Key: (1) language to be deleted (2) new language
Laws of Minnesota 1988
CHAPTER 541-H.F.No. 1897
An act relating to insurance; regulating the Minnesota
Insurance Guaranty Association; excluding investment
risks insurance from coverage; modifying the
definitions of "resident" and "covered claim";
regulating claims; preventing insolvencies; making
certain technical changes; amending Minnesota Statutes
1986, sections 60C.02, subdivision 1; 60C.03,
subdivisions 2, 7, and by adding a subdivision;
60C.05, subdivisions 1 and 2; 60C.06, by adding a
subdivision; 60C.13, subdivision 2; 60C.15; and
60C.18; Minnesota Statutes 1987 Supplement, section
60C.09; repealing Minnesota Statutes 1987 Supplement,
section 60C.06, subdivision 5.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MINNESOTA:
Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 1986, section 60C.02,
subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. [SCOPE.] Laws 1971, chapter 145 This
chapter applies to all kinds of direct insurance, except life,
title, accident and sickness written by life insurance
companies, credit, mortgage guaranty, and ocean marine.
Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 1986, section 60C.03,
subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. "Account" means any of the three five accounts
created under section 60C.04.
Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 1986, section 60C.03,
subdivision 7, is amended to read:
Subd. 7. "Resident" means:
(a) An individual person who fixes habitation in this state
without any intention of removing therefrom and who, whenever
absent therefrom, intends to return; or
(b) Any other person who maintains a place of business or a
resident agent in this state whose principal place of business
is located in this state at the time of the insured event; or
(c) A person whose principal place of business is in
Wisconsin, Iowa, North Dakota or South Dakota, but who maintains
substantial business in Minnesota.
Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 1986, section 60C.03, is
amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 9. "Affiliate" means a person other than a natural
person who directly, or indirectly, through one or more
intermediaries, controls, is controlled by, or is under common
control with an insolvent insurer on December 31 of the year
preceding the date the insurer becomes an insolvent insurer.
Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 1986, section 60C.05,
subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. The association shall:
(a) Be deemed the insurer to the extent of its obligation
on the covered claims. The claims found by the board of
directors to be covered shall be paid out of available funds
after they have been approved or settled under sections 60B.45,
subdivision 2, and 60B.58, subdivision 2, or the corresponding
laws of another jurisdiction, subject to the board's power to
reduce the amount of or reject the award under section 60C.10.
(b) Allocate claims paid and expenses incurred among
the four five accounts and assess member insurers separately for
each account the amounts necessary to pay the obligations of the
association under clause (a), the expenses of handling covered
claims, the cost of examinations under section 60C.15 and other
expenses authorized by Laws 1971, chapter 145 this chapter.
(c) Notify the persons as the commissioner directs under
Laws 1971, chapter 145 this chapter.
(d) Handle claims through its employees or through one or
more insurers or other persons designated as servicing
facilities. Designation of a servicing facility is subject to
the approval of the commissioner, but the designation may be
declined.
(e) Reimburse each servicing facility for obligations of
the association paid by the facility and for expenses incurred
by the facility while handling claims on behalf of the
association and shall pay the other expenses of the association
authorized by Laws 1971, chapter 145 this chapter.
(f) Notify each member insurer of its assessment not later
than 30 days before it is due.
(g) Issue to each insurer paying an assessment under this
chapter a certificate of contribution, in a form prescribed by
the commissioner, for the amount so paid. All outstanding
certificates shall be of equal dignity and priority without
reference to amounts or dates of issue. A certificate of
contribution may be shown by the insurer in its financial
statement as an asset in the form and for the amount, if any,
and period of time the commissioner approves.
Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 1986, section 60C.05,
subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. The association may:
(a) Employ or retain the persons necessary to handle claims
and perform other duties of the association.
(b) Borrow funds necessary to effect the purposes of Laws
1971, chapter 145 in accord with the plan of operation.
(c) Sue or be sued.
(d) Negotiate and become a party to the contracts necessary
to carry out the purpose of Laws 1971, chapter 145.
(e) Perform other acts necessary or proper to effectuate
the purpose of Laws 1971, chapter 145.
(f) Subject to section 7, refund to the member insurers in
proportion to the contribution of each member insurer to that
account the amount by which the assets of the account exceed the
liabilities, if at the end of the calendar year the board of
directors finds that the assets of the association in any
account exceed the liabilities of that account as estimated by
the board of directors for the coming year.
(g) Request the court to disapprove or modify any claim for
which approval is sought under the provisions of section 60B.45,
subdivision 2 or 60B.58, subdivision 2.
Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 1986, section 60C.06, is
amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 6. [REFUNDS RETAINED.] All money which the
association receives from the estate of an insolvent insurer or
an insurer that is the subject of delinquency proceedings shall
not be refunded to members but must be credited to the account
from which the claims were paid that resulted in the payment
from the estate. If that cannot be determined, the money shall
be credited to the account which the board determines is most
likely to have been the source of the paid claims. The money
shall be used to pay future claims.
Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 1987 Supplement, section
60C.09, is amended to read:
60C.09 [COVERED CLAIMS.]
Subdivision 1. [DEFINITION.] A covered claim is any unpaid
claim, including one for unearned premium, which:
(a) (1) Arises out of and is within the coverage of an
insurance policy issued by a member insurer if the insurer
becomes an insolvent insurer after April 30, 1979; or
(2) Would be within the coverage of an extended reporting
endorsement to a claims-made insurance policy if insolvency had
not prevented the member insurer from fulfilling its obligation
to issue the endorsement, if:
(i) the claims-made policy contained a provision affording
the insured the right to purchase a reporting endorsement;
(ii) coverage will be no greater than if a reporting
endorsement had been issued;
(iii) the insured has not purchased other insurance which
applies to the claim; and
(iv) the insured's deductible under the policy is increased
by an amount equal to the premium for the reporting endorsement,
as provided in the insured's claims-made policy, or if not so
provided, then as established by a rate service organization.
(b) Arises out of a class of business which is not excepted
from the scope of Laws 1971, chapter 145, this chapter by
section 60C.02; and
(c) Is made by:
(i) A policyholder, or an insured beneficiary under a
policy, who, at the time of the insured event, was a resident of
this state; or
(ii) A person designated in the policy as having an
insurable interest in or related to property situated in this
state at the time of the insured event; or
(iii) An obligee or creditor under any surety bond, who, at
the time of default by the principal debtor or obligor, was a
resident of this state; or
(iv) A third party claimant under a liability policy or
surety bond, if: (a) the insured or the third party claimant
was a resident of this state at the time of the insured event;
(b) the claim is for bodily or personal injuries suffered in
this state by a person who when injured was a resident of this
state; or (c) the claim is for damages to real property situated
in this state at the time of damage; or
(v) A direct or indirect assignee of a person who except
for the assignment might have claimed under (i), (ii) or (iii).
For purposes of paragraph (c), item (i) (ii), unit owners
of condominiums, townhouses, or cooperatives are considered as
having an insurable interest.
A covered claim also includes any unpaid claim which arises
or exists within 30 days after the time of entry of an order of
liquidation with a finding of insolvency by a court of competent
jurisdiction unless prior thereto the insured replaces the
policy or causes its cancellation or the policy expires on its
expiration date. A covered claim does not include claims filed
with the guaranty fund after the final date set by the court for
the filing of claims except for excused late filings permitted
under section 60B.37.
Subd. 2. [FURTHER DEFINITION.] In addition to subdivision
1, a covered claim does not include:
(1) claims by an affiliate of the insurer; and
(2) claims due a reinsurer, insurer, insurance pool, or
underwriting association, as subrogation recoveries or otherwise.
This clause does not prevent a person from presenting the
excluded claim to the insolvent insurer or its liquidator, but
the claims shall not be asserted against another person,
including the person to whom the benefits were paid or the
insured of the insolvent insurer, except to the extent that the
claim is outside the coverage of the policy issued by the
insolvent insurer.
Subd. 3. [LIMITATION OF AMOUNT.] Payment of a covered
claim, except a claim for unearned premium by any single
claimant, whether upon a single policy or multiple policies of
insurance, is limited to the amount by which the allowance on
any claim exceeds $100 and is less than $300,000. In the case
of claim for unearned premium by a single claimant, the entire
claim up to $300,000 shall be allowed. The limitation on the
amount of payment for a covered claim does not apply to claims
for workers' compensation insurance. In no event is the
association obligated to the policyholder or claimant in an
amount in excess of the obligation of the insurer under the
policy from which the claim arises. For insolvencies occurring
on or after October 1, 1985, no deductible applies to claims
eligible for payment under the assigned claims plan under
sections 65B.63 to 65B.65.
Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes 1986, section 60C.13,
subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Any person having a claim which may be recovered
under more than one insurance guaranty association or its
equivalent shall seek recovery first from the association of the
state of residence of the insured except that if the claim is a
first party claim for damage to property with a permanent
location, that person shall seek recovery first from the
association of the state in which the property is located, and
if it is a workers' compensation claim, that person shall seek
recovery first from the association of the residence of the
claimant. Any recovery under Laws 1971, chapter 145 this
chapter shall be reduced by the amount of recovery from any
other insurance guaranty association or its equivalent.
Sec. 10. Minnesota Statutes 1986, section 60C.15, is
amended to read:
60C.15 [PREVENTION OF INSOLVENCIES.]
To aid in the detection and prevention of insurer
insolvencies:
(1) It is the duty of each member insurer to notify the
commissioner of any established facts indicating any other
member insurer may be insolvent or in a financial condition
hazardous to its policyholders or the public.
(2) The board of directors shall request that the
commissioner order an examination of any member insurer which
the board in good faith believes may be in a financial condition
hazardous to its policyholders or the public. Within 30 days of
the receipt of the request, the commissioner shall begin the
examination. The examination may be conducted as a national
association of insurance commissioners examination or may be
conducted by persons designated by the commissioner. The cost
of the examination shall be paid by the association and the
examination report shall be treated as are other examination
reports. In no event shall the examination report be released
to the board of directors prior to its release to the public,
but this shall not preclude the commissioner from complying with
paragraph (3). The commissioner shall notify the board of
directors when the examination is completed. The request for an
examination shall be kept on file by the commissioner, but it
shall not be open to public inspection unless the report finds
the company to be insolvent.
(3) It shall be the duty of the commissioner to report to
the board of directors when the commissioner has reasonable
cause to believe that any member insurer examined or being
examined at the request of the board of directors may be
insolvent or in a financial condition hazardous to the
policyholders or the public.
(4) The board of directors may, upon majority vote, make
reports and recommendations to the commissioner upon any matter
germane to the solvency, liquidation, rehabilitation or
conservation of any member insurer. The reports and
recommendations shall not be considered public documents.
(5) (1) The board of directors: (a) may, upon majority
vote, make recommendations to the commissioner for the detection
and prevention of insurer insolvencies; and (b) shall respond to
requests by the commissioner to discuss and make recommendations
regarding the status of any member insurer whose financial
condition may be hazardous to policyholders or the public.
These recommendations are classified as nonpublic data under
section 13.02.
(2) The board of directors may, at the conclusion of any
domestic insurer insolvency in which the association was
obligated to pay covered claims, prepare and submit to the
commissioner a report on the history and causes of the
insolvency, based on the information available to the
association.
Sec. 11. Minnesota Statutes 1986, section 60C.18, is
amended to read:
60C.18 [RECOGNITION OF ASSESSMENTS IN RATES.]
Subdivision 1. The rates and premiums charged for
insurance policies and fidelity and surety bonds to which this
chapter applies may must include amounts sufficient to recoup a
sum equal to the amounts paid to the association by the member
insurer less any amounts returned to the member insurer by the
association. The rates shall not be deemed excessive because
they contain an amount reasonably calculated to recoup
assessments paid by the member insurer.
Subd. 2. Beginning with assessments payable by member
insurers in 1988, each member insurer must separately state on
either a billing notice or policy declaration sent to an
insured, the percentage, dollar amount, or both, of the amount
contained in the premium to recoup assessments paid by the
member insurer in Minnesota.
Sec. 12. [AUTHORIZATION FOR STAGGERED TERMS FOR BOARD
MEMBERS.]
Notwithstanding section 60C.08, subdivision 1, four board
members may be appointed for one-year terms beginning on August
1, 1987, to achieve staggered terms under the plan of operation.
Sec. 13. [EFFECTIVE DATE CLARIFICATION.]
Laws 1987, chapter 337, sections 27, 28, 29, and 30,
effective August 1, 1987, apply to delinquency proceedings
commencing on or after August 1, 1987.
Sec. 14. [REPEALER.]
Minnesota Statutes 1987 Supplement, section 60C.06,
subdivision 5, is repealed.
Sec. 15. [EFFECTIVE DATE.]
(a) Sections 1 to 5 and 8 to 10 are effective the day
following final enactment and apply to all unsettled current or
existing and future claims paid after that date arising out of
any past or future member insolvency.
(b) Sections 11, 13, and 14 are effective the day following
final enactment.
Approved April 18, 1988
Official Publication of the State of Minnesota
Revisor of Statutes