Court decision prohibits Mercury Insurance from passing brand-advertising costs to consumers

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SACRAMENTO – The California Supreme Court rejected Mercury Insurance and a coalition of insurance industry groups' latest volley in their repeated and coordinated attempts to undermine the consumer protection ground rules established by Proposition 103-approved by California voters in 1988.

The case stems from the commissioner's 2013 rate-reduction order that included prohibiting Mercury from passing on $2,806,152 in brand advertising costs to consumers because the advertising did not give policyholders meaningful information about the insurance products.

Insurers spend millions of dollars on advertising their brands including purchasing naming rights for sports stadiums and sporting event sponsorships.
 
"Once again we have successfully defended consumers against the insurance industry's ongoing crusade to undermine our consumer protection laws," said California Insurance Commissioner Dave Jones. "In this most recent victory, the courts rejected the insurers' claim that they have a First Amendment right to charge policyholders for the cost of the Mercury Insurance Tennis Open or flying a blimp over the Super Bowl with the insurer's name on the side. Consumers should not have to pay for brand advertising that only benefits the insurance company and provides no meaningful information to consumers."
 
The commissioner strongly defended in court his 2013 order requiring Mercury to reduce homeowner insurance rates by 5.4 percent, which saved policyholders millions.

In challenging the order, the insurers argued unsuccessfully that they have the right to determine their own profit with each rate proceeding rather than use the commissioner's rate formula approved by the California Supreme Court in 1994.
 
In a published decision, the court of appeal expressed its frustration with the groundless arguments the insurers used to challenge the already-approved formula to determine rates by referring to their arguments as "smoke, mirrors" and "hocus pocus."

Commissioner Jones opposed Mercury's petition to the California Supreme Court seeking review of the appellate court decision.

The California Supreme Court rejected Mercury's petition for review so the court of appeal's decision upholding the commissioner's order is the final decision.