 68 filed, but other

5133reportage and/or payments were more delayed and the Agency views

5143all these activities as “hazardous practices.”

514954. Florida law requires that the employer (PEO) be active

5159and participating in some of the reportage, and the essence of a

5171third party administrator system is that the errors and omissions

5181of the third party administrator relate back to the insurance

5191carrier. In all of the foregoing incidents, AMS was the employer

5202and Aspen was handling claims for either Providence or Companion,

5212not Dallas National.

521555. Insurance carriers ’ failures to file forms timely or

5225to pay benefits timely as previously related are common in the

5236processing of Florida workers’ compensation insurance claims.

5243Workers’ compensation claimants are supposed to receive their

5251first indemnity checks within 14 days, and some reports must be

5262filed within seven days, and others within 21 days, of the

5273injury, not just within a period following a formal claim ( see

5285Section 440.185, Florida Statutes) and the Division requires 95

5294percent accuracy. ( See § 440.20 (8)(b), Fla. Stat.). Fines on

5305these bases are mostly mandatory, but the Division of Workers’

5315Compensation may distinguish between willful and non-willful

5322violations. ( See § 440.525, Fla. Stat.). It is unclear which

5333type of fine(s) were imposed on Aspen, and thus the respective

5344insurance companies, for the foregoing failures. That said, it

5353appears that, contrary to Mr. Yon’s testimony that the only way

5364to discipline an insurer, PEO, or third party administrator is

5374with a fine, other disciplinary action might be available against

5384Aspen ( see §§ 626.8805 and 626.891, Fla. Stat.), but Florida did

5396not take any other disciplinary action, even though AMS/Aspen has

5406never met the statutory goal of 95 per cent timely payments and

5418has vacillated between 70 and 80 per cent for three years. The

5430failure to pursue any regulatory remedy against AMS and/or Aspen,

5440such as revoking their licenses, suggests that these errors are

5450not truly significant to the Agency.

545656. Companion is PEO/Employer AMS’ current workers’

5463compensation carrier. AMS, while insured by Companion, paid some

5472first day medical claims, because Texas allows an employer to pay

5483on-site first aid claims, and the company’s operatives assumed

5492that such payments were also permitted in Florida. They were

5502wrong. Florida actually requires that all workers’ compensation

5510claims be paid by the insurance carrier from the first day. AMS

5522stopped its illegal procedure when informed of the violation by

5532the Florida Division of Workers’ Compensation. Companion was

5540assessed a fine of only $2500, based on the claims adjusted by

5552AMS. Mr. Yon agreed it was acceptable to the Agency to move

5564licensed AMS adjusters to Aspen, so as to resolve the illegal

5575adjusting problem. There have been no violations of this sort

5585for two years. Companion now pays all medical bills.

559457. OIR asserts that Messrs. Wood and Nehls, personally,

5603and Dallas National as a corporate applicant, have lied to OIR in

5615each of the two successive application processes.

562258. With regard to the 2006 application, OIR conducted an

5632evidentiary hearing. The transcript thereof is in evidence and

5641although there is a question-and-answer format in which Mr. Wood,

5651Mr. Nehls, and others answered questions, most of the “hearing”

5661is more in the nature of a formalized marathon conversation,

5671which moves from topic to topic with several people chiming in to

5683clarify what OIR’s hearing officer was seeking by a question or

5694to answer the question, or with the hearing officer trying to

5705clarify what Dallas National’s witnesses meant by their answers.

5714Under these circumstances, someone not involved in a company’s

5723day-to-day operation might reasonably fail to answer some

5731questions correctly or fail to correct or elaborate on his

5741answers as the proceeding moved on.

574759. Nonetheless, clearly, Mr. Wood incorrectly answered

5754some questions put to him at that hearing by Florida regulators.

5765He testified that with regard to any and all S&P companies with

5777which he was affiliated (1) they had not failed to hold an

5789annual shareholders’ meeting; (2) had not charged unapproved

5797rates; (3) had not operated in any state without a license; (4)

5809had not continued in business after losing workers’ compensation

5818coverage; (5) had not paid claims from collateral funds; and

5828(6) had not become a party to any service agreement including

5839re-insurance, which was not reported to the state of domicile on

5850the appropriate state licensure.

585460. At the instant hearing herein, it was shown that at

5865some point before, or while, Dallas National was under Texas

5875oversight in 2002-2003, Mr. Wood, indeed, did not, as required

5885by law, meet with himself for regular shareholders’ meetings, so

5895that with regard to the situation with CNA, Bankers, and

5905Guerling, in 2002 ( see Findings of Fact 45-51) his answers to

5917questions (3), (4) and (5) should have been “yes.” ( See also

5929Findings of Fact 34, 52, and 67, as to reasons that question (3)

5942should have been answered “yes.”) However, the instant hearing

5951did not demonstrate that his answers to questions (2) and (6)

5962were clearly wrong.

596561. OIR attributed all six negative answers to lack of

5975trustworthiness. Although Mr. Wood unilaterally and voluntarily

5982submitted an affidavit attempting to correct some of his hearing

5992testimony a couple of weeks after the evidentiary hearing, his

6002affidavit does not really clarify or alter his wrong answers to

6013these questions, and it was a serious omission for Mr. Wood to

6025have not acknowledged the problems that Dallas Fire, AMS, and

6035Aspen have had, if he was aware of them, even though they were

6048remote in time.

605162. OIR also construes the business plan submitted with

6060Dallas National’s 2006 application to be suspect. The

6068application required that Mr. Wood list all the companies he

6078owns, but he failed to list Aspen, third party administrator for

6089AMS and Equity, on a chart and may have failed to list either

6102Aspen or Equity, one of his Florida PEOs, in the space provided

6114on another page. Mr. Wood testified herein that the omission

6124was an oversight.

612763. Mr. Nehls, Petitioner’s president, who prepared both

6135applications, testified that the oversight was probably his, and

6144the evidence as a whole supports a finding that Mr. Wood had no

6157current “hands on” administration of either Aspen or Equity in

6167relation to the time of either of Dallas National ’ s applications

6179to OIR and did not prepare either voluminous application, both

6189of which went back and forth with supplements to OIR for a

6201period of time till each was pronounced “complete.”

620964. Because he signed both applications, OIR views the

6218omission(s) of the companies as a material misrepresentation,

6226reflective of Mr. Wood ’ s lack of trustworthiness, but given the

6238fact that all the companies were listed somewhere in the

6248application papers; the parties’ past history, which meant that

6257OIR knew of these companies’ probable affiliation with Dallas

6266National and indeed asked questions about them; the due

6275diligence known to be Florida regulators’ hallmark; and the

6284testimony of OIR’s witnesses that failure to list a company is

6295not an absolute bar to licensing, it is unreasonable to suppose

6306that any plot existed within Dallas National, with Mr. Woods, or

6317with Mr. Nehls to hide these companies or Mr. Wood’s

6327affiliations therewith from Florida regulators.

633265. OIR also faults Mr. Wood personally for a portion of

6343the current 2008 application, which discusses Dallas National’s

6351plans to expand into the California insurance market, claiming

6360that this was also a material misrepresentation since California

6369has not yet approved Dallas National to write insurance in that

6380state. Recognizing that Dallas National remains licensed in

6388California, but is not yet authorized to write insurance there,

6398a situation impossible under Florida’s law, and that Mr. Nehls

6408placed discussion of what Dallas National planned to do in

6418California under a heading of the 2008 application which equates

6428with “future business plans,” this information was not a

6438material misrepresentation.

644066. OIR has doubts about Dallas National’s underwriting

6448parameters. For this aspect of the case, OIR relied heavily on

6459the testimony of Susan Bernard. Ms. Bernard was accepted as an

6470expert in California financial and regulatory examinations.

6477Unlike Florida, California does not license PEOs, but like

6486Florida’s OIR, California’s regulatory agency mistrusts insurers

6493affiliated with PEOs, even though Ms. Bernard was not able to

6504represent that such an affiliation offended California’s

6511insurance code.

651367. California requires that a PEO obtain a separate

6522workers’ compensation policy for each employer to whom it leases

6532employees. ( See Finding of Fact 24). In July 2003, Dallas

6543National was not permitted to sell insurance in California, but

6553Mr. Wood’s company, AMS, secured, through another entity, what a

6563California corporation that leased employees from AMS was led to

6573believe was a valid Dallas Fire workers’ compensation policy.

6582The policy was disavowed by Dallas Fire, and therefore, the

6592small employer who leased employees from California AMS suffered

6601a gap in coverage in violation of California’s Labor Code and

6612its leased employees also were without workers’ compensation

6620coverage for that same period. Someone at AMS or at Dallas Fire

6632apparently described the invalid policy or binder as a “test

6642certificate,” and California’s Insurance Department issued a

6650scathing letter of admonishment to Dallas Fire with the promise

6660of a cease and desist order if Dallas Fire ever again issued

6672such a disingenuous document or wrote insurance in California

6681without Agency approval to do so. Based on the timing of the

6693transitioning of Dallas Fire into Dallas National, it is hard to

6704be sure what really happened in this situation, but so far as

6716this record is concerned, neither Dallas Fire nor Dallas

6725National has done anything similar since.

673168. Ms. Bernard, a Certified Financial Examiner, has

6739performed three onsite visits to Dallas National’s Texas

6747headquarters to consider recommending licensure of Dallas

6754National by California. These visits were in August 2006,

6763August 2007, and December 2007. She testified that, based on a

6774reasonable sample in August 2006, Dallas National’s compliance

6782with its own underwriting guidelines was non-existent. Her

6790sampling in August 2007, produced only minimally better

6798adherence to Dallas National’s own guidelines, and on that

6807occasion, Dallas National’s own accountants, Ernst & Young, also

6816found significant underwriting flaws, while the Texas Department

6824of Insurance approved the underwriting at that time. Her

6833sampling in December 2007, using Dallas National’s new

6841underwriting guidelines, again was only slightly better than the

6850last time, but Ms. Bernard conceded that at the same time she

6862audited Dallas National on that occasion, the Texas Department

6871of Insurance was also present and again found Dallas National’s

6881underwriting compliance in December 2007, to be acceptable.

688969. Ms. Bernard’s report at the close of her examination

6899in December 2007, was partially affected by her concern over the

6910proximity of AMS and Dallas National’s offices being in a single

6921building and using the same computers ( see Findings of Fact 39-

693341), and her speculation that a 2007 sports event disaster

6943involving a different Wood company could deplete the reserves of

6953Dallas National and all Wood corporations. However, on the

6962basis of Dallas National’s failure, at that time, to

6971consistently apply its own underwriting guidelines, Ms. Bernard

6979recommended that California not license Dallas National until

6987Dallas National met all its own underwriting guidelines.

699570. Due to California’s time and budget constraints,

7003Ms. Bernard has not returned to audit Dallas National since

7013December 2007, despite urgings by Dallas National’s Board to do

7023so.

702471. In 2008, a Board-authorized underwriting committee

7031spear-headed by Ms. Patterson and Ms. Wehrle completely

7039overhauled Dallas National’s underwriting guidelines.

7044Ms. Bernard has not reviewed Dallas National’s new underwriting

7053guidelines, and Ms. Wehrle did not elaborate on them in detail.

7064However, there is no current information that these guidelines

7073are not adequate nor that they are not being followed. Since

7084effective underwriting plays into the overall financial picture

7092of an insurance company, the current reports of actuaries and

7102accountants for Dallas National ( see infra ) would seem to

7113suggest that Dallas National’s underwriting is currently

7120adequate.

712172. Since Petitioner Dallas National was created out of

7130the merger of California Indemnity and Dallas Fire, Dallas

7139National has employed Milliman, Inc., a prominent, independent

7147actuarial firm with 60 years of experience and a credible

7157reputation. Milliman, Inc., has advised Dallas Fire from the

7166time Mr. Wood purchased Dallas Fire in 2002, and has given

7177financial rating) each year since 2003.

718373. Dallas National uses A-rated reinsurance partners and

7191independent accountants and auditors. One of its independent

7199accountants is Ernst & Young.

720474. Dallas National uses independent investment advisors

7211to maintain a conservative and profitable investment portfolio.

721975. Dallas National relies heavily on opinions of all

7228these advisers with regard to loss reserves and collateral.

723776. OIR faults Dallas National in two technical compliance

7246categories. First, OIR claims that Companion is “fronting” for

7255Dallas National in violation of Subsections 624.404(4)(a) and

7263(b), Florida Statutes. Second, by citing what OIR asserts is an

7274illegal re-insurance agreement with Companion, OIR charges that

7282Dallas National has set up insufficient loss reserves.

729077. Section 624.404, Florida Statutes, provides, in

7297pertinent part, as follows:

7301624.404 General eligibility of insurers for

7307certificate of authority.--To qualify for and

7313hold authority to transact insurance in this

7320state, an insurer must be otherwise in

7327compliance with this code and with its

7334charter powers and must be an incorporated

7341stock insurer, an incorporated mutual

7346insurer, or a reciprocal insurer, of the same

7354general type as may be formed as a domestic

7363insurer under this code; except that:

7369(4)(a) No authorized insurer shall act as a

7377fronting company for any unauthorized

7382insurer which is not an approved reinsurer.

7389(b) A "fronting company" is an authorized

7396insurer which by reinsurance or otherwise

7402generally transfers more than 50 percent to

7409one unauthorized insurer which does not meet

7416the requirements of s. 624.610 (3)(a), (b),

7423or (c), or more than 75 percent to two or

7433more unauthorized insurers which do not meet

7440the requirements of s. 624.610 (3)(a), (b),

7447or (c), of the entire risk of loss on all of

7458the insurance written by it in this state ,

7466or on one or more lines of insurance, on all

7476of the business produced through one or more

7484agents or agencies, or on all of the

7492business from a designated geographical

7497territory, without obtaining the prior

7502approval of the office.(Emphasis supplied)

750778. No case law has developed around Florida’s “fronting”

7516statute.

751779. When OIR advised Dallas National’s new Board of

7526Directors that the Agency viewed Dallas National’s relationship

7534with Companion as a “fronting” situation, the Board, including

7543the former state regulators, closely reviewed the statute. The

7552Board members collectively could not discern how Florida’s

7560“fronting” statute could be applied to Dallas National’s

7568situation with Companion, and sought advice from Companion,

7576Ernst & Young, and Milliman, Inc. Relying on consistent advice

7586from all these entities that Florida’s “fronting” statute did

7595not apply, Dallas National’s Board proceeded to administrative

7603hearing.

760480. Mr. Wood's PEOs have been issued high deductible

7613workers’ compensation policies by Companion. Companion and

7620Dallas National have a re-insurance agreement which starts with

7629a million-dollar deductible, whereby Companion agrees to pay the

7638first million dollars per claim by each employee of the PEO.

7649Thereafter, Companion must seek reimbursement from the

7656policyholder, the PEO. Dallas National re-insures claims

7663between one and five million dollars. Other reinsurance

7671coverage for Companion is provided by other companies for claims

7681between five and 30 million dollars, and Companion is the direct

7692writer above 30 million dollars.

769781. OIR witnesses who had never reviewed the actual

7706reinsurance agreement in this case were not helpful by their

7716opinions that a “fronting” situation exists, and those opinions

7725are discounted.

772782. Steve Szypula currently is the Chief Analyst in OIR’s

7737Property and Casualty Oversight Unit. He was accepted as an

7747expert in financial regulation, accounting, and regulation

7754examination, and testified that the providing of reinsurance

7762coverage by Dallas National to Companion for workers’

7770compensation coverage written by Companion for AMS constituted

7778an unlawful “fronting” arrangement in violation of Subsections

7786is not specifically workers’ compensation, and he has no

7795background in reinsurance, specifically.

779983. Mr. Szypula found no fault with the Milliman Inc.

7809December 31, 2008, report, including reserves or its

7817calculations and agreed that, with or without a high deductible,

7827Companion is always required to pay workers’ compensation claims

7836from the first dollar. However, his “fronting” theory requires

7845that the statutory phrase, “entire risk of loss” be read as the

7857single word, “premium,” and that the million-dollar deductible

7866in the subject insurance policy be equated with a “credit risk."

7877By his interpretation, Mr. Szypula opined that more than 50

7887percent of Companion’s risk was being ceded to Dallas National

7897because the premium was a simple “pass through.”

790584. Ray Neff is a Member of the American Academy of

7916Actuaries; the former Director of the Florida Division of

7925Workers’ Compensation, when the Division was housed in the

7934Department of Labor; and a former Bureau Chief of the Florida

7945Department of Insurance Bureau of Rates. Mr. Neff is an actuary

7956and certified Reinsurance Arbitrator, and was accepted as an

7965expert with special knowledge regarding re-insurance

7971arrangements and interpretation of re-insurance agreements and

7978insurance in general.

798185. Mr. Neff agreed with Mr. Szypula that, under the re-

7992insurance agreement between Dallas National and Companion,

7999Companion takes the risk of loss on the entire claim and is

8011liable from the first dollar, due to the nature of workers’

8022compensation insurance, as compared with other types of

8030insurance/re-insurance. He further testified that the insurer

8037must pay the deductible first and may only seek reimbursement

8047from its re-insurers later. Therefore, Companion is liable for,

8056and must first pay, all claims, regardless of whether there is,

8067or is not, eventual reimbursement by re-insurers.

807486. Concentrating on the phrase “entire risk of loss” as

8084used in Section 624.404(4)(b), Florida Statutes, Mr. Neff opined

8093that an unlawful “fronting” arrangement did not exist between

8102Companion and Dallas National by the terms of their re-insurance

8112agreement in this case. By that agreement, Dallas National

8121agrees to insure between one million and five million dollars in

8132liability. The one million dollar deductible policy issued to

8141AMS by Companion does not mean that Companion does not assume

8152the risk of the first million dollar loss, because via Florida

8163Administrative Code Rule 69O-189.006, 7/ the insurer is always

8172responsible for first paying the injured claimant directly,

8180regardless of any deductible, and only thereafter may seek

8189reimbursement. Mr. Neff maintains that, unlike those other

8197types of casualty insurance which are Mr. Szypula’s forte,

8206reinsurance of workers’ compensation policies is only a

8214reimbursement mechanism and not a true deductible. Because of

8223his education, training, and experience, his clarity of

8231explanation, and particularly his use of the actual language of

8241the “fronting” statute analyzed, Mr. Neff is the more credible

8251witness over Mr. Szypula.

825587. OIR presented the testimony of Joseph Boor, who

8264reviews general lines, commercial, intangible and surety rate

8272filings for OIR. Mr. Boor has special experience in hurricane

8282losses. He is an esteemed actuary, a member of the Casualty

8293Actuarial Society, and the first person in the United States to

8304have achieved the “Senior Professional of Insurance Regulation”

8312designation by NAIC. However, Mr. Boor does not review workers’

8322compensation rate filings. He was accepted as an expert in

8332actuarial science, loss reserving, and large deductible business

8340practices. Even though he did not point to any errors in

8351Milliman Inc.’s December 31, 2008, annual actuarial report,

8359Mr. Boor used that report to conclude that Dallas National is

8370deficient in loss reserves by plus or minus 42 million dollars.

838188. Mr. Boor was brought on relatively late in

8390Respondent’s preparation of the case and purely for purposes of

8400litigation testimony. Accordingly, he had to revise his figures

8409several times. To his credit, in the highest standards of his

8420profession, Mr. Boor pro-actively disclosed his mathematical

8427errors to all concerned.

843189. Milliman, Inc., conducted an independent loss reserve

8439analysis of Dallas National as of December 31, 2008, 8/ on both a

8452gross and net basis with respect to reinsurance and rendered its

8463year-end statement of actuarial opinion on the held reserves of

8473Dallas National. Two fully credentialed actuaries (both Fellows

8481of the Casualty Actuarial Society) performed the work, including

8490a review of the company’s entire claim liability, which went

8500through two peer reviews, one of which was “firm-wide,” before

8511Milliman, Inc., issued its final opinion. Robert Meyer, a

8520principal and consulting actuary of that firm, is a Fellow of

8531the Casualty Actuarial Society and a Member of the American

8541Academy of Actuaries. He was accepted as an expert actuary in

8552the field of property and casualty insurance. He explained

8561Dallas National’s loss reserving process and critiqued

8568Mr. Boor’s methodology and conclusions, to the effect that

8577Mr. Boor used reserves in place of collateral so as to overstate

8589collateral; had suggested reserves be posted before a loss

8598occurred; and made unreasonable assessments on claims now and in

8608the future. Vastly simplified, Mr. Meyer’s defense of Milliman

8617Inc.’s report, approving Dallas National’s loss reserves as

8625reasonable, is more credible than Mr. Boor’s opinion for the

8635foregoing reasons, and most particularly because Mr. Boor skewed

8644loss development factors on the basis of his choice of an

8655industry database, and his adjustment thereof, which

8662overestimated the claim liability of Dallas National and

8670Companion.

8671CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

867490. The Division of Administrative Hearings has

8681jurisdiction of the parties and subject matter of this cause,

8691pursuant to Sections 120.569 and 120.57(1), Florida Statutes

8699(2009).

870091. The duty to go forward and the burden of proof by a

8713preponderance of the evidence is upon Petitioner. Department of

8722Banking & Finance v. Osborne Stern & Co. , 670 So. 2d 932 (Fla.

87351996); Florida Department of Transportation v. J.W.C. Co., Inc. ,

8744396 So. 2d 778 (Fla. 1st DCA 1981). In Osborne Stern & Co. ,

8757supra , the Florida Supreme Court found that in a license

8767application proceeding, the agency has the burden to prove

8776specific acts of misconduct by a preponderance of the evidence

8786if it seeks to deny a license application on that ground. In

8798contested license application proceedings, the party asserting

8805the affirmative of an issue has the burden to present evidence

8816as to that issue, and an administrative decision denying a

8826license will not be sustained unless the decision is supported

8836by competent substantial evidence in the record. While the

8845applicant continuously has the burden of persuasion to prove

8854entitlement, if the agency proposing to deny the requested

8863license bases its decision on specific acts of misconduct that

8873the agency claims demonstrate the applicant’s lack of fitness to

8883be licensed, the agency assumes the burden of proving the

8893specific acts of misconduct that it claims demonstrate the

8902applicant’s unfitness to be licensed. See also M.H. v.

8911Department of Children and Family Services , 977 So. 2d 755 (Fla.

89222d DCA 2008). Accordingly, even though a license applicant

8931continuously has the burden of persuasion to prove entitlement,

8940the agency denying the license has the burden to produce

8950evidence to support its denial. Similar to a discrimination

8959case, the agency is not required to prove its allegations by

8970clear and convincing evidence, but it may not deny a license

8981application unless its decision is supported by competent

8989substantial evidence. Comprehensive Medical Access, Inc. v.

8996Office of Insurance Regulation , 983 So. 2d 45 (Fla. 1st DCA

90072008). Competent substantial evidence is such evidence as is

9016“sufficiently relevant and material that a reasonable mind would

9025accept it as adequate to support the conclusions reached.”

9034Comprehensive Medical Access, Inc. , 983 So. 2d at 46.

904392. The seminal licensing statutes to be applied are:

9052624.401 Certificate of authority required.--

9057(1) No person shall act as an insurer, and

9066no insurer or its agents, attorneys,

9072subscribers, or representatives shall

9076directly or indirectly transact insurance,

9081in this state except as authorized by a

9089subsisting certificate of authority issued

9094to the insurer by the office, except as to

9103such transactions as are expressly otherwise

9109provided for in this code.

9114and

9115624.404 General eligibility of insurers for

9121certificate of authority.--To qualify for

9126and hold authority to transact insurance in

9133this state, an insurer must be otherwise in

9141compliance with this code and with its

9148charter powers and must be an incorporated

9155stock insurer, an incorporated mutual

9160insurer, or a reciprocal insurer, of the

9167same general type as may be formed as a

9176domestic insurer under this code; except

9182that:

9183* * *

9186(3)(a) The Office shall not grant or

9193continue authority to transact insurance in

9199this state as to any insurer the management,

9207officers, or directors of which are found by

9215it to be incompetent or untrustworthy; or so

9223lacking in insurance company managerial

9228experience as to make the proposed operation

9235hazardous to the insurance-buying public; or

9241so lacking in insurance experience, ability,

9247and standing as to jeopardize the reasonable

9254promise of successful operation; or which it

9261has good reason to believe are affiliated

9268directly or indirectly through ownership,

9273control, reinsurance transactions, or other

9278insurance or business relations, with any

9284person or persons whose business operations

9290are or have been marked, to the detriment of

9299policyholders or stockholders or investors

9304or creditors or of the public, by

9311manipulation of assets, accounts, or

9316reinsurance or by bad faith.

9321* * *

9324(4)(a) No authorized insurer shall act as a

9332fronting company for any unauthorized

9337insurer which is not an approved reinsurer.

9344(b) A "fronting company" is an authorized

9351insurer which by reinsurance or otherwise

9357generally transfers more than 50 percent to

9364one unauthorized insurer which does not meet

9371the requirements of s. 624.610 (3)(a), (b),

9378or (c), or more than 75 percent to two or

9388more unauthorized insurers which do not meet

9395the requirements of s. 624.610 (3)(a), (b),

9402or (c), of the entire risk of loss on all of

9413the insurance written by it in this state ,

9421or on one or more lines of insurance, on all

9431of the business produced through one or more

9439agents or agencies, or on all of the

9447business from a designated geographical

9452territory, without obtaining the prior

9457approval of the office. (Emphasis supplied)

946393. OIR affirmatively pled that Companion was “fronting”

9471for Dallas National. Oddly, OIR apparently has never sought to

9481discipline Companion for this alleged “fronting,” but only seeks

9491to deny Petitioner’s license application on that theory. OIR’s

9500“fronting” theory requires that one read the single word

9509“premium” in place of the entire phrase, “risk of loss.”

951994. Even understanding that the Agency’s expert achieved

9527his interpretation of the statute by modifying the language

9536in this state,” that expert’s interpretation is torturous.

954595. Where, as here, the Legislature has not defined the

9555words used in a phrase, the language should usually be given its

9567plain and ordinary meaning. Southern Fisheries Association,

9574Inc. v. Dept. of Natural Resources , 453 So. 2d 1351 (Fla. 1984).

958696. Although obligated to give deference to OIR’s

9594statutory interpretations [ Fortune Ins. Co. v. Dep’t. of Ins. ,

9604644 So.2d 312 (Fla. 1st DCA 1995); Public Employee Relations

9614Comm’n v. Dade County Public Benevolent Ass’n, 467 So.2d 987

9624(Fla. 1985); O’Conner v. Dept. of Professional Regulation,

9632Constr. Indus. Licensing Bd. ], as pithily observed by the Second

9643District Court of Appeal in Cepcot Corp. v. Dept. of Business

9654and Professional Regulation , 658 So.2d 1092 (Fla. 2d DCA 1995),

9664the undersigned is “not obligated to dive off the deep end.”

967597. The undersigned has found no source listing “premium”

9684as a synonym for “risk,” as urged by OIR.

969498. The Florida Statutes do not reveal a definition of

9704“risk,” associated with Florida’s insurance code, but Black’s

9713Law Dictionary, Fifth Edition, copyright 1979, gives the

9721following definition of “risk”:

9725In insurance law the danger or hazard of a

9734loss of the property insured; the casualty

9741contemplated in a contract of insurance; the

9748degree of hazard; a specified contingency or

9755peril . . .

975999. Section 427.403, Florida Statutes, defines “premium”

9766as:

9767“Premium” is the consideration for

9772insurance, by whatever name called. Any

9778“assessment,” or any “membership”, “policy”,

9784“survey,” “inspection,” “service” or similar

9791fee or charge in consideration for an

9798insurance contract is deemed part of the

9805premium.

9806100. Therefore, since, in plain and ordinary usage, an

9815insurance premium is a marketing term for the actual amount of

9826money charged by an insurance company for active coverage, the

9836Agency’s interpretation of its “fronting” statute is not

9844reasonable. Ceding a premium amount to another insurer is not

9854identical to ceding the entire risk of loss on the peril for

9866which the insurance is issued. Therefore, based on the facts as

9877found, and the maxim to apply the plain meaning of the words in

9890a statute, it is concluded that OIR has not linked Companion and

9902Dallas National in a “fronting” relationship.

9908101. OIR also affirmatively pled that Dallas National had

9917skewed its rates and claims statistics so as to have

9927insufficient reserves. OIR did not prove that premise, either.

9936102. On all other issues, OIR’s denial of an insurance

9946carrier license to Dallas National hinges upon past problems the

9956Division of Workers’ Compensation has had with either AMS (a

9966PEO) or Aspen (AMS’s third party administrator) or some other

9976insurance company, such as Providence or Companion. Florida’s

9984Workers’ Compensation Law attributes a third party

9991administrator’s errors and omissions to the carrier utilizing it

10000at the time of the error or omission, and OIR did that via

10013fines.

10014103. The licensing standards for PEOs and third party

10023administrators are minimal, but the power to grant a license

10033encompasses the power to discipline that license. How those

10042licenses might be disciplined beyond the fines already imposed

10051is conjectural in the absence of case law, but it is a

10063reasonable option for OIR to discipline the adjusters and

10072administrators over whom it has authority and to initiate a

10082complaint to the appropriate arm of the Department of Business

10092and Professional Regulation concerning any PEO. Rejecting the

10100application of an insurer that wants to use those PEOs and third

10112party administrators is not a reasonable option.

10119104. Likewise, just because Mr. Wood owns 100 per cent of

10130AMS’ and Aspen’s respective stock issues, does not mean he is

10141rendered personally untrustworthy due to those corporations’

10148day-to-day minimal failures throughout 39 states and the

10156District of Columbia.

10159105. The gap in coverage in 2002, due to Mr. Wood’s

10170dealings with Bankers and Guerling has been fully explained.

10179OIR apparently now considers this episode only a bad business

10189decision, not untrustworthiness, but it evidences neither, and

10197the episode that resulted in a gap in coverage for AMS, never

10209involved Dallas National and has never affected Mr. Wood’s or

10219Dallas National’s solvency or reserves. Mr. Wood’s subsequent

10227success and that of Dallas National do not support a conclusion

10238of incompetency.

10240106. Most of OIR ’ s concerns with other states' regulatory

10251issues are remote in time and unlikely to be repeated because

10262they arose prior to Dallas Fire being either taken over by

10273Mr. Wood or before it was fully transitioned into Dallas

10283National.

10284107. Dallas National’s underwriting problems in 2006-2007,

10291which were revealed by Ms. Bernard, and the continuing reporting

10301and payment problems of Aspen deserve attention. However,

10309because Ms. Bernard's observations with regard to underwriting

10317showed improvement on each of her visits; because Texas has

10327repeatedly approved Dallas National while observing the same

10335underwriting problems noted by Ms. Bernard; because other states

10344have also approved Dallas National; because Ms. Wehrle is clear

10354that tighter underwriting guidelines are constantly evolving at

10362Dallas National; because Mr. Yon had no significant problems

10371auditing any Florida entities in Dallas; and because of the

10381fiscal responsibility demonstrated by Dallas National’s

10387accounting and actuary witnesses, it is concluded that Dallas

10396National has presented adequate evidence for Florida licensure.

10404RECOMMENDATION

10405Based upon the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions

10414of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that the Office of Insurance

10424Regulation enter a Final Order issuing the license for which

10434Petitioner Dallas National Insurance Company has applied.

10441DONE AND ENTERED this 3rd day of February, 2010, in

10451Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida.

10455S

10456ELLA JANE P. DAVIS

10460Administrative Law Judge

10463Division of Administrative Hearings

10467The DeSoto Building

104701230 Apalachee Parkway

10473Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060

10476(850) 488-9675

10478Fax Filing (850) 921-6847

10482www.doah.state.fl.us

10483Filed with the Clerk of the

10489Division of Administrative Hearings

10493this 3rd day of February, 2010.

10499ENDNOTES

105001/ It seems that in California and several other states, a

10511prudent insurance carrier will not apply for a license until

10521virtually assured, through informal procedures, that the license

10529will be granted. However, Dallas National has repeatedly

10537requested that California examine and license it. See also

10546Findings of Fact 66-70.

105502/ OIR witnesses related valid concerns based on problems

10559occurring with the startup of PEOs in the early 1990’s when some

10571heavy duty construction workers were intentionally miscoded as

10579secretaries in order to offer reduced premiums, which miscoding

10588skewed data and reserves with regard to catastrophic injuries,

10597but their testimony never linked such incidents to Dallas

10606National or to any Wood enterprise.

106123/ Workers’ compensation insurance generally is a riskier type

10621of insurance to write than other types of insurance because

10631workers’ compensation claims may have to pay out over long

10641periods of time, up to 30 years. The potential spread of years

10653requiring higher reserves than some other types. Because some

10662Florida benefits must be paid for an injured employee’s

10671lifetime, as opposed to a finite number of years (as is the case

10684in Texas) the claim reserves must be that much more secure in

10696Florida.

106974/ Those OIR employees who testified herein denied that OIR had

10708made such an offer, but there is sufficient credible evidence to

10719show that Dallas National’s attorneys and principals, for

10727whatever reason, believed that there was an advantage to

10736withdrawal of the 2006, application as opposed to possible

10745rejection of it.

107485/ Apparently, despite still being fully licensed in Florida,

10757Bankers and its principals had been under OIR suspicion or

10767investigation for criminal activity for a period of time, and it

10778appears Mr. Wood was also victimized.

107846/ One individual Mr. Wood dealt with may have been connected

10795with both Bankers and Guerling, and it is not clear whether

10806Guerling, based in New York, had an appropriate license to write

10817insurance in Florida, but the undersigned is satisfied that

10826Mr. Wood and Mr. Reid were of the reasonable belief that

10837Guerling could legally issue coverage for AMS in Florida.

108467/ Florida Administrative Code Rule 69O-189.006, reads:

10853Guidelines for Large Deductible Workers’

10858Compensation Filings.

10860If a workers’ compensation insurer wishes to

10867file for a large deductible, such filing

10874shall be governed by the following

10880guidelines:

10881(1) Eligibility: Minimum standard premium

10886of $500,000; Minimum deductible of $100,000.

10894(2) Insurer must be clearly obligated to

10901pay first dollar of loss just like any other

10910workers’ compensation policy without a

10915deductible.

10916(3) Reimbursement of deductible by

10921insured does not affect insurer obligation

10927to pay losses.

10930(4) Insurer must continue all filing

10936requirements with Department of Financial

10941Services in compliance with Chapter 440,

10947F.S., for all losses including those below

10954the deductible limits.

10957(5) Insurer must file unit statistical

10963reports with the NCCI which show all losses

10971including those below the deductible limit.

10977(6) Unit statistical reports are to be

10984completed and filed with the NCCI so that an

10993experience modification factor can be

10998calculated for the insured.

11002(7) Data must be maintained to allow for

11010reporting on financial calls of Standard

11016Premium at NCCI Level together with all

11023losses including those below the deductible

11029limit.

11030(8) Insurers must comply with NCCI

11036Aggregate Financial Calls, Detail Claim

11041Information Calls, Unit Statistical

11045Reporting, and other required calls.

11050(9) Insurer must have an established

11056program to evaluate financial ability of

11062insured to pay losses within the deductible.

11069Insurers are required to use various

11075financial mechanisms to insure that funds

11081are available from the insured to pay

11088deductible portion of losses.

110928/ At the time of hearing, a new report was due December 31,

111052009.

11106COPIES FURNISHED :

11109Elenita Gomez, Esquire

11112Amanda Allen, Esquire

11115Office of Insurance Regulation

11119200 East Gaines Street, Room 612

11125Tallahassee, Florida 32399

11128J. Riley Davis, Esquire

11132Edward L. Kutter, Esquire

11136Akerman Senterfitt, P.A.

11139106 East College Avenue, Suite 1200

11145Tallahassee, Florida 32301

11148Kevin M. McCarty, Commissioner

11152Office of Insurance Regulation

11156200 East Gaines Street

11160Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0305

11163Steve Parton, General Counsel

11167Office of Insurance Regulation

11171200 East Gaines Street

11175Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0305

11178NOTICE OF RIGHT TO SUBMIT EXCEPTIONS

11184All parties have the right to submit written exceptions within

1119415 days from the date of this Recommended Order. Any exceptions

11205to this Recommended Order should be filed with the agency that

11216will issue the Final Order in this case.

Select the PDF icon to view the document.
PDF
Date
Proceedings
PDF:
Date: 04/08/2010
Proceedings: Agency Final Order
PDF:
Date: 04/08/2010
Proceedings: Agency Final Order filed.
PDF:
Date: 04/08/2010
Proceedings: Notice of Filing Final Order and Exceptions to Recommended Order filed.
PDF:
Date: 04/08/2010
Proceedings: Respondent's Exceptions to Recommended Order filed.
PDF:
Date: 04/08/2010
Proceedings: Dallas National Insurance Company's Exceptions to Recommended Order of the Administrative Law Judge filed.
PDF:
Date: 02/03/2010
Proceedings: Recommended Order
PDF:
Date: 02/03/2010
Proceedings: Transmittal letter from Claudia Llado forwarding duplicate copies of documents, to the agency.
PDF:
Date: 02/03/2010
Proceedings: Recommended Order (hearing held August 10-14 and 31, and September 1, 2009). CASE CLOSED.
PDF:
Date: 02/03/2010
Proceedings: Recommended Order cover letter identifying the hearing record referred to the Agency.
PDF:
Date: 11/05/2009
Proceedings: Proposed Recommended Order of Dallas National Insurance Company filed.
PDF:
Date: 11/05/2009
Proceedings: Certificate of Service filed.
PDF:
Date: 11/05/2009
Proceedings: Respondent's Proposed Recommended Order filed.
PDF:
Date: 10/09/2009
Proceedings: Order Granting Extension of Time (proposed recommended orders to be filed by November 5, 2009).
PDF:
Date: 10/08/2009
Proceedings: Respondent's Motion for Extension of Time Within Which to File Proposed Recommended Order filed.
Date: 09/22/2009
Proceedings: Transcript (Volumes 1-11) filed.
Date: 08/31/2009
Proceedings: CASE STATUS: Hearing Held.
PDF:
Date: 08/25/2009
Proceedings: Order Denying Respondent`s Motion to Recall Chris Nehls.
PDF:
Date: 08/24/2009
Proceedings: Order on All Pending Issues.
PDF:
Date: 08/21/2009
Proceedings: Respondent's Motion to Recall Chris Nehls filed.
PDF:
Date: 08/14/2009
Proceedings: Order of Continuance (hearing set for August 24, 25, 31, and September 1, 2009; 10:30 a.m.; Tallahassee, FL).
Date: 08/10/2009
Proceedings: CASE STATUS: Hearing Partially Held; continued to August 25, 2009; 10:30 a.m.; Tallahassee, FL.
PDF:
Date: 08/10/2009
Proceedings: Deposition of Steven Yon filed.
PDF:
Date: 08/10/2009
Proceedings: Deposition of Joseph Boor filed.
PDF:
Date: 08/10/2009
Proceedings: Deposition of Stephen John Syzpula filed.
PDF:
Date: 08/10/2009
Proceedings: Petitioner's Notice of Filing Deposition Transcripts of Joseph Boor, Steve Szypula, and Stephen Yon Taken on August 7, 2009 filed.
PDF:
Date: 08/10/2009
Proceedings: Joint Pre-hearing Stipulation filed.
PDF:
Date: 08/07/2009
Proceedings: Motion to Quash Subpoena or, in the Alternative Motion for Protective Order (complete) filed.
PDF:
Date: 08/07/2009
Proceedings: Motion to Quash Subpoena or, in the Alternative Motion for Protective Order (incomplete) filed.
PDF:
Date: 08/05/2009
Proceedings: Order on All Pending Motions.
PDF:
Date: 08/04/2009
Proceedings: Notice of Filing Deposition Transcript (of S. Bernard not availabe for viewing) filed.
PDF:
Date: 08/04/2009
Proceedings: Deposition of Chris Nehls filed.
PDF:
Date: 08/04/2009
Proceedings: Notice of Filing Deposition Transcript (of C. Nehls) filed.
PDF:
Date: 08/04/2009
Proceedings: Deposition of Charles David Wood, Jr. filed.
PDF:
Date: 08/04/2009
Proceedings: Notice of Filing Deposition Transcript (of C. Wood) filed.
PDF:
Date: 08/04/2009
Proceedings: Oral Telephonic Deposition of Andrew Thomas Price filed.
PDF:
Date: 08/04/2009
Proceedings: Notice of Filing Deposition Transcript (of A. Price) filed.
PDF:
Date: 08/04/2009
Proceedings: Oral Deposition of Eilliam Reid filed.
PDF:
Date: 08/04/2009
Proceedings: Notice of Filing Deposition Transcript (of W. Reid) filed.
PDF:
Date: 08/04/2009
Proceedings: Petitioner's Response to the Request of the Administrative Law Judge to Citation to Pages of Reference Transcripts filed.
Date: 08/03/2009
Proceedings: CASE STATUS: Motion Hearing Held.
PDF:
Date: 08/03/2009
Proceedings: Respondent's List of Citations Regarding Petitioner's Motion in Limine and Request for Telephonic Hearing filed.
PDF:
Date: 08/03/2009
Proceedings: Respondent's Response to Petitioner's Motion in Limine and Request for Telephonic Hearing filed.
PDF:
Date: 07/27/2009
Proceedings: Petitioner's Notice of Filing Deposition Transcripts in Support of Petitioner's Motion in Limine filed.
PDF:
Date: 07/27/2009
Proceedings: Petitioner's Motion in Limine and Request for Telephonic Hearing filed.
PDF:
Date: 07/16/2009
Proceedings: Joint Motion for Extension of Time to File Prehearing Stipulation or Prehearing Statement filed.
PDF:
Date: 07/14/2009
Proceedings: Deposition of Belinda Miller filed.
PDF:
Date: 07/14/2009
Proceedings: Deposition of T. Robin Westcott filed.
PDF:
Date: 07/14/2009
Proceedings: Petitioner's Response to Defendant's Motion in Limine and Request for Telephonic Hearing filed.
PDF:
Date: 07/14/2009
Proceedings: Petitioner's Notice of Filing the Deposition Transcripts of Belinda Miller and Robin Westcott in Support of Petitioner's Response in Opposition to Respondent's Motion in Limine filed.
PDF:
Date: 07/13/2009
Proceedings: Respondent's Final Exhibit List filed.
PDF:
Date: 07/07/2009
Proceedings: Motion in Limine and Request for Telephonic Hearing filed.
PDF:
Date: 06/23/2009
Proceedings: Notice of Filing Respondent's Second Set of Interrogatories to Petitioner filed.
PDF:
Date: 05/21/2009
Proceedings: Dallas National Insurance Company Final Witness List filed.
PDF:
Date: 05/19/2009
Proceedings: Office of Insurance Regulation's Final Witness List filed.
PDF:
Date: 04/22/2009
Proceedings: Order on Discovery Issues.
PDF:
Date: 04/22/2009
Proceedings: Order Re-scheduling Hearing (hearing set for August 10 through 14, 2009; 10:00 a.m.; Tallahassee, FL).
Date: 04/21/2009
Proceedings: CASE STATUS: Pre-Hearing Conference Held.
PDF:
Date: 04/13/2009
Proceedings: Respondent`s Second Emergency Motion for Relief filed.
PDF:
Date: 04/09/2009
Proceedings: Order (pre-hearing conference is scheduled for April 21, 2009; 2:00 p.m.).
PDF:
Date: 04/08/2009
Proceedings: Petitioner`s Response to Respondent`s Motion to Continue Final Hearing Scheduled for April 20 and 21, 2009 filed.
PDF:
Date: 04/02/2009
Proceedings: Respondent`s Motion to Continue filed.
PDF:
Date: 03/26/2009
Proceedings: Joint Motion for Extension of Time to File Prehearing Stipulation or Prehearing Statement filed.
PDF:
Date: 03/23/2009
Proceedings: Notice of Filing Responses to Petitioner`s First Set of Interrogatories Nos. 17-30 filed.
PDF:
Date: 03/23/2009
Proceedings: Dallas National Insurance Company Witness List filed.
PDF:
Date: 03/23/2009
Proceedings: Petitioner`s Proposed Exhibit List filed.
PDF:
Date: 03/16/2009
Proceedings: Order Compelling Production and Answers to Interrogatories and Enlarging the Number of Interrogatories.
Date: 03/13/2009
Proceedings: CASE STATUS: Motion Hearing Held.
PDF:
Date: 03/11/2009
Proceedings: Qualified Protective Order.
PDF:
Date: 03/11/2009
Proceedings: Order on Respondent`s Motion for Protective Order and Emergency Motion for Relief.
PDF:
Date: 03/11/2009
Proceedings: Letter to Judge Davis from J. Davis enclosing case documents filed.
Date: 03/11/2009
Proceedings: CASE STATUS: Motion Hearing Held.
PDF:
Date: 03/06/2009
Proceedings: Respondent`s Response to Petitioner`s Motion to Compel and Motion to Enlarge the Number of Interrogatories Permitted filed.
PDF:
Date: 03/06/2009
Proceedings: Notice of Appearance as Additional Counsel (of A. Allen) filed.
PDF:
Date: 03/05/2009
Proceedings: Respondent`s Emergency Motion for Relief filed.
PDF:
Date: 03/03/2009
Proceedings: Respondent`s Motion for Protective Order filed.
PDF:
Date: 02/27/2009
Proceedings: Petitioner`s Motion to Compel Respondent to Produce Documents and Respond to Written Interrogatories and to Enlarge the Number of Interrogatories Permitted filed.
PDF:
Date: 01/30/2009
Proceedings: Order Granting Continuance and Re-scheduling Hearing (hearing set for April 20 and 21, 2009; 9:30 a.m.; Tallahassee, FL).
PDF:
Date: 01/29/2009
Proceedings: Respondent`s Motion to Continue filed.
PDF:
Date: 01/28/2009
Proceedings: Joint Motion for Extension of Time to File Prehearing Statement filed.
PDF:
Date: 01/07/2009
Proceedings: Notice of Filing Responses to Petitioner`s First Set of Interrogatories filed.
PDF:
Date: 12/16/2008
Proceedings: Order of Pre-hearing Instructions.
PDF:
Date: 12/16/2008
Proceedings: Notice of Hearing (hearing set for February 16 and 17, 2009; 9:30 a.m.; Tallahassee, FL).
PDF:
Date: 12/12/2008
Proceedings: Notice of Service of Petitioner`s First Set of Interrogatories to Respondent filed.
PDF:
Date: 12/12/2008
Proceedings: Petitioners` First Request for Production filed.
PDF:
Date: 12/12/2008
Proceedings: Letter to DOAH from J. Davis regarding filing of Petitioners` First Request for Production and Notice of Service of Petitioner`s First Set of Interrogatories to Respondent filed.
PDF:
Date: 11/17/2008
Proceedings: Joint Response to Initial Order filed.
PDF:
Date: 11/17/2008
Proceedings: Joint Response to Initial Order filed.
PDF:
Date: 11/10/2008
Proceedings: Initial Order.
PDF:
Date: 11/10/2008
Proceedings: Denial of Application for Licensure filed.
PDF:
Date: 11/10/2008
Proceedings: Petition for Formal Administrative Hearing filed.
PDF:
Date: 11/10/2008
Proceedings: Agency referral filed.

Case Information

Judge:
ELLA JANE P. DAVIS
Date Filed:
11/10/2008
Date Assignment:
11/10/2008
Last Docket Entry:
04/08/2010
Location:
Tallahassee, Florida
District:
Northern
Agency:
ADOPTED IN PART OR MODIFIED
 

Counsels

Related DOAH Cases(s) (1):

Related Florida Statute(s) (12):

Related Florida Rule(s) (1):