Drew v. Insurance Commissioner & Treasurer
Drew v. Insurance Commissioner & Treasurer
Opinion of the Court
John Drew, a licensed insurance agent, seeks review of an administrative order
Drew is licensed by the Insurance Commissioner as a general lines and an ordi
Count I: (a) He knowingly collected as a premium a sum in excess of the charge applicable to such insurance (F.S. 626.-970[2]);
(b) He collected a service fee (F.S. 626.970 [2]);
(c) He willfully used his license to circumvent the requirements of the insurance code (F.S. 626.611 [4]) ;
(d) He demonstrated lack of fitness or trustworthiness to engage in the business of insurance (F.S. 626.611 [7]);
(e) He committed fraudulent or dishonest practices (F.S. 626.611 [9]) ;
(f) He misappropriated money belonging to others in the conduct of business under his license (F.S. 626.611 [10]) ;
(g) He violated a provision of the insurance code in the dealing under his license (F.S. 626.621 [2]); and
(h) He failed to properly account for funds belonging to insurers or others (F.S. 626.561).
*796 Count II: In explaining to a customer and charging a contingency fee of $10.-50, Drew violated Florida Statutes 627.-403, 626.611(4), 626.611 (7), 626.611(9), 626.611(10), 626.621(2) and 626.561. “Charge I” is fully incorporated by reference.
Counts III, IV, V, VI and VII charge Drew with similar transgressions except each count names a specific individual. These counts also incorporated by reference “Charge I”.
Distilling the charges into the essence of Drew’s alleged transgressions, it is that he collected from seven named individuals a contingency fee of $10.50 each, which he candidly admitted. It appears, to use an appropriate colloquilism, that the Insurance Commissioner “threw the book at him”.
The first point raised by Drew is that the hearing procedure afforded did not comport with elemental principles of “due process”, because he' was subject to “house justice”.
At the outset of the hearing, Mr. Drew stipulated that he sold insurance to the persons named in each charge, that he collected the premiums from each of these persons as alleged in each charge, and that he collected a contingency fee in addition to the premium in each charge. Thus, the evidence in this case is unquestionably sufficient to support the examiner’s finding that Mr. Drew was guilty of violation of Chapter 626, Florida Statutes, by charging and collecting a contingency fee of $10.50 from each of the seven named purchasers of automobile insurance.
Upon fully reviewing this record, we address ourselves to a consideration of the severity of the punishment meted out to Mr. Drew. As in Rogers v. King,
. See Florida Statutes 626.611(4), (7), (9) ; 626.621(2); and 626.970(2). .
. The order recites: “. . . (such amount represents administrative monetary fines of $250.00 each as to Charges I, III, V, VI, VII and $500.00 each for Charges II and IV)
. At the hearing, Drew stated: “.
Another thing is if a person came in and tendered me with a bad cheek in payment and I sent in my agency cheek which I did and if this check was fraudulent then the company not only kept my check, they sent my money back to the individual unless I could get a power of attorney requesting the money come to me which was difficult. So I not only worked for free in some occasions, I contributed to the company’s welfare with no return whatsoever, as a matter of fact, it’s a loss to myself.”
. Drew had his customers sign the following document:
“Agent Sales Commission is earned at point of sale. The minimum earned contingency is $10.60 or at an earned rate of $10.50 per hour, whichever is greater.
“CANCELLATION
“No flat cancellation after inception. When policy cancellation is requested by the producer, premium finance company, or by the named insured, the effective date of cancellation will be no earlier than 12:01 A.M. on the date of postmark of cancellation request. If cancelled, the minimum agency cancellation charge will be $10.50 or 17% percent of the total premium refund amount, whichever is greater. This cancellation charge is applicable to all policies, regardless of term, and to each item insured. Cancellations for ANY reason other than at the Producer’s or at the Insuring Company’s request are short rate. Original policy, lost policy release, or written request of the insured is necessary where requested by insuring company.”
.The notice and charges which encompassed six legal size pages have been summarized.
. The hearing examiner was an employee of the Insurance Commissioner as was the trial counsel.
. Buchman v. State Board of Accountancy, 273 So.2d 122 (1 Fla.App. 1973).
. At one point, the examiner stated to Mr. Drew: “You’re doing yourself no good and I’ll put it on record by not trying to answer question, running around in circles.”
. State v. Seaboard Air Line Ry. Co., 111 So. 391 (Fla. 1927) ; See also Ford v. Bay County School Board, 246 So.2d 119 (1 Fla. App. 1970) ; and Buchman v. State Board of Accountancy, 300 So.2d 671 (Fla. 1974).
. Rogers v. King, 161 So.2d 258 (1 Fla. App. 1964), cert. discharged 176 So.2d 65 (Fla. 1965).
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.