IN
THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF
NEW YORK Civil No. 3106 Filed: October 23 1963 UNITED STATES OF
AMERICA Plaintiff, v. ASSOCIATION OF CASUALTY AND SURETY COMPANIES;
AMERICAN MUTUAL INSURANCE ALLIANCE; and NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF
MUTUAL CASUALTY COMPANIES, Defendants. COMPLAINT The United States
of America, by its attorneys, acting under the direction of the
Attorney General of the United States, brings this civil action
to obtain equitable relief against the above named defendants,
and complains and alleges as follows:
- JURISDICTION AND
VENUE
- This complaint
is filed and these proceedings are instituted under Section
4 of the Act of Congress of July 2, 1890, c. 647, 26 Stat.
209 (15 U.S.C. 4), as amended, entitled "An Act to
protect trade and commerce against unlawful restraints and
monopolies," commonly known as the Sherman Act, in
order to prevent and restrain continuing violations by the
defendants, as hereinafter alleged, of Sections 1 and 3
of the Sherman Act.
- The defendant
Association of Casualty and Surety Companies transacts business
and is found within the Southern District of New York.
- DEFINITIONS
- As used herein:
(a) "Member Companies" shall be deemed to mean
member companies of any of the defendant association; (b)
"Automobile" shall be deemed to mean a self-propelled
vehicle used for the transportation of persons or property
on the highway; c) "Automobile property damage liability
insurance" shall be deemed to mean insurance against
loss arising out of the insured’s legal liability for damages
to the property of others resulting from the ownership,
maintenance or use of an automobile; (d) "Automobile
physical damage insurance" shall be deemed to mean
insurance covering damages or loss to the automobile of
the insured resulting from collision, fire, theft, and other
perils; (e) "Automobile property insurance" shall
be deemed to mean automobile property damage liability insurance
and automobile physical damage insurance; (f) "Direct
premiums earned" shall be deemed to mean that part
of the premiums applicable to the expired part of the policy;
(g) "Direct losses incurred" shall be deemed to
mean the amount of loss paid and outstanding; (h) "Insured"
shall be deemed to mean the party to whom or on behalf of
whom the insurer agrees to pay losses under the insurance
contract; (I) "Insurer" shall be deemed to mean
the party to the insurance contract who promises to pay
losses; (j) "Adjustment" shall be deemed to mean
the process to determine the amount payable by the insurer
to an insured or other claimant under the insurance contract,
and the rights and obligations incident thereto; (k) "Settlement"
shall be deemed to mean the discharge of an obligation of
an insurer to an insured or other claimant under an insurance
contract as determined by adjustment of a claim; (l) "Adjuster"
shall be deemed to mean a person or firm who represents
the insurer in the adjustment and settlement of claims with
insureds or other claimants; (m) "Automobile material
damage" shall be deemed to mean any damage to an automobile
resulting from collision, fire, or other perils for which
automobile property insurance is available; (n) "Repair
Shop" shall be deemed to mean a person or firm engaged
in automobile material damage repair; (o) "Agreed price"
shall be deemed to mean a commitment by a repair shop to
undertake to complete and guarantee automobile material
damage repairs in consideration of the amount of an appraiser’s
estimate.
- DEFENDANTS
- Associations
of Casualty and Surety Companies (hereinafter referred to
as "ACSC"), which maintains its principal office
at 110 William Street, New York, New York, is made a defendant
herein. ASCS in an unincorporated trade association whose
membership is composed of 133 stock insurance companies
doing business in the United States.
- American Mutual
Insurance Alliance (hereinafter referred to "AMIA"),
a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the
State of Illinois, with its principal office at 20 North
Wacker Drive, Chicago, Illinois, is made a defendant herein.
AMIA is a trade association whose membership is composed
of 106 mutual insurance companies doing business in the
United States.
- National Association
of Mutual Casualty Companies (hereinafter referred to as
"NAMCC"), a corporation organized and existing
under the laws of the State of Illinois, with its principal
office at 20 North Wacker Drive, Chicago, Illinois, is made
a defendant herein. NAMCC is a trade association whose
membership is composed of 26 mutual insurance companies
doing business in the United States. All members of the
NAMCC which write automobile property insurance are members
also of AMIA.
- CO-CONSPIRATORS
- Various other
persons, firms, organizations and corporations, including
but not limited to member companies, sponsored appraisers,
and repair shops, not made defendants herein have participated
as co-conspirators with the defendants in the offense hereinafter
charged and performed acts and have made statements in furtherance
thereof.
- NATURE OF TRADE
AND COMMERCE
- An important
branch of the insurance industry is automobile property
insurance, which provides coverage for property losses arising
out of the ownership or use of automobiles. This coverage
is provided by two types of insurance: Automobile property
damage liability insurance and automobile physical damage
insurance.
- Total direct
premiums earned in the United States by all insurance companies
in 1960 for automobile property insurance amounted to approximately
$3,327,815,566. Of the total direct premiums earned in
1960, member companies accounted for approximately 35.5
percent, or approximately $1,183,642,376. Total direct
losses incurred in the United States in 1960 by all insurance
companies under automobile property insurance amounted to
approximately $1,787,276,826. Of the total direct losses
incurred in 1960, member companies accounted for approximately
35.2 percent, or $627,948,160.
- Automobile property
insurance is sold by insurance companies, including member
companies, throughout the United States, and in the District
of Columbia, by the issuance of an insurance contract, commonly
called a policy, in exchange for an amount of money, commonly
called premiums. The automobile property insurance business
involves a continuous and indivisible stream of intercourse
among states composed of collections of premiums, payment
of policy obligations, and documents and communications
essential to the negotiation and execution of policy contracts
and the adjustment and settlement of claims.
- A vital phase
of the automobile property insurance business is the adjustment
and settlement of claims. A great majority of the claims
under automobile property insurance policies are for automobile
material damage. It is the general practice for member
companies to employ a claim representative, commonly known
as a claim manager, to supervise and be responsible for
the adjustment and settlement of claims, including those
under automobile property insurance, arising in the territory
assigned to him. An integral part of the process of adjustment
and settlement of claims arising under automobile property
insurance is determining the cost of repairing the damaged
automobiles. One way of accomplishing this is for the claim
manager or adjuster to engage an appraiser to prepare an
estimate of the repair cost.
- An appraiser
operates by examining the damaged automobile to determine
the damage covered by automobile property insurance, the
repairs that must be made, the time it will take to make
them and thereafter securing an agreed price from a repair
shop. The agreed price is transmitted by the appraiser
to the claim manager or adjuster, and is used as a basis
for adjusting and settling the claim. The process of adjustment
and settlement of claims includes a continual transmission
to and from and between home offices of insurance companies,
claim managers, adjusters, appraisers, and claimants located
in different states of the United States and the District
of Columbia of claim forms, statements, reports, directives,
checks and drafts, documents and communications of various
kinds, all of which are essential to the adjustment and
settlement of claims.
- A major part
of direct losses incurred under automobile property insurance
is attributable to automobile material damage repair cost;
and a major part of the automobile material damage repair
business is the repair of automobile damage covered by automobile
property insurance. The automobile material damage repair
business consists of the repair and replacement of automobile
parts and is engaged in by repair shops located in all states
of the United States and District of Columbia. The price
charged by repair shops for automobile material damage repairs
consists of a labor charge, which is an hourly rate applied
to the time taken to repair or replace parts, and a parts
charge for any parts which are used to replace damaged parts
on the automobile. Automobile parts are manufactured by
automobile manufacturers and others in plants located in
various states of the United States and are sold and shipped
by them to jobbers, wholesalers and dealers located in the
District of Columbia and states other than the states in
which they were manufactured for resale to repair shops
for sale and use in the repair of damaged automobiles.
- BACKGROUND OF THE
CONSPIRACY
- The ACSC has
had for many years a committee known as the Advisory Committee
of the Claims Bureau, sometimes referred to as the Claims
Bureau Advisory Committee, which is composed of approximately
18 claims executives of member companies. The NAMCC has
had for many years a committee known as the Claims Executive
Committee which is composed of approximately 8 claims executives
of member companies. It was and is the function of these
committees to consider on behalf of their respective associations
policies and programs relating to claims administration.
An additional function of the Advisory Committee of the
Claims Bureau of the ACSC is to supervise the operations
of and formulate policies for the Claims Bureau, a department
of the ACSC. The Claims Bureau, which has a large administrative
staff, maintains its headquarters at 110 William Street,
New York, New York, and also has several regional offices
located throughout the United States. The function of the
Claims Bureau is to aid in claims administration.
- Beginning in
or about 1940, the Advisory Committee of the Claims Bureau
of the ACSC and the Claims Executive Committee of the NAMCC
began to hold joint meetings. These meetings were soon
formalized into regular joint sessions and the group became
known as the Joint Claims Committee and later the Combined
Claims Committee (hereinafter referred to as "CCC").
These two committees were designated by their respective
defendant associations to represent the interest of member
companies on the CCC. The purpose and function of the CCC
was and is to provide a common forum to consider policies
and programs relating to claims administration. In 1962,
by resolution of the governing boards of the defendants,
the Claims Executive Committee of the NAMCC was designated
to represent AMIA on the CCC.
- On March 12,
1942 the CCC passed a resolution which provided for the
organization of Casualty Insurance Claim Managers’ Councils
(hereinafter referred to as "Councils") in various
areas of the United States to act as sub-committees of and
under the direction and control of the CCC, then known as
the Joint Claims Committee. These Councils are each chartered
by the CCC. Each Council’s membership is composed of those
member companies which have a full time, salaried claim
representative in the area under the Council’s jurisdiction.
The primary purpose and function of the Councils are to
permit field claim managers of member companies to consider
local problems of claims administration, including those
arising under automobile property insurance. At the present
time there are approximately 80 Councils located throughout
the United States, including the District of Columbia.
- In the Fall
of 1946, the Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Council met to consider
what collective action might be taken by its members to
depress and control automobile material damage repair costs
in the Pittsburgh area. In March 1947, the Pittsburgh Council
adopted a program subsequently known as the Independent
Appraisal Plan (hereinafter referred to as the "Plan"),
intended to depress and control automobile material damage
repair cost.
The CCC in December 1948 and again in July 1949 formally
adopted the Plan and since that time has sponsored it and
actively promoted its expansion and use. Since its inception
the Plan, under the supervision and direction of the CCC,
and administered by the Claims Bureau of the ACSC and the
Councils, has become a nationwide operation. By the end
of 1961, it was in effect in 177 localities throughout the
United States, including the District of Columbia. The
CCC requires uniformity in the operation of the Plan throughout
the United States.
- Under the Plan,
a Council in collaboration with the CCC, selects and sponsors
an individual or partnership to act as appraiser to make
determinations of automobile material damage costs for use
in the adjustment and settlement of claims. Prior to the
selection of a sponsored appraiser, Council members are
instructed to submit to the Council the volume of business
they anticipate giving the appraiser in the area for which
he is to be sponsored. The sponsored appraiser is required
to employ sufficient personnel to handle any volume of appraisal
business in his territory. Most such appraisers have several
employees. The sponsored appraiser is required to confine
his operations to the territory for which he is sponsored
by the council or CCC. The fees which the sponsoring appraiser
charges are subject to the approval of the sponsoring Council
or CCC. The sponsored appraiser is required to conform
his operations to the principles of the Plan and to assure
his compliance, his operations are supervised and controlled
by the sponsoring Council and the Claims Bureau on behalf
of the CCC. The Plan calls for exclusive use of the sponsored
appraisers by member companies and the sponsored appraiser
is urged to solicit business from others in order to increase
the effectiveness of the Plan.
- Included among
the means used under the Plan to control and depress automobile
material damage repair costs are the following: (1) to repair
rather than replace damaged parts; (2) to replaced damaged
parts by used rather than new parts; (3) to obtain discounts
on new replacement parts; (4) to establish strict labor
time allowances by the sponsored appraisers; and (5) to
obtain the lowest possible hourly labor rate.
- The Plan calls
for the sponsored appraiser to arrange for a number of repair
shops to agree to make automobile material damage repairs
based upon his estimate without the repair shop first examining
the damaged automobile. In those situations in which the
damaged automobile is not already in the possession of a
repair shop, the sponsored appraiser will recommend any
of these repair shops to the adjuster or claim manager.
In those instances where a particular repair shop in which
the damaged automobile is located will not agree to make
repairs based upon the sponsored appraiser’s estimate, the
Plan provides that the sponsored appraiser shall inform
the adjuster or claim manager of the names of those repair
shops which will accept his estimate and that the adjuster
or claim manager will then, when possible, have the damaged
automobile repaired by one of the repair shops which have
agreed to accept the sponsored appraiser’s estimate. It
is seldom that a claim is settled at a higher figure than
the sponsored appraiser’s estimate.
- The nationwide
application of the Plan involves a continuous intercourse
among the states composed of memoranda, correspondence,
directives and other communications to and from and between
the CCC, defendants, Claims Bureau, member companies, Councils
and sponsored appraisers.
- OFFENSES CHARGED
- Beginning in
or about 1947, and continuing up to and including the date
of the filing of this complaint, the defendants and co-conspirators
have engaged in a combination and conspiracy in unreasonable
restraint of the aforesaid trade and commerce in the adjustment
and settlement of automobile property insurance claims,
the automobile material damage appraisal business and the
automobile damage repair business, in violation of Sections
1 and 3 of the Sherman Act. Defendants are continuing and
will continue said offenses unless the relief herein prayed
for is granted.
- The aforesaid
combination and conspiracy has consisted of a continuing
agreement and concert of action among the defendants and
co-conspirators to eliminate competition among member companies
in the adjustment and settlement of automobile property
insurance claims, among appraisers and among repair shops,
in order to control and depress automobile material damage
repair costs through boycott, coercion and intimidation
of repair shops.
- Pursuant to
and in effectuation of the aforesaid combination and conspiracy
the defendants and co-conspirators did those things which,
as hereinbefore alleged, they agreed to do and, among others,
did the following things: (a) Refused to recognize or sponsor
more than one appraiser in a territory designated by a Council
or the CCC; (b) Coerced sponsored appraisers to operate
only in the territories in which they are sponsored; (c
Induced member companies to channel their automobile material
damage appraisal business to the sponsored appraiser and
boycott other business to the sponsored appraiser and boycott
other automobile material damage appraisal businesses; (d)
Encouraged the use of sponsored appraisers by others to
increase the effectiveness of the Plan; (e) Required sponsored
appraisers to conform their operations to the Plan and withdrew
or threatened to withdraw the sponsorship of appraisers
who failed to do so; (f) Required fees charged by sponsored
appraisers to be approved by Councils or the CCC; (g) Induced
member companies to refuse to settle a claim for an amount
greater than a sponsored appraiser’s estimate of the automobile
material damage repair costs; and (h) Induced member companies
to channel automobile material damage repair business to
those repair shops which will, and boycott those repair
shops which will not: (1) Accept the sponsored appraiser’s
estimate as to the cost of repairs; (2) Give a price discount
on replacement parts; (3) Maintain hourly labor rates at
a figure which is considered the lowest possible rate in
the area; and (4) Accede to the sponsored appraiser’s determination
of time allowances.
- EFFECTS
- The aforesaid
offenses have had, among others, the following effects:
(a) Elimination of competition in the adjustment and settlement
of automobile property insurance claims, in the automobile
material damage appraisal business and in the automobile
material damage repair business; (b) Non-sponsored appraisers
engaged in or desiring to engage in the automobile material
damage appraisal business have been foreclosed from a substantial
segment of the business; (c Repair shops which refuse to
accept the sponsored appraisers’ estimate have been foreclosed
from a substantial segment of the automobile material damage
repair business; and (d) Prices charged by repair shops
have been subjected to collective control and supervision
by defendants and co-conspirators. PRAYER WHEREFORE, the
plaintiff prays: 1. That the aforesaid combination and
conspiracy be adjudged and decreed to be in violation of
Sections 1 and 3 of the Sherman Act. 2. That each of the
defendants, their officers, directors, agents, and employees,
and all committees or persons acting or claiming to act
on behalf of the defendants or any of them, be perpetually
enjoined from continuing to carry out, directly or indirectly,
the aforesaid combination and conspiracy to restrain interstate
trade and commerce in the adjustment and settlement of automobile
property insurance claims, the automobile material damage
appraisal business and the automobile material damage repair
business; and that they be perpetually enjoined from engaging
in or participating in practices, contracts, agreements,
or understandings, or claiming any rights thereunder, having
the purpose or effect of continuing, reviving, or renewing
the aforesaid offense or any offenses similar thereto. 3.
That each of the defendants be enjoined from, either individually
or in concert with others: (1) sponsoring or preferentially
dealing with any appraiser; (2) boycotting any appraiser;
(3) exercising any control over or influence upon the activities
of any appraiser; (4) channeling or attempting to channel
automobile material damage repair business to any repair
shop or type of repair shop; (5) boycotting any repair shop
or type of repair shop; or (6) coercing any repair shop
to conform to its prices for repair work or parts to the
estimates of any appraiser or otherwise influencing the
prices for repair work or parts. 4. That each of the defendants
be ordered to amend its by-laws to require each of its member
companies to refrain from acting in concert with any other
companies in: (1) sponsoring or preferentially dealing with
any appraiser; (2) boycotting any appraiser; (3) exercising
any control over or influence upon the activities of any
appraiser; (4) channeling or attempting to channel automobile
material damage repair business to any repair shop or type
of repair shop; (5) boycotting any repair shop or type of
repair shop; (6) coercing any repair shop to conform its
prices for repair work or parts to the estimates of any
appraiser or otherwise influencing the prices for repair
work on parts; and to make compliance with such requirements
a condition of membership. 5. That pursuant to Section 5
of the Sherman Act on order be made and entered herein requiring
defendants AMIA and NAMCC to be brought before the Court
in this proceeding and directing the Marshal of the Northern
District of Illinois to serve summons upon AMIA and NAMCC.
6. That the plaintiff have such other and further relief
as the nature of the case may require and the Court may
deem just and proper. 7. That the Plaintiff recover the
costs of this suit. Dated: New York, New York October 22nd
1963 signed by: Robert F. Kennedy Attorney General William
H. Orrick, Jr. Assistant Attorney General Baddia J. Rashid
Attorney, Department of Justice John H. Waters Attorney,
Department of Justice William H. Rowan Attorney, Department
of Justice
IN THE UNITED STATES
DISTRICT COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK
CIVIL ACTION No. 63
Civ. 3106 ENTERED: November 27,1963 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Plaintiff v. ASSOCIATION OF CASUALTY AND SURETY COMPANIES, AMERICAN
MUTUAL INSURANCE ALLIANCE and the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF MUTUAL
CASUALTY COMPANIES, Defendants
FINAL JUDGMENT
Plaintiff, United States
of America, having filed its complaint herein on October 23, 1963,
and the plaintiff and the defendants, by their respective attorneys,
having consented to the entry of this Final Judgment without admission
by any party with respect to any issue herein; NOW, THEREFORE,
before the taking of any testimony herein, without trial or adjudication
of any issue, and upon such consent, as aforesaid, it is hereby
ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED as follows:
- This Court has jurisdiction
of the subject matter hereof and the parties hereto and the
complaint states a claim upon which relief can be granted under
Sections 1 and 3 of the Act of Congress of July 2, 1890, commonly
known as the Sherman Act, as amended.
- The provisions of
this Final Judgment shall be binding upon each defendant and
upon its officers, directors, agents, servants, employees, committees,
successors and assigns, and upon all other persons in active
concert or participation with any defendant who shall have received
actual notice of this Final Judgment by personal service or
otherwise.
- (A) Each defendant
is ordered and directed within ninety (90) days from the entry
of this Final Judgment to terminate, cancel and abandon the
Independent Appraisal Plan, sometimes known as the Automotive
Damage Appraisal Plan, which the defendants have established
and are now administering, and each defendant is enjoined from
reviving, renewing or again placing into effect that plan. (B)
Defendants are ordered and directed within ninety (90) days
from the entry of this Final Judgment to send written notice,
in the form attached hereto as an exhibit, stating that all
defendants have terminated, canceled and abandoned the Independent
Appraisal Plan (1) to each appraiser sponsored under the Plan,
(2) to each member company, and (3) to each Local Casualty Insurance
Claims Managers’ Council.
- (A) Each defendant
is enjoined from placing into effect any plan, program or practice
which has the purpose or effect of: (1) sponsoring, endorsing
or otherwise recommending any appraiser of damage to automobile
vehicles: (2) directing, advising or otherwise suggesting that
any person or firm do business or refuse to do business with
(a) any appraiser of damage to automobile vehicles with respect
to the appraisal of such damage, or (b) any independent or dealer
franchised automotive repair shop with respect to the repair
of damage to automobile vehicles; (3) exercising any control
over the activities of any appraiser of damage to automotive
vehicles; (4) allocating or dividing customers, territories,
markets or business among any appraisers of damage to automotive
vehicles; or (5) fixing, establishing, maintaining or otherwise
controlling the prices to be paid for the appraisal of damage
to automotive vehicles, or to be charged by independent or dealer
franchised automotive repair shops for the repair of damage
to automotive vehicles or for replacement parts or labor in
connection therewith, whether by coercion, boycott or intimidation
or by the use of flat rate or parts manuals or otherwise.
(B) Nothing in Subsection (A) above shall be deemed to prohibit
the furnishing to any person or firm of any information indicating
corrupt, fraudulent or unlawful practices on the part of any
appraiser of damage to automotive vehicles or any independent
or dealer franchised automotive repair shop, so long as the
furnishing of such information is not part of a plan, program
or practice enjoined in paragraphs (1) through (5) of Subsection
(A) above. Each defendant shall include in any report of such
information an affirmative statement that such report is not
a recommendation and that the person or firm to whom such report
is furnished should independently determine whether to do business
with any appraiser or automotive repair shop to which the report
relates.
- Defendants are ordered
and directed within ninety (90) days from the entry of this
Final Judgment to cause the character of each Local Casualty
Insurance Claims Managers’ Council to be amended so as to incorporate
therein a declaration of policy that the Council shall not engage
in any activity prohibited by Section IV of this Final Judgment.
- Nothing in Section
IV of this Final Judgment shall be deemed to determine or constitute
a waiver of any rights or immunities that defendants may have
under the Act of Congress of March 9, 1945, commonly known as
the McCarran-Ferguson Act.
- (A) For the purpose
of determining and securing compliance with this Final Judgment
and subject to any legally recognized privilege, duly authorized
representatives of the Department of Justice shall, upon written
request of the Attorney General, or the Assistant Attorney General
in charge of the Antitrust Division, and on reasonable notice
to any defendant made to its principal office, be permitted
(1) access during the office hours of such defendant to all
books, ledgers, accounts, correspondence, memoranda and other
records and documents in the possession or under the control
of such defendant relating to any of the matters contained in
this Final Judgment during which time counsel for such defendant
may be present; and (2) subject to the reasonable convenience
of such defendant and without restraint or interference from
it to interview officers or employees of such defendant, who
may have counsel present, regarding any such matters. (B) Any
defendant, on written request of the Attorney General or the
Assistant Attorney General in charge of the Antitrust Division,
shall submit within a reasonable time such reports in writing,
under oath if requested, with respect to any matters contained
in this Final Judgment as may be reasonably necessary for the
purpose of the enforcement of this Final Judgment. (C) No information
obtained by the means provided in this Section VII shall be
divulged by any representative of the Department of Justice
to any person other than a duly authorized representative of
the Executive Branch, except in the course of legal proceedings
to which the United States of America is a party for the purpose
of securing compliance with this Final Judgment or as otherwise
required by law.
- Jurisdiction is
retained for the purpose of enabling any of the parties to this
Final Judgment to apply to this Court at any time for such further
orders and directions as may be necessary or appropriate for
the construction or carrying out of this Final Judgment or for
the modification or termination of any of the provisions thereof,
and for the enforcement of compliance therewith and punishment
of violations thereof. Dated: November 27, 1963 /s/ Edward
C. McLean United States District Judge
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT
OF NEW YORK
CIVIL ACTION No. 63 Civ. 3106
Filed October 23,1963 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff v. ASSOCIATION
OF CASUALTY AND SURETY COMPANIES, AMERICAN MUTUAL INSURANCE
ALLIANCE and the NATIONAL
ASSOCIATION OF MUTUAL CASUALTY COMPANIES, Defendants. STIPULATION.
It is stipulated by and between the undersigned parties, by their
respective attorneys, that: (1) The parties consent that a Final
Judgment in the form hereto attached may be filed and entered
by the Court at any time after the expiration of thirty (30) days
following the date of filing of this Stipulation without further
notice to any party or other proceedings, either upon the motion
of any party or upon the Court’s own motion, provided that plaintiff
has not withdrawn its consent as provided herein; (2) The plaintiff
may withdraw its consent hereto at any time within said period
of thirty (30) days by serving notice thereof upon the other parties
hereto and filing said notice with the Court; (3) In the event
plaintiff withdraws its consent hereto, this Stipulation shall
be of no effect whatever in this or any other proceeding and the
making of this Stipulation shall not in any manner prejudice any
consenting party in any subsequent proceedings. Dated: October
23, 1963. For the Plaintiff: WILLIAM H. ORRICK, JR. Assistant
Attorney General JOHN H. WATERS WILLIAM D. KILGORE, JR. WILLIAM
H. ROWAN BADDIA J. RASHID CHARLES F. B. McALEER Attorneys, Department
of Justice For the Defendant Association of Casualty and Surety
Companies: ROBERT MacCRATE For the Defendants American Mutual
Insurance Alliance and the National Association of Mutual Casualty
Companies: HUGH B. COX
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