DENISE COTE, District Judge.
On June 7, 2013, defendants Assurant, Inc. ("Assurant") and American Security Insurance Company ("American Security") (collectively "Assurant defendants") filed a motion to dismiss the complaint of
This action arises out of a dispute over whether Curtis was required to purchase wind insurance on a second home located in West Palm Beach, Florida. In December 2008, Curtis purchased the second home. Curtis's mortgage is held by co-defendant Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation ("Freddie Mac") and is serviced by co-defendant Cenlar, FSB, and/or Cenlar Agency, Inc. (collectively "Cenlar"). The Mortgage provides in relevant part that:
Concurrently with the purchase of the home, Curtis acquired a homeowners property insurance policy. The policy excluded coverage for damage caused by wind. Curtis renewed the insurance policy each year thereafter with some modifications, but he never obtained wind coverage.
In October 2012, Cenlar sent a letter to Curtis informing him that the terms of his mortgage purportedly required him to acquire wind insurance. Curtis responded that wind coverage was not specifically required by his mortgage and that Cenlar had accepted his insurance policy for the prior three years. Following Curtis's refusal to purchase wind coverage, Cenlar purchased a policy which included wind coverage on his behalf at an annual premium of $7,512.91, which was billed to Curtis's escrow account. That policy was issued by American Security, a co-defendant and movant here. American Security is a subsidiary of Assurant, also a co-defendant and movant here.
On April 4, 2013, Curtis filed this complaint against Cenlar, Freddie Mac, American Security, and Assurant in the Supreme Court of the State of New York, County of New York. Curtis makes several claims against the various defendants in his complaint. Only one of the claims is alleged against the two moving Assurant defendants.
On May 3, 2013, American Security filed a Notice of Removal to this Court. On June 14, 2013, Curtis filed a motion to remand this case to state court on the ground that this Court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the claims. The motion to remand was denied in an Opinion and Order of October 3, 2013.
Although the Assurant defendants bring their motion to dismiss under both standing and failure to state a claim theories, their arguments are not properly characterized as standing arguments. All of the defendants' contentions concern the legal merits of Curtis's complaint. They reason that because Curtis loses on the merits, he has not suffered any "cognizable injury that is traceable to the acts of the Assurant defendants and he lacks standing to sue them." But this reasoning would allow any Rule 12(b)(6) motion to be restyled as a Rule 12(b)(1) standing motion. While standing and merits questions frequently overlap, standing is fundamentally about the propriety of the
To survive a motion to dismiss under Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6), "a complaint must contain sufficient factual matter, accepted as true, to state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face."
The Assurant defendants bring their motion to dismiss on two separate grounds. They rely on the Filed Rate Doctrine and on the fact that the Florida statute on which Curtis relies does not apply to insurance companies. The motion to dismiss is properly granted on either ground.
The Assurant defendants argue that the "Filed Rate Doctrine" bars Curtis's claims that Cenlar and the Assurant defendants entered into a business arrangement whereby Cenlar was paid commissions for placing property insurance wherein "the actual cost of the insurance . . . [was] inflated." Curtis does not respond to the Assurant defendants' Filed Rate Doctrine defense in his opposition to their motion to dismiss.
The Second Circuit recognizes the Filed Rate Doctrine:
While the Filed Rate Doctrine often arises in the context of federal regulators, the Second Circuit has said that "the rationales underlying the filed rate doctrine apply equally strongly to regulation by state agencies."
Because American Security and Assurant are insurance providers whose rates are subject to regulation by the Florida Office of Insurance Regulation, Curtis's claim that the rates they set are inflated is not cognizable here. Curtis makes no argument to override the clear bar set up by the Filed Rate Doctrine. Nowhere does he allege that the Assurant defendants are not insurance companies. Nor does he argue at any point that the charge for wind coverage was not a rate applied to him in Florida subject to regulation by the Florida Office of Insurance Regulation. Rather, his complaint centers on the alleged impropriety of the insurance-pricing conduct of the Assurant defendants. Whether the cost of the insurance was inflated is a question that is non-justiciable under the Filed Rate Doctrine. Resolving that question would implicate both the rate-discrimination concern and the justiciability concern that underlie the Doctrine. In light of this bar, Curtis's complaint against the Assurant defendants lacks "sufficient factual matter. . . to state a claim to relief that is [legally] plausible on its face."
Nor is Curtis's complaint saved by his allegations of improper coordination between American Security and Cenlar. The applicability of the Filed Rate Doctrine does not turn on the conduct underlying the rate setting. Rather, "it is [the] judicial determination of a reasonable rate that the filed rate doctrine forbids."
Curtis does not bring any claims against American Security and Assurant that are not predicated on the allegedly inflated insurance rates. Consequently, Curtis's claims against the Assurant defendants must be dismissed as non-justiciable pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6).
Although the Filed Rate Doctrine is independently sufficient to require Curtis's claims against the Assurant defendants to be dismissed, it is also true that the Florida Deceptive and Unfair Trade Practices Act ("FDUTPA"), Fla. Stat. § 501.204, upon which Curtis bases all of his claims against the Assurant defendants, does not apply to insurance companies. Curtis's complaint against those defendants would thus have to be dismissed on that basis alone. Although the Assurant defendants raise this issue in their motion, Curtis offers no response in his opposition.
The codified FDUTPA statute expressly provides that the law "does not apply to . . . [a]ny person or activity regulated under laws administered by . . . The Office of Insurance Regulation." Fla. Stat. § 501.212. Because insurance companies in Florida are regulated by that Office, district courts have held that "FDUTPA does not apply to insurance companies."
Curtis's complaint against the Assurant defendants is predicated on their allegedly improper insurance rate setting conduct. Nowhere in his complaint does Curtis suggest that the Assurant defendants are not companies involved in insurance "activity" in the meaning of the FDUTPA insurance exclusion.
Curtis contends that this motion is governed by New York state procedural law, and that the Assurant defendants' declarations in support of their motion to dismiss are procedurally improper. But, all actions in United States courts are governed by the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
The Assurant defendants' June 7, 2013 motion to dismiss is granted in its entirety. All claims against American Security and Assurant are dismissed.
SO ORDERED.