Court Opinion

ID: 1036249
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-08-01 21:36:53.456643+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:05:12.773900
License: Public Domain

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                      EME COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

CHICAGO TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY, an )
Authorized Insurer,                 )
                                                 )                     No. 87215-5
              Respondent,                        )
                                                 )                        En Bane
v.                                               )
                                                 )
WASHINGTON STATE OFFICE OF THE                   )       Fi1 ---fJA~-V-~.UGt~--V-0-!--18::20Hil13e-_- -
                                                           ed
INSURANCE COMMISSIONER,                          )
                                                 )
              Petitioner.                        )
                                                 )

      WIGGINS, J.- Washington State strictly regulates how insurance may be

provided and marketed in order to protect the consumer. Applicable statutes and

regulations prohibit an insurer or its agent from giving out inducements for the

purpose of obtaining title insurance business. Chicago Title Insurance Company

(CTIC) appointed Land Title Insurance Company as its agent for the purpose of

soliciting and effectuating CTIC's insurance policies. Land Title violated the anti-

inducement laws. We hold that CTIC is responsible for Land Title's regulatory

violations, pursuant to statutory and common-law theories of agency. When the

statute forbids the insurer or its agent from certain conduct, it means that the insurer
No. 87215-5

may not do indirectly-through its agent-what it may not do directly. We reverse the

Court of Appeals.

                                            FACTS

    I.   Background- Title Insurance

         Typically, insurance protects against a contingency that might occur in the

future, such as a fire or flood. Title insurance is different-it protects against past

claims against the insured real estate, such as forged signatures on transfer

documents, unpaid real estate taxes, and liens that cloud title on the property. Title

insurance is also unique in two ways significant to this case: first, in how it is

provided and, second, in how it is marketed and regulated.

         Before a title company issues a title insurance policy, it must research the

state of title to the property in question, which is done using an archive called a tract

index or "title plant." 1 Admin. R. (AR) at 469, 514. The Washington Insurance Code

requires a title insurance company to own, lease, or maintain a complete set of tract

indexes in every county where it transacts business. RCW 48.29.020(2), .040(1 ). A

title company can satisfy this requirement by retaining a "duly authorized agent" with

a complete set of tract indexes in a county where it transacts business. RCW

48.29.040(1 ). An agent is "any person appointed by an insurer to solicit applications

for insurance on its behalf." Former RCW 48.17.010 (1985). 2 The insurance code

also governs the process for appointing an agent. RCW 48.17. 160.

1
 This process is called "abstracting." First Am. Title Ins. Co. v. Oep't of Revenue, 144
Wash. 2d 300, 302, 27 P.3d 604 (2001).
2
    This definition was in effect at the time of the administrative proceedings at issue in this

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No. 87215-5

      Some title insurers utilize a type of agent called an underwritten title company

(UTC). A title insurer that wishes to market its policies in a small county might not

own a title plant there; a prospective UTC might own a title plant in that county but

be legally unable to sell insurance. 3 Therefore, the title insurer and the UTC agree to

sell their services as a bundle. The consumer buys the title insurer's policy,

supported by the UTC's abstracting work. First Am. Title Ins. Co. v. Oep't of

Revenue, 144 Wash. 2d 300, 304, 27 P.3d 604 (2001 ). A UTC may offer other services

as well. For tax purposes, "a UTC is not a mere insurance agent or broker, but rather

generates business for its own account .... "4 /d. at 305.

      Title insurance is also special in that it is purchased as part of the closing of a

real estate transaction. Sometimes title insurance is mandatory in order to secure

the funds to close on the transaction. In many cases, consumers have little real

opportunity to shop around or to make an informed decision about what title

insurance policy to buy; to the consumer, title insurance is "just one more expensive

step in the dizzying, convoluted and often confusing flurry of paperwork and signings

that culminate in the closing of the home purchase." AR at 469-70. Many consumers

case. The present statute defines a "title insurance agent" as "a business entity licensed
under the laws of this state and appointed by an authorized title insurance company to sell,
solicit, or negotiate insurance on behalf of the title insurance company." RCW
48.17.01 0(16).
3
  For instance, the UTC might not meet the insurance code's minimum capital stock
requirements to sell title insurance. RCW 48.29.020(3); RCW 48.05.340.
4
  In First American Title Insurance Company, we specifically disclaimed any reliance on
principles of agency. 144 Wn.2d at 304 n. 1. Therefore, First American Title is not controlling
authority as to our agency analysis below and is not further discussed in this opinion.

                                               3
No. 87215-5

ultimately buy title insurance from whomever a real estate agent, bank, or other

major party to the transaction recommends.

      This model is called "reverse competition" because title companies do not

cater to their consumers' needs, but to the needs of the middlemen who can

recommend a consumer to a title insurer. AR at 470. Indeed, title companies spend

nearly all of their marketing budgets "wining and dining" middlemen in order to gain

referrals. /d. Because this model creates significant potential for abuse, both the

legislature and Office of the Insurance Commissioner (OIC) impose strict restrictions

on gifts and other inducements to middlemen. At the time of the administrative

proceedings below, former RCW 48.30.150 (1990) provided that

      [n]o insurer, general agent, agent, broker, solicitor, or other person
      shall, as an inducement to insurance, or in connection with any
      insurance transaction, provide in any policy for, or offer, or sell, buy, or
      offer or promise to buy or give, or promise, or allow to, or on behalf of,
      the insured or prospective insured in any manner whatsoever:

             (3)   Any prizes, goods, wares, or merchandise of an aggregate
      value in excess of twenty-five dollars.

Similarly, OIC enjoys broad authority to define unfair or deceptive trade practices,

RCW 48.30.01 0(2), and the commissioner has clarified through rule making that

      (1)     RCW 48.30.140 and 48.30.150, pertaining to "rebating" and
      "illegal inducements," are applicable to title insurers and their agents.

               (2)   It is an unfair method of competition and an unfair or
      deceptive act or practice for a title insurer or its agent, directly or
      indirectly, to offer, promise, allow, give, set off, or pay anything of value
      exceeding twenty-five dollars, calculated in the aggregate over a
      twelve-month period on a per person basis in the manner specified in
      RCW 48.30.140(4), to any person as an inducement, payment, or
      reward for placing or causing title insurance business to be given to the
      title insurer.

                                           4
No. 87215-5

Former WAC 284-30-800 (1990) (emphasis added). 5 The present case involves

alleged violations of former WAC 284-30-800 on the part of CTIC's duly appointed

agent, as described below.

    II.   Land Title's Relationship with CTIC

          Land Title is one of several duly appointed agents of CTIC. Land Title is not

authorized to sell insurance in Washington; rather, it is a UTC of CTIC. According to

OIC's records, Land Title is authorized to issue title insurance for only one insurer:

CTIC. AR at 347. Aside from selling CTIC's title insurance policies, Land Title

markets escrow services, which constitute 28 percent of its total revenue. Land Title

requires all of its escrow customers to purchase title insurance as well. AR at 510

("TITLE INSURANCE . . . Must be provided in conjunction with every escrow

transaction provided by this office.").

          Land Title and CTIC entered into an "Issuing Agency Agreement" (Agreement)

providing for Land Title to issue CTIC's title assurances in four Washington counties:

Kitsap, Clallam, Jefferson, and Mason. In these four counties, CTIC conducts no

direct operations.

          The Agreement authorizes Land Title to "sign, countersign and issue

Principal's title assurances on forms supplied and approved by Principal and only on

real property located in the County or Counties listed above, and in such other

Counties as may be designated in writing by Principal .... " AR at 519, at         1f   3.

5
  This section of the Washington Administrative Code has since been repealed and
superseded by RCW 48.29.210 and WAC 284-29-200 through 284-29-260. Wash. St. Reg.
09-05-077 (Mar. 20, 2009).

                                                5
No. 87215-5

However, Land Title is not authorized to do "any other act for principal not expressly

authorized herein." /d. Land Title must use forms supplied by CTIC and charge only

premiums approved by CTIC, but may not use CTIC's name in any advertising or

printing other than to indicate its status as CTIC's policy issuing agent.

       CTIC retains the power to decide questions of risk for Land Title and is "fully

authorized and empowered in its absolute discretion, to defend, settle, compromise

or dispose of any claim for which any party to this Agreement may be liable." AR at

521, at1J10.B.

Ill.   Inducement Violations and OIC Enforcement

       In 2005, OIC launched an investigation into the marketing practices of several

major title insurers operating in Washington. Over the 10-month investigation, OIC

found that violations of former RCW 48.30.140 (1994) and former 48.30.150 were

"widespread and pervasive" and that the entire industry was "rife with practices gone

haywire. . . . [T]he consumer, who ultimately pays for the coverage, is the only

source of money for these illegal expenses." AR at 473-E. OIC further found that

"some of the major offenders view the law as little more than a nuisance standing

between them and their ability to have business steered to them from their

middlemen, go-betweens and associates in the real estate business." AR at 473-L.

       CTIC was no exception. Over a period of 18 months, CTIC co-advertised with

middlemen (a cost of $100 to $4,300) over 150 times. CTIC bought food for

hundreds of middlemen meetings and broker opens, sponsored golf tournaments

(over $3,000), hosted receptions and hospitality suites ($13,000), and, on one

occasion, purchased 26 seats ($2,400) at a Seahawks game. These unlawful

                                            6
No. 87215-5

expenditures were not atypical, but rather CTIC's violations were "somewhere in the

middle of the pack when [CTIC]'s violation record is compared to other companies."

AR at 473-H. OIC did not act on the violations it found at that time, but published its

findings in a written report, AR at 473-A through 473-N. In November 2006, OIC

issued a technical assistance advisory to all Washington title insurers and title

insurance agents, intended to "clarify requirements [of the anti-inducement laws] for

title insurers and their agents." AR at 473AF.

       In 2007, OIC began investigating Land Title. For purposes of the motion now

on review, CTIC has stipulated that Land Title violated the anti-inducement statutes

through "'wining and dining' of real estate agents, builders, and mortgage lenders

with meals, golf tournaments, advertising for one real estate agent; purchases at a

Board of Realtors auction; and professional football championship game tickets, in

amounts over the $25.00 limit allowed by [former] WAC 284-30-800." AR at 279.

       In November 2007, the OIC approached CTIC with a "Consent Order Levying

Fine," which provided for CTIC to

       (1) stipulate that Land Title's conduct violated the Inducement
       Regulation, (2) agree to pay a fine of $114,500 based on Land Title's
       alleged violations, and (3) enter into a Compliance Plan that required
       specific tracking of expenditures, semi-annual internal audits and
       related reporting and corrective actions and to represent that Chicago
       title[sic] has "the authority to comply fully with the terms and conditions
       of the [Compliance] Plan."

AR at 514. CTIC refused to sign the consent order.

 IV.   Administrative Proceedings

       OIC brought disciplinary proceedings against CTIC. The parties agreed to

bifurcate the action into a phase I, concerning only CTIC's vicarious liability for Land

                                            7
No. 87215-5

Title's actions, and a phase II, concerning only whether Land Title had violated the

law 6
   •'

         CTIC moved for summary judgment on phase I, and Administrative Law

Judge (ALJ) Cindy L. Burdue granted CTIC's motion. The ALJ held that the

Agreement created between CTIC and Land Title a "traditional agency relationship,

which specifically limited the control by the principal to those items specifically set

out in the contract." AR at 290. Therefore, CTIC had no right to control Land Title's

marketing practices.

         OIC Review Judge Patricia D. Petersen reversed the ALJ's decision. The

review judge held that regardless of any private contract terms between CTIC and

Land Title, Land Title was performing within its statutory authority as an "agent"

under former RCW 48.17.01 0. Thus, whether or not the Agreement allowed Land

Title to solicit or market insurance was irrelevant. Rather, "[w]hether or not Chicago

chooses to be involved or otherwise participate in these activities which are

conducted on its behalf does not affect the relationship of Chicago as the appointing

insurer and Land Title as its appointed agent." AR at 133.

    V.   Judicial Proceedings

         CTIC petitioned for review and the superior court affirmed the review judge's

order without opinion. Clerk's Papers at 163-64. CTIC then appealed to Division Two

6
  On October 5, 2009, while the petition for judicial review was pending, OIC and CTIC
entered into a stipulation and agreement admitting that Land Title violated former WAC 284-
30-800 and settling the phase II adjudication in full. Whether Land Title committed the
alleged violations is no longer an issue in this case. For our purposes, we may assume it
did.

                                            8
No. 87215-5

of the Court of Appeals, which reversed the superior court in a published opinion,

Chi. Title Ins. Co. v. Office of Ins. Comm'r, 166 Wash. App. 844, 271 P.3d 373 (2012).

The Court of Appeals held that CTIC was not vicariously liable for Land Title's

actions, either through statute or through the common law.

      First, the Court of Appeals agreed with the ALJ that the insurance code only

created the agency relationship without defining what acts were within the scope of

agency authority: "Washington's insurance code is silent regarding both the scope of

agency generally and vicarious liability specifically." Chi. Title, 166 Wn. App. at 853.

Second, the Court of Appeals held that CTIC bore no vicarious liability at common

law because it had no '"input in, or oversight of, Land Title's marketing practices or

procedures."' /d. at 855 (quoting AR at 499). Finally, the Court of Appeals rejected

OIC's argument that Land Title had apparent authority to market on CTIC's behalf,

holding that CTIC's registration of Land Title as its agent pursuant to RCW

48.17.160 did not amount to a "specific objective manifestation" that CTIC

authorized Land Title to violate the anti-inducement laws. Chi. Title, 166 Wn. App. at

857. Therefore, the Court of Appeals reversed the OIC review judge and reinstated

the ALJ's order granting summary judgment. OIC timely appealed, and this court

granted review. Chi. Title Ins. Co. v. Office of Ins. Comm'r, 174 Wash. 2d 1012, 281
P.3d 687 (2012).

                                      ANALYSIS

       Land Title's unlawful inducements constituted solicitation, for which CTIC is

responsible as Land Title's principal. Whatever CTIC and Land Title believed about

their agency relationship, the statute makes the authority to solicit an inherent part of

                                           9
No. 87215-5

Land Title's agency. But even without the statute, CTIC would be vicariously liable at

common law. When CTIC gave Land Title the authority to sell its insurance, CTIC

also gave Land Title implied authority to perform other acts necessary to the sale of

insurance and to act in accordance with industry norms. Solicitation was necessary

to effectuate Land Title's authority to sell CTIC insurance under the Agreement, and

violating the anti-inducement provisions was customary in the title insurance

industry. Having found statutory and implied authority, we need not reach the

alternative test of whether CTIC had the right to control Land Title's marketing

practices.

  I.   Standard of Review

       Judicial review of the commissioner's final order is governed by RCW

34.05.570(3). That statute enumerates nine circumstances under which the court

may grant relief from an agency order in an adjudicative proceeding. CTIC alleges

that the OIC review judge's order was outside the "statutory authority or jurisdiction

of the agency," RCW 34.05.570(3)(b); that OIC "erroneously interpreted or applied

the law," RCW 34.05.570(3)(d); and that the order was arbitrary or capricious, RCW

34.05.570(3)(i). In reviewing an agency order, this court sits in the same position as

the superior court and applies the standards of the Administrative Procedure Act

(APA), chapter 34.05 RCW, to the agency record. City of Redmond v. Cent. Puget

Sound Growth Mgmt. Hearings Bd., 136 Wash. 2d 38, 45, 959 P.2d 1091 (1998). This

court reviews an agency's interpretation or application of the law de novo.      Legal

determinations are reviewed using the "'error of law"' standard, which allows the

court to substitute its view of the law for that of the OIC. Verizon Nw., Inc. v. Emp't

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No. 87215-5

Sec. Oep't, 164 Wash. 2d 909, 915, 194 P.3d 255 (2008) (quoting former RCW

34.05.570(3)(d) (2004)). This court "accord[s] deference to an agency interpretation

of the law where the agency has specialized expertise in dealing with such issues,

but ... [is] not bound by an agency's interpretation of a statute." Cent. Puget Sound

Growth Mgmt. Hearings Bd., 136 Wn.2d at 46. The agency's interpretation of pure

questions of law is not accorded deference. Hunter v. Univ. of Wash., 101 Wash. App.
283, 292, 2 P.3d 1022 (2000).

 II.   Arguments of the Parties

       OIC argues that the insurance code and its own regulations displace the

common law and establish the scope of CTIC's vicarious liability. Under OIC's

theory, the statute places solicitation within the scope of an appointed agent's

authority, meaning that the principal is necessarily liable for its appointed agent's

solicitation activities. Furthermore, the "directly or indirectly" language of former

WAC 284-30-800(2) makes CTIC liable for Land Title's unlawful inducements

notwithstanding common law agency.

       But even if common law agency applies, OIC asserts, CTIC had the right to

control Land Title's actions because it retained the right to inspect Land Title's

records and would have discovered the illegal inducements had it done so.

Furthermore, CTIC clothed Land Title with apparent authority to solicit insurance and

thus to carry out an unlawful inducement scheme.

       In response, CTIC asserts that Land Title's marketing activities were both

outside the scope of the agency relationship and outside of CTIC's control. CTIC

contends that the statute merely establishes that Land Title is an agent, but the

                                          11
No. 87215-5

statute has no bearing on the scope of Land Title's agency. Rather, in CTIC's view,

the right to control is dispositive. Because CTIC played no part and had no control

over Land Title's marketing practices, CTIC should not be held liable for Land Title's

unlawful inducements.

Ill.   The Insurance Code and Regulations

       Whatever the principal and agent believe, by definition, an insurance agent in

Washington has authority to solicit. The insurance code comprehensively governs

the relationship between agent and insurer, specifically enumerating the duties and

powers an agent possesses. Day v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co., 111 Wash. 49,

52, 189 P. 95 (1920). Solicitation is one such power: former RCW 48.17.010. 7

defines an agent as "any person appointed by an insurer to solicit applications for

insurance on its behalf." Under the plain language of the statute, a duly appointed

agent is necessarily authorized to solicit insurance for its appointing insurer-

whatever other activities the agent may conduct on the side.

       CTIC concedes that Land Title is an agent but characterizes it as a "limited

agent" with no authority to market for CTIC. Suppl. Br. of Resp't at 1. But the

authority to solicit necessarily includes the authority to market. The meaning of

solicitation "includes inviting, requesting, urging, or advising a person to subscribe to

insurance, endeavoring to obtain such a subscription, or approaching a person for

the purpose of receiving an application for insurance coverage." Nat'/ Fed'n of

7
  The statute governing the proceedings at issue here has since been amended to define a
"title insurance agent" as an entity appointed by a title insurance company "to sell, solicit, or
negotiate insurance on behalf of the title insurance company." RCW 48.17.01 0(16).

                                               12
No. 87215-5

Retired Persons v. Ins. Comm'r, 120 Wash. 2d 101, 110-11, 838 P.2d 680 (1992)

(NFRP) (citing Paulson v. W Life Ins. Co., 292 Or. 38, 62, 636 P.2d 935 (1981 )). We

define "solicitation" broadly, and we do not require that the person approached be an

end consumer, nor that the solicitor seek applications for its own insurance. When

Land Title approaches a middleman for the purpose of receiving an application (from

that middleman's customers) for a CTIC insurance policy, Land Title is soliciting for

CTIC. In other words, Land Title is doing what CTIC appointed it to do pursuant to

statute. When Land Title solicits in an unlawful way, CTIC is responsible.

      CTIC argues that the Agreement controls over the statute and withdraws Land

Title's authority to engage in solicitation. See AR at 519, at   1f 3 ("Issuing Agent shall
not be deemed or construed to be authorized to do any other act for principal not

expressly authorized herein."); AR at 520,     1f 6(G)   ("Issuing Agent shall not, without

prior written consent of Principal ... Use the name of the Principal in any advertising

or printing other than to indicate the Issuing Agent is a policy issuing agent of the

Principal."). This argument overlooks the fact that solicitation is inherently part of

Land Title's authority to sell title insurance. In any event, CTIC's argument founders

on our decision in Pagni, where we held that

       an insurance company is bound by all acts, contracts, or
       representations of its agent, whether general or special, which are
       within the scope of his real or apparent authority, notwithstanding they
       are in violation of private instructions or limitations upon his authority, of
       which the person dealing with him, acting in good faith, has neither
       actual nor constructive knowledge.

Pagni v. N.Y. Life Ins. Co., 173 Wash. 322, 349-50, 23 P.2d 6 (1933) (emphasis

added) (quoting 32 C.J. § 140, at 1063). That is to say, where an agent acts within

                                             13
No. 87215-5

its authority, the principal cannot excuse itself from vicarious liability through an

undisclosed private arrangement that purports to restrict that authority. Here, the

statute provides the authority, and the Agreement was an undisclosed private

contract between CTIC and Land Title.

      The Pagni rule is further supported by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeal's

interpretation of a comparable Oregon statute. In NFRP, we looked to the Oregon

Supreme Court's interpretation of the term "solicit" in Oregon Revised Statutes

744.165 to aid us in interpreting the same term in our own insurance code. In turn,

federal courts have interpreted the same Oregon statute to indicate a legislative

intent to "make acts or statements of one who solicits or procures an application of

insurance from the insured, binding on the company whose coverage is being sold,

regardless of 'waivers' to the contrary by either the insurer or the intermediary." Lien

Ho Hsing Steel Enter. Co.   v.   Weihtag, 738 F.2d 1455, 1459 (9th Cir. 1984 ).

      Here, too, the purpose of the statute would be defeated if an insurer could

gain the benefits of appointing an agent (here, the ability to sell insurance in a locale

where it lacks a title plant) while waiving any attendant liability through contract. As

we recognized in Day, the insurance code creates a statutory standard of agency

that agents and their principals cannot opt out of at their own discretion.

IV.   Common Law: Inherent or Implied Agency Power

       Independent of the statute, Land Title had the authority to solicit insurance for

CTIC and to bind CTIC by its unlawful solicitations. This court has recognized that a

principal's grant of authority may come with implied authority to perform other acts

that are necessary steps to achieving the principal's objective or that are customary

                                             14
No. 87215-5

for agents performing the work. In Debentures, Inc. v. Zech, 192 Wash. 339, 348, 73
P.2d 1314 (1937), an agent was left in possession of a building and authorized to

collect rents and manage, operate, and maintain the building. We held that this grant

of authority also gave the agent "implied authority as a necessary incident to the

exercise of his powers, to order and to direct that reasonable expenditures be made

for the purpose of redecoration." /d. We have also held that an agent who is

empowered to sell is presumptively empowered to make a warranty as "necessary

to consummate the contract ... " so long as "it is usual in the market to give a

warranty .... " Johns v. Jaycox, 67 Wash. 403, 406, 121 P. 854 (1912). We have

held that a real estate agent "employed for the sole purpose of procuring a purchase

for real property ... " nevertheless had the authority to exhibit the property and make

representations about its area and boundary lines, because negotiation would be

impossible otherwise. Yarnall v. Knickerbocker Co., 120 Wash. 205, 209-10, 205 P.
936 (1922); see also Walker v. Pac. Mobile Homes, Inc., 68 Wash. 2d 347, 351, 413
P.2d 3 (1966) ("Authority to perform particular services for a principal carries with it

the implied authority to perform the usual and necessary acts essential to carry out

the authorized services."); Hoglund v. Meeks, 139 Wash. App. 854, 866, 170 P.3d 37

(2007) ("Nonetheless, actual authority to perform certain services on a principal's

behalf results in implied authority to perform the usual and necessary acts

associated with the authorized services."); Cameron v. Downs, 32 Wash. App. 875,

881, 650 P.2d 260 (1982) ("To be within the scope of one's agency, conduct must be

of the same general nature as that authorized, or incidental to the conduct

authorized.").

                                           15
No. 87215-5

      The idea that an agent's authority expands to cover necessary or customary

acts is not novel but is well supported by the Third Restatements of Agency

(Second) and (Third). The Second Restatement defines "[i]nherent agency power,"

which arises not from the principal's authorization to perform the acts at issue, nor

from apparent authority or estoppel, "but solely from the agency relation and exists

for the protection of persons harmed by or dealing with a servant or other agent."

RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF AGENCY § 8A (1958). 8 The theory of inherent agency

power recognizes that agents may be overzealous or careless in doing the work

assigned by the principal and may harm third parties as a result. In that case, "[it]

would be unfair for an enterprise to have the benefit of the work of its agents without

making it responsible to some extent for their excesses and failures to act carefully."

/d. cmt. a. Therefore, the Second Restatement makes the principal liable on a

transaction where "a general agent does something similar to what he is authorized

to do, but in violation of orders." /d. cmt. b. As the Second Restatement goes on to

explain,

      [a] general agent for a disclosed or partially disclosed principal subjects
      his principal to liability for acts done on his account which usually
      accompany or are incidental to transactions which the agent is
      authorized to conduct if, although they are forbidden by the principal,
      the other party reasonably believes that the agent is authorized to do
      them and has no notice that he is not so authorized.

8
  This section has been superseded by Restatement (Third) of Agency § 2.02 (2006),
discussed infra.

                                          16
No. 87215-5

RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF AGENCY§ 161. 9            This rule is especially pertinent where

an agent comprises an "essential part[] of [the principal's] business enterprise." !d. at

cmt. a. We applied this principle in Miller v. United Pacific Casualty Insurance Co.,

187 Wash. 629, 636, 60 P.2d 714 (1936), where we held that if an insurer could do

business only through an authorized agent, that agent acted as the insurer's "alter

ego" and could bind the insurer through its acts.

         Likewise, the Third Restatement includes acts "necessary or incidental to

achieving the principal's objectives" within the actual authority of an agent.

RESTATEMENT (THIRD) OF AGENCY§ 2.02(1) (2006). The Third Restatement approach

considers that an agent may reasonably assume "that the principal wishes, as an

incidental matter, that the agent take the steps necessary and that the agent

proceed in the usual and ordinary way, if such has been established, unless the

principal directs otherwise." /d. cmt. d at 9. Even if the principal purports to forbid

certain acts on the part of an agent, the agent may reasonably believe itself to be

authorized if the principal "affirmatively approve[s] of the agent's unauthorized act or

silently acquiesce[s] in it by failing to voice affirmative disapproval." !d. cmt. fat 100.

         Similarly, Mechem states that "every delegation of authority whether 'general'

or 'special,' carries with it, unless the contrary be expressed, implied authority to do

all of those acts, naturally and ordinarily done in such cases, which are reasonably

necessary and proper to be done in this case in order to carry into effect the main

authority conferred." 1 FLOYD R. MECHEM, A TREATISE ON THE LAW OF AGENCY§ 715

9
    See id.

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No. 87215-5

(2d ed. 1914). Like the Third Restatement, Mechem points out that the principal

presumably means for the agent to perform those acts reasonably necessary to

carry out those acts the principal expressly authorizes and also for the agent to do

business in the "usual and ordinary way." !d. Therefore, even if the statute did not

control, Land Title was implicitly authorized to solicit applications for insurance as a

necessary act in executing its authority to issue and effectuate insurance for CTIC.

CTIC carried out no direct operations in those counties where Land Title was

employed to sell its insurance. If CTIC was not advertising in those areas, and Land

Title could not advertise for title insurance, then no one would purchase CTIC

insurance from Land Title. This cannot be the result that CTIC intended when it

appointed Land Title as its agent. Just as we found a selling agent had the implied

authority to exhibit the property in Yarnall, 120 Wash. at 209-10, we hold that Land

Title, as an issuing agent, must have the authority to solicit applications for

insurance. If it had no authority to attract consumers in the first instance, then its

authority to issue and effectuate insurance contracts would be meaningless.

       Land Title is authorized to solicit for CTIC under both statute and common

law. Following the Restatement (Second) of Agency § 161 test, we now turn to

whether Land Title was a general agent and whether unlawful inducements were

necessary or customary in executing the authority to solicit.

   A. Land Title was   a general agent of CTIC
       A "general agent" is "'an agent authorized to conduct a series of transactions

involving a continuity of service.'" Costco Wholesale Corp. v. World Wide Licensing

Corp., 78 Wash. App. 637, 646, 898 P.2d 347 (1995) (quoting RESTATEMENT (SECOND)

                                           18
No. 87215-5

OF AGENCY§ 3(1 )). A "general agent" is to be distinguished from a "special agent," or

'"an agent authorized to conduct a single transaction or a series of transactions not

involving continuity of service."' /d. (quoting RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF AGENCY §

3(2)). Some factors that aid in determining an agent's status include "the number of

acts performed, number of persons with whom the agent must deal, and the length

of service." /d. (citing RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF AGENCY§ 3 cmt. a).

      These factors weigh heavily toward Land Title being CTIC's general agent.

Land Title and CTIC were involved in a long-standing relationship; the Agreement

had been in force since 1992. Moreover, their relationship was exclusive. Land Title

could only issue CTIC's title insurance; it is not licensed to issue insurance on its

own. Land Title was appointed only by CTIC and no other insurer, and the

Agreement further barred Land Title from issuing assurances by any insurer other

than CTIC. On CTIC's end, the insurer conducted no operations in those counties

where Land Title sold CTIC insurance policies.

       Finally, Land Title created business for CTIC every time it did business with

anyone. Aside from title insurance, Land Title's only other offering was escrow

services, which constituted only 28 percent of Land Title's revenue. Even Land

Title's escrow services were sold only in conjunction with title insurance. Thus, every

one of Land Title's customers ultimately walked away with a CTIC title insurance

policy, whether they bought the insurance directly or were required to purchase it in

conjunction with an escrow transaction.

       Land Title's agency relationship with CTIC was not a discrete, arm's length

contract assignment but involved continuous service. Land Title did no business that

                                          19
No. 87215-5

did not result in a sale for CTIC, and within Kitsap, Clallam, Jefferson, and Mason

Counties, CTIC did no business other than through Land Title. As far as these four

counties were concerned, Land Title was an integrated part of CTIC's operations.

Land Title was a general agent of CTIC, and thus under the doctrine of implied

authority, could bind CTIC through acts necessary to or customary with those

transactions that CTIC authorized.

   B. Unlawful inducements were customary in Land Title's industry

       In keeping with the common law, we presume that when a principal gives its

agent authority to perform a certain act, the principal also grants implied authority to

carry out that act in the usual and customary way. See Johns, 67 Wash. at 406.

Here, unlawful inducements were the norm in the title insurance industry, CTIC was

aware of the pervasiveness of unlawful inducements in the industry, and CTIC took

no affirmative steps to stop Land Title from engaging in unlawful inducements. CTIC

should have foreseen Land Title's unlawful inducements, and CTIC is vicariously

liable for those acts.

       In the Washington title insurance industry, vendors of title insurance frequently

used unlawful inducements as part of their marketing. Indeed, OIC brought the

present   enforcement    action   precisely     because   unlawful   inducements were

"widespread and pervasive [and] occur[ring] throughout this industry .... " AR at

473-E. CTIC does not challenge OIC's finding that "[the title insurance] industry is

rife with practices gone haywire." /d. In fact, CTIC itself was directly implicated in

numerous transgressions of the anti-inducement laws.

                                           20
No. 87215-5

      CTIC appointed Land Title as an agent to solicit applications for its title

insurance. Because Land Title sold a CTIC insurance policy with every transaction it

engaged in, it solicited for CTIC's title insurance whenever it did any marketing.

CTIC cannot have failed to realize that inducements to middlemen were typical in

the industry, having engaged in unlawful inducements itself. Yet CTIC did not

attempt to dissuade Land Title from engaging in the usual practice of unlawful

inducements, outside of boilerplate language in the Agreement. There is no

evidence that CTIC exercised its right to investigate Land Title's records or reminded

Land Title of its obligation to obey the anti-inducement laws. CTIC cannot now

evade liability by willfully blinding itself to Land Title's unlawful marketing practices.

       CTIC argues that it would be absurd to apply per se vicarious liability every

time a statute used the label "agent." As CTIC points out, the term "agent" appears

thousands of times in Washington statutes; for example, RCW 23B.05.01 0 requires

a corporation to register an "agent" for accepting service of process. But we do not

suggest that all acts of a process agent should be binding on the corporation. There

must be some nexus between the act at issue and the prescribed duties of the

agent. As we have explained above, there is clearly such a nexus between soliciting

applications for insurance and inducing middlemen to direct end-consumers to an

insurer. As we held in NFRP, '"solicits' includes inviting, requesting, urging, or

advising a person to subscribe to insurance, endeavoring to obtain such a

subscription, or approaching a person for the purpose of receiving an application for

insurance coverage." 120 Wn.2d at 110-11 (citing Paulson, 292 Or. at 62). This

definition requires neither that the soliciting party approach the end-consumer, nor

                                             21
No. 87215-5

that the insurance application be for the party's own insurance.             It clearly

encompasses a situation where a UTC approaches a middleman for the purpose of

receiving an application (from that middleman's consumers) for insurance coverage

(provided by the UTC's parent insurer).

 V.   Right To Control

      CTIC argues that we should apply the right-to-control test: the principal is

accountable for the agent's actions only if the principal had the right to control the

details of the agent's performance. Lamer   v.   Torgerson, 93 Wash. 2d 801, 804-05, 613
P.2d 780 (1980). Right of control is not the only test for vicarious liability. We have

generally considered right of control in tort cases, where the agent's negligence is at

issue. See Kamla   v.   Space Needle Corp., 147 Wash. 2d 114, 119, 52 P.3d 472 (2002);

Lamer, 93 Wn.2d at 804; see also 16 DAVID K. DEWOLF & KELLER W. ALLEN,

WASHINGTON PRACTICE: TORT LAW AND PRACTICE § 3.12 (2012). The right-to-control

test makes sense in the tort context because it is based in the assumption that the

agent's act "would be non-tortious if done carefully .... " RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF

AGENCY § 250 cmt. b. Here, Land Title's actions were unlawful, not negligent. Land

Title did not wine and dine the real estate middlemen by accident. Rather, whether

out of overzealousness or ignorance of the law, Land Title engaged in intentional

conduct that violated the law.

      Because the right-of-control test is not a proper fit for every principal-agent

situation, the common law treats it as an alternative test that coexists with implied

authority. See RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF AGENCY § 8A cmt. b. (master-servant

theory is one of two ways to determine inherent agency power); RESTATEMENT

                                           22
No. 87215-5

(THIRD) OF AGENCY ch. 2 INTRODUCTORY NOTE at 79 (actual authority, apparent

authority, and respondeat superior are the "three distinct bases for attribution"). We

have already determined that Land Title's unlawful inducements were within the

purview of its agency by way of statutory and implied common-law authority. That is

enough to establish vicarious liability without any need to engage in a respondeat

superior analysis or to determine whether CTIC had the right to control Land Title's

actions.

VI.   OIC Did Not Engage in De Facto Rule Making in Violation of the APA and the
      Washington Constitution

      Finally, CTIC argues that the OIC attempted to circumvent the APP\s directive

that rules be adopted only after notice and the opportunity for comment. An agency

may not circumvent the APA by announcing new rules through adjudication. Budget

Rent A Car Corp. v. Dep't of Licensing, 100 Wash. App. 381, 387-88, 997 P.2d 420

(2000). The OIC responds that the commissioner was simply enforcing a properly

promulgated rule pursuant to constitutionally delegated authority. The legislature

may delegate rulemaking authority if

       (1) the legislature has set forth guidelines defining in general terms
       what is to be done and what administrative body or officer is to do it,
       and (2) adequate procedural safeguards exist to control arbitrary
       administrative action and the abuse of discretionary power ....

Barry & Barry, Inc. v. Dep't of Motor Vehicles, 81 Wash. 2d 155, 164, 500 P.2d 540

(1972). The legislature delegated broad authority to the commissioner to promulgate

rules defining unfair or deceptive trade practices. RCW 48.30.01 0(2). The rule in the

instant case, former WAC 284-30-800, was properly adopted following the statutory

                                          23
No. 87215-5

notice and comment procedures set forth in RCW 48.30.010 and RCW 34.05.310-

.395.

        We agree with the OIC. The rule was properly promulgated in accordance

with the APA. The current enforcement action against CTIC was simply the

commissioner's interpretation and application of the rule. The commissioner did not

engage in de facto rule making in violation of the APA and the Washington

Constitution.

                                  CONCLUSION

        Former WAC 284-30-800     means what it says: an insurer may not make

inducements exceeding $25.00, "directly or indirectly," through its own channels or

through an appointed agent that carries sole responsibility for soliciting and

effectuating the parent insurer's policies in a locality. We reverse the Court of

Appeals and remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion.

                                        24
No. 87215-5

      WE CONCUR.

                   25
Chicago Title Ins. Co. v. Wash. State Office of Insurance Commissioner, No. 87215-5
Dissent by J.M. Johnson, J.

                                    No. 87215-5

       J.M. JOHNSON, J. (dissenting)-In Washington State, the freedom of

contract is one of our most highly prized liberties. Indeed, impairment of

contracts is constitutionally prohibited in article I, section 23 of the

Washington Constitution. The simple knowledge that legal contracts will be

enforced by the rule of law in courts encourages entrepreneurs to innovate,

increasing the quality of life for our citizens. The actions of the Office of

the Insurance Commissioner (OIC) and today's majority opinion undermine

this bedrock principle.      Because the majority fails to respect a business

relationship that properly limits vicarious liability, I respectfully dissent.

       In this case, two distinct business entities recognized a need for title

insurance in rural Washington communities, a need which is in part

generated by burdensome insurance regulation. Each entity could supply

one of the two necessary components to remedy this title insurance shortage:

Land Title Insurance Company has tract indexes to perform the title searches

                                               1
No. 87215-5

while Chicago Title Insurance Company (CTIC) has the requisite capital to

underwrite the small risk that a title search has been performed incorrectly. 1

CTIC and Land Title entered into a contract that limited the agency

relationship and allocated the risk of regulatory noncompliance solely to

Land Title.

       Business relationships such as the one at issue here thrive on the

freedom of contract and often result in lowered costs and increased services

for our state's citizens. As long as the business relationship properly limits

the scope of agency and leaves open avenues for punishing noncompliance,

the ore should be forced to directly pursue the entity violating the anti-

inducement laws.

       I would hold that the Washington Insurance Code's provisions for the

appointment of agents do not, without more, allow for the imposition of

vicarious liability for regulatory violations.           Instead, agencies and courts

1
  Under the Washington Insurance Code, a title insurer that does not have a title plant in a
given county must rely on a title agent that owns or leases a title plant in order to transact
business in that county. Administrative Record (AR) at 469 (Decl. Tompkins ~ 4). A
title insurer must also maintain a minimum amount of capital stock and surplus. RCW
48.29.020(3); RCW 48.05.340. For these reasons, large title companies often underwrite
policies issued by small title companies in rural areas. The underwritten companies are
referred to as "independent agents" or "underwritten title companies" (UTCs). The
insurance code requires title companies in such arrangements to appoint UTCs as their
agents, file the appointment with the commissioner, and notify the commissioner if the
appointment is ever revoked. RCW 48.17.160.

                                              2
No. 87215-5

must turn to common law agency principles to determine whether vicarious

liability is appropriate. Where, as here, an entity does not have a right to

control the aspect of the other entity's business under which the regulatory

violation occurred, the commissioner may not impose vicarious liability. I

would remand to the       ore with instructions to enter an appropriate final
order. 2

                                      ANALYSIS

       The Washington Insurance Code is silent as to the general scope of

agency and, in particular, vicarious liability. Thus, common law principles

of agency are necessary to determine whether vicarious liability is

appropriate.      Pursuant to the entities' agreement, CTIC has no right to

control the marketing practices of its appointed agent, Land Title. For this

reason, CTIC cannot be held vicariously liable for Land Title's violations of

the illegal inducement regulation.

           The use of the term "agent," without more, cannot create per se

liability. Kroshus v. Koury, 30 Wash. App. 258, 263, 633 P.2d 909 (1981)
2
  The relief granted by the Court of Appeals was improper because it was not available
under the Administrative Procedure Act, chapter 34.05 RCW. See Chi. Title Ins. Co. v.
Wash. State Office of Ins. Comm'r, 166 Wash. App. 844, 858, 271 P.3d 373 (2012); see also
RCW 34.05.570, .574(1), .464(7). Accordingly, instead of affirming the Court of
Appeals, I would remand to the OIC with instructions to enter an appropriate final order.
Although the procedural routes are different, the result is substantively similar to
affirming the Court of Appeals.

                                           3
No. 87215-5

(concluding that the label "employee" or "agent" does not create per se

vicarious liability). Furthermore, Land Title does not have implied authority

to market on CTIC's behalf. While former RCW 48.17.010 (1985) defines

an agent as "any person appointed by an insurer to solicit applications for

insurance on its behalf," our precedent recognizes the unique relationship

between an underwritten title company (UTC) and an insurer.                  In First

American Title Insurance Co. v. State, Dep 't of Revenue, 144 Wash. 2d 300,

304,27 P.3d 604 (2001), 3 we noted that the activities of title insurers and

UTCs are separate business services.          We recognized that "'[The UTC]

generates business for its own account.            It places the relatively small

msurance component with an insurer qualified, by reason of compliance

with financial requirements, to underwrite the slight risk that [the UTC] has

not properly done its work."' I d. (alterations in original) (quoting Fid. Title

Co. v. Dep't of Revenue, 49 Wash. App. 662, 669-70, 745 P.2d 530 (1987)).

We further noted that "a UTC is not a mere insurance agent or broker, but

rather generates business for its own account." Id. at 305. Although UTCs

3
  Footnote 1 of First American Title indicates that sometimes the statutory scheme will
fully dispose of the agency issue, eliminating the need for a common law analysis.
However, where, as here, the statutory scheme does not define the scope of agency and,
in particular, provide for vicarious liability, a common law analysis is necessary. 144
Wn.2d at 304 n. 1.

                                          4
No. 87215-5

are required to be registered as an appointed agent of the underwriting

company, our precedent firmly establishes the separateness of the two

entities. Where, as here, marketing is done by the UTC on its own behalf,

former RCW 48.17.010 does not establish implied authority.

         "Agent" has been defined in the insurance code for the past 100

years, 4 and courts have continued to apply common law agency principles to

determine the appropriateness of vicarious liability.             In Miller v. United

Pacific Casualty Insurance Co., 187 Wash. 629, 60 P.2d 714 (1936), we

established the existence of the agency relationship through the insurance

code and then went on to analyze common law agency principles to

determine whether the agent's acts could bind the insurer. Id. at 636. In

determining the appropriateness of vicarious liability, a court may look to

the statutory agency relationship.          However, particularly if the statute is

silent as to the scope of agency, an analysis of common law principles is

necessary.

         American Fidelity & Casualty Co. v. Backstrom, 47 Wash. 2d 77, 287
P.2d 124 (1955), followed Miller's lead. Both cases quoted from 2 Floyd R.

Mechem, A Treatise on the Law of Agency (2d ed. 1914) in using the

4
    See Day v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co., 111 Wash. 49, 51-52, 189 P. 95 (1920).

                                              5
No. 87215-5

common law of agency to determine whether the agent's actions fell within

the scope of agency. Am. Fid., 47 Wn.2d at 82; Miller, 187 Wash. at 639.

American Fidelity also quoted from the first Restatement of Agency. Am.

Fid., 47 Wn.2d at 83. In this way, both American Fidelity and Miller relied

on common law agency principles, not solely the statutory definition of

"agent" to determine the scope of the agency relationship.

Right To Control

      Under common law principles, an agent's actual authority can be

implied or express. King v. Rive/and, 125 Wash. 2d 500, 507, 886 P.2d 160

(1994). The main consideration for actual authority is the right to control.

Hollingbery v. Dunn, 68 Wash. 2d 75, 80, 411 P.2d 431 (1966). Whenever

superior and subordinate business parties enter into a relationship, the

relationship is either one of master and servant or one of independent

contractor. Larner v. Torgerson, 93 Wash. 2d 801, 804, 613 P .2d 780 (1980).

"An independent contractor . . . may be generally defined as one who

contractually undertakes to perform services for another, but who is not

controlled by the other nor subject to the other's right to control with respect

to his physical conduct in performing the services." Hollingbery, 68 Wn.2d

at 79-80. "When a superior business party has retained no right of control

and there is no reason to infer a right of control over a subordinate business
                                       6
No. 87215-5

party, then he cannot be held liable for the negligent acts of the subordinate

party." Larner, 93 Wn.2d at 804-05.

      This common law right to control analysis allows contracting entities

to choose the structure, with the attendant liability, which best suits their

needs. The decision regarding which party should retain the risk of liability

or regulatory noncompliance is often complex. It can include factors such as

which party is in a better position to obtain insurance, and the party retaining

the risk of liability is generally compensated through higher remuneration or

better terms.   The right to control principle is critical to the freedom of

contract. Business liability is not "one size fits all," governed exclusively by

statute and subject to second guessing by courts.

      Here, Land Title and CTIC contractually entered an independent

contractor relationship, allowing Land Title to retain its own risk of

regulatory noncompliance. Governed by their agreement, Land Title accepts

and processes applications for title insurance and issues policies

underwritten by CTIC. The agreement provides that Land Title "shall not be

deemed or construed to be authorized to do any other act for principal not

expressly authorized herein."     Administrative Record (AR) at 519.        The

agreement prohibits Land Title from using CTIC's name in its advertising,

other than to indicate its authority to issue policies underwritten by CTIC.
                                       7
No. 87215-5

AR at 520.    CTIC does not have input in or oversight of Land Title's

marketing practices.    AR at 499 (Decl. Kennedy        ~   9).       CTIC simply

underwrites the risk for title policies issued by Land Title in exchange for 12

percent of the policy premium. AR at 517 (Decl. Randolph          ~   8). We should

respect the entities' independent contractor relationship, recognizing that

CTIC does not have the right to control Land Title's marketing practices.

Because there is no statutorily defined agency relationship, or actually

authority (express or implied), it is improper to impute Land Title's

noncompliance with the anti-inducement laws to CTIC.

      The majority asserts that "the purpose of the statute would be defeated

if an insurer could gain the benefits of appointing an agent (here, the ability

to sell insurance in a locale where it lacks a title plant) while 'waiving' any

attendant liability through contract." Majority at 14.       However, there is

nothing resembling waiver here. Instead, Land Title and CTIC have chosen

a specific allocation of risk between them, with Land Title maintaining full

liability for its own regulatory noncompliance. In fact, the two companies

                                       8
No. 87215-5

have allocated the risk of regulatory noncompliance in the most efficient

way possible. In this situation, Land Title is the cheapest cost avoider. 5

        Here, Land Title's management is in the best position to monitor the

company's marketing practices for compliance with the anti-inducement

laws.    Oversight by CTIC would most certainly result in unnecessary

administrative costs.      Therefore, the most efficient allocation of risk for

noncompliance is to avoid vicarious liability and hold Land Title responsible

for its own violations. This is the best way to incentivize compliance with

the least transaction costs.

        While minimizing the cost of oversight, the agreement simultaneously

aligns Land Title's incentives to comply with the law. 6                   All of this is

achieved without impermissibly "waiving" liability.                Instead of imputing

5
  The terms "cheapest cost avoider" and "least cost avoider" are interchangeable. It is a
concept first developed by law and economics scholars such as Ronald Coase and Guido
Calabresi. "A pure market approach to primary accident cost avoidance would require
allocation of accident costs to those acts or activities (or combinations of them) which
could avoid the accident costs most cheaply." GUIDO CALABRESI, THE COSTS OF
ACCIDENTS: A LEGAL AND ECONOMIC ANALYSIS 135 (1970). For example, if we assume
that pedestrians are in a better position to avoid car accidents than drivers (by not darting
into the street without looking), we should assign liability for accidents to pedestrians.
Having to bear the risk of an accident incentivizes looking both ways before crossing the
street. Although generally used in the tort context, this principle is also applicable to
regulatory compliance.
6
  The majority notes, "There is no evidence that CTIC exercised its right to investigate
Land Title's records or reminded Land Title of its obligation to obey the anti-inducement
laws." Majority at 20-21. This type of inefficient oversight is precisely what the entities
sought to avoid by allocating the risk of noncompliance solely to Land Title.

                                             9
No. 87215-5

liability to CTIC, Land Title is responsible for its own noncompliance. If

OIC wishes to fine an entity for Land Title's noncompliance, it is free to do

so. It must simply go after Land Title directly.

      I see no wisdom in this court second-guessing efficient and effective

business relationships that leave open avenues for punishing regulatory or

statutory noncompliance.     This court's decision will likely result in the

reduced availability of title insurance in rural Washington counties.

Shortages of reasonably priced title insurance will most certainly hurt

consumers more than offering a free game of golf to their real estate agents.

      It is difficult to understand that this statewide elected insurance

commissioner holds nothing more important to Washington insured citizens

than the de minimis golf games or baseball tickets underlying this case-

with the expenditure of thousands of dollars in attorney fees, most funded by

taxpayers.

      Because their contractual relationship bars CTIC from having any

control over Land Title's marketing practices, it is improper to impute Land

Title's liability for regulatory noncompliance to CTIC. I, therefore, dissent.

                                       10
No. 87215-5

              11