Sec. 38a-836. (Formerly Sec. 38-273). Short title: Connecticut Insurance
Guaranty Association Act. Sections 38a-836 to 38a-853, inclusive, shall be known
and may be cited as the "Connecticut Insurance Guaranty Association Act".
(1971, P.A. 466, S. 1.)
History: Sec. 38-273 transferred to Sec. 38a-836 in 1991.
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Sec. 38a-837. (Formerly Sec. 38-274). Application of chapter. Sections 38a-836
to 38a-853, inclusive, shall apply to all kinds of direct insurance, except:
(1) Life, annuity, health or disability insurance;
(2) Mortgage guaranty, financial guaranty or other forms of insurance offering protection against investment risks;
(3) Fidelity or surety or any bonding obligations;
(4) Credit insurance, vendors' single interest insurance, or collateral protection insurance or any similar insurance protecting the interests of a creditor arising out of a
creditor-debtor transaction;
(5) Insurance of warranties or service contracts, including insurance that provides
for the repair, replacement or service of goods or property, or indemnification for repair,
replacement or service, for the operational or structural failure of the goods or property
due to a defect in materials, workmanship or normal wear and tear, or that provides
reimbursement for the liability incurred by the issuer of agreements or service contracts
that provide such benefits;
(6) Title insurance;
(7) Ocean marine insurance;
(8) Any transaction or combination of transactions between a person, including
affiliates of such person, and an insurer, including affiliates of such insurer, which involves the transfer of investment or credit risk unaccompanied by transfer of insurance risk;
(9) Any insurance provided by or guaranteed by government; or
(10) Flood insurance pursuant to the federal Flood Disaster Protection Act of 1973,
as amended, 42 USC Section 4001, et seq.
(1971, P.A. 466, S. 2; P.A. 86-63; P.A. 88-76, S. 1, 10; P.A. 97-125, S. 1, 9.)
History: P.A. 86-63 provided that certain types of flood insurance shall not be subject to the provisions of chapter 687;
P.A. 88-76 excepted financial guaranty insurance from the provisions of this chapter; Sec. 38-274 transferred to Sec. 38a-837 in 1991; P.A. 97-125 reorganized section by expending types of excepted insurance and adding Subdiv. designators,
effective July 1, 1997.
Annotation to former section 38-274:
Cited. 217 C. 371.
Annotation to present section:
Cited. 217 C. 371.
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Sec. 38a-838. (Formerly Sec. 38-275). Definitions. The following terms as used
in sections 38a-836 to 38a-853, inclusive, unless the context otherwise requires or a
different meaning is specifically prescribed, shall have the following meanings:
(1) "Account" means any one of the three accounts created by section 38a-839;
(2) "Affiliate" means any affiliate, as defined in section 38a-1, of an insolvent insurer;
(3) "Association" means the Connecticut Insurance Guaranty Association created
under section 38a-839;
(4) "Commissioner" means the Insurance Commissioner;
(5) "Covered claim" means an unpaid claim, including, but not limited to, one for
unearned premiums, which arises out of and is within the coverage and subject to the
applicable limits of an insurance policy to which sections 38a-836 to 38a-853, inclusive,
apply issued by an insurer, if such insurer becomes an insolvent insurer after October
1, 1971, and (A) the claimant or insured is a resident of this state at the time of the
insured event; or (B) the claim is a first party claim for damage to property with a
permanent location in this state, provided the term "covered claim" shall not include (i)
any claim by or for the benefit of any reinsurer, insurer, insurance pool, or underwriting
association, as subrogation recoveries or otherwise; provided that a claim for any such
amount, asserted against a person insured under a policy issued by an insurer which has
become an insolvent insurer, which, if it were not a claim by or for the benefit of a
reinsurer, insurer, insurance pool or underwriting association, would be a "covered
claim" may be filed directly with the receiver of the insolvent insurer but in no event
shall any such claim be asserted against the insured of such insolvent insurer, (ii) any
claim by or on behalf of an individual who is neither a citizen of the United States nor
an alien legally resident in the United States at the time of the insured event, or an entity
other than an individual whose principal place of business is not in the United States at
the time of the insured event, and it arises out of an accident, occurrence, offense, act,
error or omission that takes place outside of the United States, or a loss to property
normally located outside of the United States or, if a workers' compensation claim, it
arises out of employment outside of the United States, (iii) any claim by or on behalf
of a person who is not a resident of this state, other than a claim for compensation or any
other benefit which arises out of and is within the coverage of a workers' compensation
policy, against an insured whose net worth at the time the policy was issued or at any
time thereafter exceeded twenty-five million dollars, provided that an insured's net
worth for purposes of this section and section 38a-844 shall be deemed to include the
aggregate net worth of the insured and all of its subsidiaries as calculated on a consolidated basis, (iv) any claim by or on behalf of an affiliate of the insolvent insurer at the
time the policy was issued or at the time of the insured event, or (v) any claim arising
out of a policy issued by an insurer which was not licensed to transact insurance in this
state either at the time the policy was issued or when the insured event occurred;
(6) "Insolvent insurer" means an insurer (A) (i) licensed to transact insurance in
this state either at the time the policy was issued or when the insured event occurred,
and (ii) determined to be insolvent by a court of competent jurisdiction; (B) which is
(i) the legal successor of an insurer that was licensed to transact insurance in this state
either at the time the policy was issued or when the insured event occurred, by reason
of a merger, provided such merger is approved by an insurance regulator having jurisdiction over such merger, and (ii) determined to be insolvent by a court of competent
jurisdiction; or (C) which (i) succeeds to the policy obligations of an insurer that was
licensed to transact insurance in this state either at the time the policy was issued or
when the insured event occurred, by reason of a division whereby policies issued by
such licensed insurer are transferred to an insurer, and (ii) is determined to be insolvent
by a court of competent jurisdiction, provided such division is approved (I) in a jurisdiction that allows such division, and (II) by an insurance regulator having jurisdiction
over such division. "Insolvent insurer" shall not be construed to mean any insurer with
respect to which an order, decree, judgment or finding of insolvency, whether permanent
or temporary in nature, or order of rehabilitation or conservation has been issued by a
court of competent jurisdiction prior to October 1, 1971;
(7) "Member insurer" means any person who (A) writes any kind of insurance to
which sections 38a-836 to 38a-853, inclusive, apply under section 38a-837, including,
but not limited to, the exchange of reciprocal or interinsurance contracts, and (B) is
licensed to transact insurance in this state. An insurer shall cease to be a member insurer
effective on the day following the termination or expiration of its license to transact the
kinds of insurance to which said sections 38a-836 to 38a-853, inclusive, apply, however
such insurer shall remain liable as a member insurer for any obligations, including obligations for assessments levied prior to the termination or expiration of the insurer's
license and for assessments levied after the termination or expiration which relate to
any insurer which became an insolvent insurer prior to the termination or expiration of
such insurer's license. In the case of such insurer, the average of its net direct written
premium for the five calendar years prior to expiration or termination of its license,
whether or not the insurer has net direct written premium in the year preceding such
expiration or termination, shall be used as its assessment base for any year following
such expiration or termination in which the insurer has no direct written premium;
(8) "Net direct written premiums" means direct gross premiums written in this state
on insurance policies to which sections 38a-836 to 38a-853, inclusive, apply, less return
premiums thereon and dividends paid or credited to policyholders on such direct business, provided the term "net direct written premiums" shall not include premiums on
any contract between insurers or reinsurers;
(9) "Person" means an individual, corporation, partnership, association, joint stock
company, business trust, limited liability company, unincorporated organization, voluntary organization, governmental entity or other legal entity;
(10) "Residence" means, when used in reference to a corporation, its principal place
of business;
(11) "United States" has the meaning assigned to it by section 38a-1.
(1971, P.A. 466, S. 3; P.A. 77-614, S. 163, 610; P.A. 80-482, S. 321, 345, 348; P.A. 81-83, S. 1; P.A. 87-290, S. 1, 8;
P.A. 88-76, S. 2, 10; P.A. 90-243, S. 151; P.A. 97-125, S. 2, 9; P.A. 03-49, S. 1; P.A. 04-174, S. 5; P.A. 05-140, S. 2.)
History: P.A. 77-614 placed insurance commissioner within the department of business regulation and made insurance
department a division within that department, effective January 1, 1979; P.A. 80-482 restored insurance commissioner
and division to prior independent status and abolished the department of business regulation; P.A. 81-83 added Subdiv. (9)
defining "residence" and replaced "authorized" with "licensed" in Subdiv. (5); P.A. 87-290 added definitions of "affiliate",
"claimant", and "United States", and amended the definition of "covered claim" to limit its application to nonresidents of
this state, renumbering previous Subdivs. as necessary; P.A. 88-76 clarified the definition of "covered claim"; P.A. 90-243 amended the definitions for "affiliate", "affiliated", "person" and "United States"; Sec. 38-275 transferred to Sec. 38a-838 in 1991; P.A. 97-125 amended Subdiv. (4) re time when a claimant files a claim, amended Subdiv. (6)(c) to require
the claim to be a first party claim for damage to property with a permanent location and to exclude any claim by or for the
benefit of any reinsurer, insurance pool or underwriting association, amended Subdiv. (8) re when an insurer ceases to be
a member and such member's liability for obligations and amended Subdiv. (10) to redefine "person", effective July 1, 1997;
P.A. 03-49 redefined "affiliate" and "covered claim", deleted former Subdiv. (4) re definition of "claimant", redesignated
existing Subdivs. (5) to (12) as Subdivs. (4) to (11) and made technical changes, effective May 23, 2003, and applicable
to claims filed on or after that date; P.A. 04-174 amended Subdiv. (6)(B) to insert clause (i) designator and add new clause
(ii) to include the legal successor of the insolvent insurer in the event of merger; P.A. 05-140 redefined "covered claim"
in Subdiv. (5) and "insolvent insurer" in Subdiv. (6), effective June 24, 2005, and applicable to insolvencies occurring on
or after that date.
Annotations to former section 38-275:
Subdiv. (4):
Cited. 217 C. 371.
Subdiv. (6):
Cited. 215 C. 224.
Annotations to present section:
Subdiv. (5):
Subpara. (B)(i): Waiver by state's indemnity insurer of its contractual right to reimbursement restored status of state's
claim as a "covered claim" that was reimbursable by the association since claim was no longer for the benefit of an insurer.
278 C. 77. Subpara. (B)(i): Connecticut Insurance Guaranty Association payment to plaintiff who was injured when her
motor vehicle was struck by municipally owned police cruiser did not relieve plaintiff's automobile insurance company
of obligation for purposes of statutory limitation on association payments for the benefit of a solvent insurer, nor did that
payment violate Sec. 38a-845 requirement of exhaustion of solvent carrier policies. Those statutory sections do not have
effect of automatically shifting liability from the association to the nearest solvent insurer when liability does not rest there
already. Id., 794.
Subdiv. (6):
Cited. 217 C. 371. All claims by insurers are excluded from definition of "covered claim". 243 C. 438. Employer that
is self-insurer under Workers' Compensation Act is not an "insurer" under definition of "covered claim". 247 C. 442.
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Sec. 38a-839. (Formerly Sec. 38-276). Connecticut Insurance Guaranty Association created. Membership. Function. Accounts. There is created a nonprofit unincorporated legal entity to be known as the Connecticut Insurance Guaranty Association.
All insurers defined as member insurers in subdivision (8) of section 38a-838 shall be
members of said association as a condition of their authority to transact insurance in
this state. Said association shall perform its functions under a plan of operation established and approved under section 38a-842 and shall exercise its powers through a board
of directors established under section 38a-840. For the purposes of administration and
assessment, said association shall be divided into three separate accounts: (1) The workers' compensation insurance account; (2) the automobile insurance account; and (3) an
account for all other insurance to which sections 38a-836 to 38a-853, inclusive, apply.
(1971, P.A. 466, S. 4; P.A. 79-376, S. 63; P.A. 87-290, S. 2, 8; P.A. 10-5, S. 38.)
History: P.A. 79-376 substituted "workers' compensation" for "workmen's compensation"; P.A. 87-290 made a technical change, substituting reference to 38-275(8) for reference to Sec. 38-275(6); Sec. 38-276 transferred to Sec. 38a-839 in
1991; P.A. 10-5 made technical changes, effective May 5, 2010.
Annotations to former section 38-276:
Cited. 215 C. 224. Cited. 217 C. 371.
Annotation to present section:
Cited. 217 C. 371.
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Sec. 38a-840. (Formerly Sec. 38-277). Board of directors. Selection. Reimbursement for expenses. (a) The board of directors of said association shall consist of
not less than five nor more than nine persons serving terms as established in the plan
of operation under section 38a-842. The members of the board of directors shall be
selected by member insurers subject to the approval of the commissioner. Vacancies
on the board shall be filled for the remaining period of the term by a majority vote of
the remaining members, subject to the approval of the commissioner. If no members
are selected within sixty days after October 1, 1971, the commissioner may appoint the
initial members of the board of directors.
(b) In approving selections to said board, the commissioner shall consider among
other things whether all member insurers are fairly represented.
(c) Members of said board shall receive no compensation as such but shall be reimbursed from the assets of said association for actual and necessary expenses incurred
by them in carrying out their official duties as members of the board of directors.
(1971, P.A. 466, S. 5; P.A. 81-83, S. 2; P.A. 10-5, S. 39.)
History: P.A. 81-83 required that vacancies on the board be filled by majority vote of remaining members rather than
"in the same manner as initial appointments" under Subsec. (1); Sec. 38-277 transferred to Sec. 38a-840 in 1991; P.A. 10-5 made technical changes, effective May 5, 2010.
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Sec. 38a-841. (Formerly Sec. 38-278). Obligations and rights of association.
Limitations. Assessments. Investigation of claims. Right to intervene in court proceedings. (a) Said association shall: (1) Be obligated to the extent of the covered claims
existing prior to the determination of insolvency and arising within thirty days after the
determination of insolvency, or before the policy expiration date if less than thirty days
after the determination, or before the insured replaces the policy or causes its cancellation, if he does so within thirty days of such determination, provided such obligation
shall be limited as follows: (A) With respect to covered claims for unearned premiums, to
one-half of the unearned premium on any policy, subject to a maximum of two thousand
dollars per policy; (B) with respect to covered claims other than for unearned premiums,
such obligation shall include only that amount of each such claim which is in excess of
one hundred dollars and is less than three hundred thousand dollars for claims arising
under policies of insurers determined to be insolvent prior to October 1, 2007, and four
hundred thousand dollars for claims arising under policies of insurers determined to be
insolvent on or after October 1, 2007, except that said association shall pay the full
amount of any such claim arising out of a workers' compensation policy, provided in
no event shall said association be obligated (i) to any claimant in an amount in excess
of the obligation of the insolvent insurer under the policy form or coverage from which
the claim arises, or (ii) for any claim filed with the association after the expiration of
two years from the date of the declaration of insolvency unless such claim arose out of
a workers' compensation policy and was timely filed in accordance with section 31-294c; (2) be deemed the insurer to the extent of its obligations on the covered claims
and to such extent shall have all rights, duties, and obligations of the insolvent insurer
as if the insurer had not become insolvent; (3) allocate claims paid and expenses incurred
among the three accounts, created by section 38a-839, separately, and assess member
insurers separately (A) in respect of each such account for such amounts as shall be
necessary to pay the obligations of said association under subdivision (1) of subsection
(a) of this section subsequent to an insolvency; (B) the expenses of handling covered
claims subsequent to an insolvency; (C) the cost of examinations under section 38a-846; and (D) such other expenses as are authorized by sections 38a-836 to 38a-853,
inclusive. The assessments of each member insurer shall be in the proportion that the
net direct written premiums of such member insurer for the calendar year preceding the
assessment on the kinds of insurance in such account bears to the net direct written
premiums of all member insurers for the calendar year preceding the assessment on the
kinds of insurance in such account. Each member insurer shall be notified of its assessment not later than thirty days before it is due. No member insurer may be assessed in
any year on any account an amount greater than two per cent of that member insurer's
net direct written premiums for the calendar year preceding the assessment on the kinds
of insurance in said account, provided if, at the time an assessment is levied on the "all
other insurance" account, as defined in subdivision (3) of section 38a-839, the board of
directors finds that at least fifty per cent of the total net direct written premiums of a
member insurer and all its affiliates, for the year on which such assessment is based,
were from policies issued or delivered in Connecticut, on risks located in this state, such
member insurer shall be assessed only on such member insurer's net direct written
premium that is attributable to the kind of insurance that gives rise to each covered
claim. If the maximum assessment, together with the other assets of said association in
any account, does not provide in any one year in any account an amount sufficient to
make all necessary payments from that account, the funds available may be prorated
and the unpaid portion shall be paid as soon thereafter as funds become available. Said
association may defer, in whole or in part, the assessment of any member insurer, if the
assessment would cause the member insurer's financial statement to reflect amounts of
capital or surplus less than the minimum amounts required for a certificate of authority
by any jurisdiction in which the member insurer is authorized to transact insurance
provided that during the period of deferment, no dividends shall be paid to shareholders
or policyholders. Deferred assessments shall be paid when such payment will not reduce
capital or surplus below the minimum amounts required for a certificate of authority.
Such payments shall be refunded to those insurers receiving greater assessments because
of such deferment or, at the election of the insurer, be credited against future assessments.
Each member insurer serving as a servicing facility may set off against any assessment,
authorized payments made on covered claims and expenses incurred in the payment of
such claims by such member insurer if they are chargeable to the account in respect of
which the assessment is made; (4) investigate claims brought against said association
and adjust, compromise, settle, and pay covered claims to the extent of said association's
obligations, and deny all other claims. The association shall pay claims in any order it
deems reasonable, including but not limited to, payment in the order of receipt or by
classification. It may review settlements, releases and judgments to which the insolvent
insurer or its insureds were parties to determine the extent to which such settlements,
releases and judgments may be properly contested; (5) notify such persons as the commissioner may direct under subdivision (1) of subsection (b) of section 38a-843; (6)
handle claims through its employees or through one or more insurers or other persons
designated by said association as servicing facilities, provided such designation of a
servicing facility shall be subject to the approval of the commissioner, and may be
declined by a member insurer; (7) reimburse each such servicing facility for obligations
of said association paid by such facility and for expenses incurred by such facility while
handling claims on behalf of said association and shall pay such other expenses of said
association as are authorized by sections 38a-836 to 38a-853, inclusive.
(b) Said association may: (1) Employ or retain such persons as are necessary to
handle claims and perform other duties of said association; (2) borrow such funds as
may be necessary from time to time to effect the purposes of sections 38a-836 to 38a-853, inclusive, in accord with the plan of operation under section 38a-842; (3) sue or
be sued; (4) intervene as a matter of right as a party in any proceeding before any court
in this state that has jurisdiction over an insolvent insurer, as defined in section 38a-838; (5) negotiate and become a party to such contracts as are necessary to carry out
the purpose of said sections; (6) perform such other acts as are necessary or proper to
effectuate the purpose of said sections; (7) refund to the member insurers in proportion
to the contribution of each such member insurer to that account, that amount by which
the assets of the account exceed the liabilities, if, at the end of any calendar year, the
board of directors finds that the assets of said association in any account exceed the
liabilities of that account as estimated by the board of directors for the coming year.
(c) (1) Each insurer paying an assessment under sections 38a-836 to 38a-853, inclusive, may offset one hundred per cent of the amount of such assessment against its
premium tax liability to this state under chapter 207. Such offset shall be taken over a
period of the five successive tax years following the year of payment of the assessment,
at the rate of twenty per cent per year of the assessment paid to the association. Each
insurer to which has been refunded by the association, pursuant to subsection (b) of this
section, all or a portion of an assessment previously paid to the association by the insurer
shall be required to pay to the Department of Revenue Services an amount equal to the
total amount that has been claimed as an offset against the premiums tax liability on the
premiums tax return or returns, as the case may be, filed by such insurer and that is
attributable to such refunded assessment, provided the amount required to be paid to
said department shall not exceed the amount of the refunded assessment. If the amount
of the refunded assessment exceeds the total amount that has been claimed as an offset
against the premiums tax liability on the premiums tax return or returns filed by such
insurer and that is attributable to such refunded assessment, such excess may not be
claimed as an offset against the premiums tax liability on a premiums tax return or
returns filed by such insurer or, if the offset has been transferred to another person
pursuant to subdivision (2) of this subsection, by such other person. For purposes of
this subparagraph, if the offset has been transferred to another person pursuant to subdivision (2) of this subsection, the total amount that has been claimed as an offset against
the premiums tax liability on the premiums tax return or returns filed by such insurer
includes the total amount that has been claimed as an offset against the premiums tax
liability on the premiums tax return or returns filed by such other person. The association
shall promptly notify the Commissioner of Revenue Services of the name and address
of the insurers to which such refunds have been made, the amount of such refunds and
the date on which such refunds were mailed to such insurer. If the amount that an insurer
is required to pay to the Department of Revenue Services has not been so paid on or
before the forty-fifth day after the date of mailing of such refunds, the insurer shall be
liable for interest on such amount at the rate of one per cent per month or fraction thereof
from such forty-fifth day to the date of payment.
(2) An insurer, in this subparagraph called "the transferor", may transfer any offset
provided under subdivision (1) of this subsection to an affiliate, as defined in section 38a-1, of the transferor. Any such transfer of the offset by the transferor and any subsequent
transfer or transfers of the same offset shall not affect the obligation of the transferor
to pay to the Department of Revenue Services any sums which are acquired by refund
from the association pursuant to subsection (b) of this section and which are required
to be paid to the Department of Revenue Services pursuant to subdivision (1) of this
subsection. Such offset may be taken by any transferee only against the transferee's
premium tax liability to this state under chapter 207. The Commissioner of Revenue
Services shall not allow such offset to a transferee against its premium tax liability unless
the transferor, the affiliate to which the offset was originally transferred, each subsequent
transferor and each subsequent transferee have filed such information as may be required
on forms provided by said commissioner with respect to any such transfer or transfers
on or before the due date of the premium tax return on which such offset would have
been taken by the transferor if no transfer had been made by the transferor.
(1971, P.A. 466, S. 6; P.A. 79-376, S. 64; P.A. 81-83, S. 3; P.A. 87-290, S. 3, 8; P.A. 90-50, S. 1, 3; P.A. 97-43; 97-125, S. 3, 9; P.A. 00-174, S. 77, 83; June Sp. Sess. P.A. 01-6, S. 40, 41, 85; P.A. 07-21, S. 1; P.A. 10-5, S. 40.)
History: P.A. 79-376 substituted "workers' compensation" for "workmen's compensation"; P.A. 81-83 specified that
associations are not obligated for claims filed more than two years from date of declaration of insolvency, provided for
permissive rather than mandatory proration of funds in account, prohibited payment of dividends during deferment period,
added provisions re payment of deferred assessments and refunds and authorized payment of claims "in any order it deems
reasonable, including but not limited to, payment in the order of receipt or by classification" in Subsec. (1); P.A. 87-290
amended Subsec. (1) to limit the assessment levied on the "all other insurance account" of a member insurer whenever
over half the premiums received by the insurer were for policies issued in the state for risks in the state; P.A. 90-50 amended
Subsec. (1)(a)(i) to raise the per policy maximum for covered claims for unearned premiums from $1,000 to $2,000; Sec.
38-278 transferred to Sec. 38a-841 in 1991; P.A. 97-43 amended Subsec. (1) to exclude timely filed workers' compensation
claims from two-year filing deadline; P.A. 97-125 added new Subdiv. in Subsec. (2) to allow the association to intervene
in proceedings before any court with jurisdiction over an insolvent insurer, relettering remaining Subdivs. accordingly,
effective July 1, 1997; P.A. 00-174 added Subdiv. (3) re offsets against premium tax liability for amounts assessed under
this chapter, and to allow transfer of the offset to an affiliate, effective May 26, 2000, and applicable to income years
commencing on and after January 1, 2000; June Sp. Sess. P.A. 01-6 amended Subdiv. (3)(A) to specify procedures for tax
treatment of refunds of assessments of association members, effective July 1, 2001, and amended Subdiv. (3)(B) to add
procedures for the transfer to affiliates of tax offsets for association assessments, effective July 1, 2001, and applicable to
calendar years commencing on or after January 1, 2001; P.A. 07-21 amended Subdiv. (l)(a)(ii) to provide that coverage
limit of $300,000 is applicable to claims arising under policies of insurers determined to be insolvent prior to October 1,
2007, and that coverage limit of $400,000 is applicable to claims arising under policies of insurers determined to be
insolvent on or after October 1, 2007; P.A. 10-5 made technical changes, effective May 5, 2010.
Annotations to former section 38-278:
Cited. 215 C. 224. Cited. 217 C. 371.
Annotations to present section:
Cited. 217 C. 371.
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Sec. 38a-842. (Formerly Sec. 38-279). Plan of operation. (a)(1) Said association
shall submit to the commissioner a plan of operation and any amendments thereto necessary or suitable to assure the fair, reasonable, and equitable administration of said association. The plan of operation and any amendments thereto shall become effective upon
approval in writing by the commissioner.
(2) If said association fails to submit a suitable plan of operation within ninety days
following October 1, 1971, or if at any time thereafter said association fails to submit
suitable amendments to the plan, the commissioner shall, after notice and hearing, adopt
and promulgate such reasonable regulations as are necessary or advisable to effectuate
the provisions of sections 38a-836 to 38a-853, inclusive. Such regulations shall continue
in force until modified by the commissioner or superseded by a plan submitted by said
association and approved by the commissioner.
(b) All member insurers shall comply with the plan of operation.
(c) The plan of operation shall: (1) Establish the procedures whereby all the powers
and duties of said association under section 38a-841 shall be performed; (2) establish
procedures for handling the assets of said association; (3) establish the number, the
terms of office and the amount and method of reimbursing members of the board of
directors under section 38a-840; (4) establish procedures by which claims may be filed
with said association and establish acceptable forms of proof of covered claims. Notice
of claims to the receiver or liquidator of the insolvent insurer shall be deemed notice to
said association or its agent and a list of such claims shall be periodically submitted to
said association or similar organization having a like function to that of said association
in another state by the receiver or liquidator; (5) establish regular places and times for
meetings of the board of directors; (6) establish procedures for records to be kept of all
financial transactions of said association, its agents, and the board of directors; (7) provide that any member insurer aggrieved by any final action or decision of said association
may appeal to the commissioner within thirty days after such action or decision; (8)
establish the procedures whereby selections for the board of directors shall be submitted
to the commissioner; (9) contain such additional provisions as may be necessary or
proper for the execution of the powers and duties of said association under sections 38a-836 to 38a-853, inclusive.
(d) The plan of operation may delegate any or all powers and duties of said association, except those under subdivision (3) of subsection (a) of section 38a-841 and subdivision (2) of subsection (b) of section 38a-841, to a corporation, association, or other
organization which performs or will perform functions similar to those of said association, or its equivalent having a like function to that of said association, in two or more
states. Such a corporation, association or organization shall be reimbursed by said association as a servicing facility would be reimbursed and shall be paid by said association
for its performance of any other functions of said association. Any delegation under this
subsection shall take effect only with the approval of both the board of directors and
the commissioner, and may be made only to a corporation, association, or organization
which extends protection not substantially less favorable and effective than that provided
by sections 38a-836 to 38a-853, inclusive.
(1971, P.A. 466, S. 7; P.A. 10-5, S. 41.)
History: Sec. 38-279 transferred to Sec. 38a-842 in 1991; P.A. 10-5 made technical changes, effective May 5, 2010.
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Sec. 38a-843. (Formerly Sec. 38-280). Insolvent insurers. Penalty. Petition to
show cause. (a) The commissioner shall: (1) Notify said association of the existence of
an insolvent insurer, and notify the chairman of the Workers' Compensation Commission and the State Treasurer of the existence of an insolvent workers' compensation
insurer, not later than three days after he receives notice of the determination of any
such insolvency; (2) upon request of the board of directors, provide said association
with a statement of the net direct written premiums of each member insurer.
(b) The commissioner may: (1) Require that said association notify those persons
insured by the insolvent insurer, and any other interested parties, of the determination
of insolvency and of their rights under sections 38a-836 to 38a-853, inclusive. Such
notification shall be by mail sent to their last known address, where available, provided
if sufficient information for such notification by mail is not available, notice by publication in a newspaper of general circulation shall be sufficient to satisfy the requirements
of this subsection; (2) suspend or revoke, after notice and hearing, the certificate of
authority to transact insurance in this state of any member insurer that fails to pay an
assessment when due or which fails to comply with said plan of operation. In lieu of
such suspension or revocation, the commissioner may levy a fine on any member insurer
which fails to pay an assessment when due, provided no such fine shall exceed five per
cent of the unpaid assessment per month, and provided no fine shall be less than five
hundred dollars per month; (3) revoke the designation of any servicing facility if the
commissioner finds claims are being handled unsatisfactorily.
(c) Any person aggrieved by any final action or order of the commissioner under
sections 38a-836 to 38a-853, inclusive, may, not later than thirty days from the date of
such action or order, petition the superior court for the judicial district of Hartford to
require the commissioner to show cause why said action or order should not be reversed
or eliminated, and, if said court finds that the action or order of the commissioner was
arbitrary and unjustified it shall take such action in the premises as may seem equitable.
The pendency of any such petitions to show cause shall act as a stay of execution of any
such order. Petitions under this section shall be privileged in respect of trial assignment.
(1971, P.A. 466, S. 8; P.A. 78-280, S. 6, 127; P.A. 86-35, S. 2; P.A. 88-230, S. 1, 12; P.A. 90-98, S. 1, 2; P.A. 93-142,
S. 4, 7, 8; P.A. 95-220, S. 4-6; P.A. 08-178, S. 42; P.A. 10-5, S. 42.)
History: P.A. 78-280 substituted "judicial district of Hartford-New Britain" for "Hartford county" in Subsec. (3); P.A.
86-35 amended Subsec. (1) to require the insurance commissioner to notify the chairman of the workers' compensation
commission and the state treasurer whenever a workers' compensation insurer becomes insolvent; P.A. 88-230 replaced
"judicial district of Hartford-New Britain" with "judicial district of Hartford", effective September 1, 1991; P.A. 90-98
changed the effective date of P.A. 88-230 from September 1, 1991, to September 1, 1993; Sec. 38-280 transferred to Sec.
38a-843 in 1991; P.A. 93-142 changed the effective date of P.A. 88-230 from September 1, 1993, to September 1, 1996,
effective June 14, 1993; P.A. 95-220 changed the effective date of P.A. 88-230 from September 1, 1996, to September 1,
1998, effective July 1, 1995; P.A. 08-178 amended Subsec. (2) by making technical changes and increasing per month
minimum fine from $100 to $500; P.A. 10-5 made technical changes, effective May 5, 2010.
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Sec. 38a-844. (Formerly Sec. 38-281). Assignment of rights under policy. Receiver or liquidator bound by settlements. Preservation of rights of association.
Right of recovery. (a) Any person recovering any moneys under sections 38a-836 to
38a-853, inclusive, shall be deemed to have assigned his rights under the policy to said
association to the extent of his recovery from said association. Every insured or claimant
seeking the protection of said sections shall cooperate with said association to the same
extent as such person would have been required to cooperate with the insolvent insurer.
Said association shall have no cause of action against any insured of the insolvent insurer
for any sums it has paid out to such insured except such causes of action as the insolvent
insurer would have had if such sums had been paid by the insolvent insurer. In the case
of an insolvent insurer operating on a plan with assessment liability, payments of claims
of said association shall not operate to reduce the liability of insureds to the receiver,
liquidator, or statutory successor for unpaid assessments.
(b) The receiver, liquidator, or statutory successor of an insolvent insurer shall be
bound by determinations of covered claim eligibility under sections 38a-836 to 38a-853, inclusive, and by settlements of claims made by said association or any similar
organization having a like function to that of said association in another state. The court
having jurisdiction shall grant such claims priority equal to that to which the claimant
would have been entitled in the absence of said sections 38a-836 to 38a-853, inclusive,
against the assets of the insolvent insurer. The expenses of said association or any similar
organization having a like function to that of said association in handling claims shall
be accorded the same priority as the receiver's or liquidator's expenses.
(c) Said association shall periodically file with the receiver or liquidator of the insolvent insurer statements of the covered claims paid by said association, the expenses
paid for the processing of covered claims paid or contested and estimates of anticipated
claims on said association, and expenses of processing such claims which shall preserve
the rights of said association against the assets of the insolvent insurer.
(d) (1) Except as provided in subdivision (2) of this subsection, the association
shall have the right to recover from the following persons the amount of any covered
claim paid on behalf of such person pursuant to sections 38a-836 to 38a-853, inclusive:
(A) Any person who is an affiliate of the insolvent insurer and whose liability obligations
to other persons are satisfied in whole or in part by payments made under this chapter;
and (B) any insured whose net worth on December thirty-first of the year next preceding
the date the insurer becomes an insolvent insurer exceeds fifty million dollars and whose
liability obligations to other persons are satisfied in whole or in part by payments made
under said sections. For purposes of this subdivision, "insured" does not include a municipality, as defined in section 7-148, or the Second Injury Fund, established in section
31-354.
(2) The association shall have no right to recover pursuant to subdivision (1) of this
subsection from any nonprofit corporation organized to deliver health services and social
services to meet the needs of the elderly, that is incorporated in this state and qualified
as a Section 501(c)(3) organization under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, or any
subsequent corresponding internal revenue code of the United States, as amended from
time to time, for any amount of covered claims paid on behalf of such corporation on
or after December 1, 2001, provided the insolvent insurer was declared insolvent prior
to May 27, 2008. Any amounts recovered by the association prior to May 27, 2008,
from any such nonprofit corporation or affiliate of such nonprofit corporation shall not
be required to be reimbursed to such nonprofit corporation or affiliate of such nonprofit
corporation.
(1971, P.A. 466, S. 9; P.A. 81-83, S. 4; P.A. 87-290, S. 4, 8; P.A. 97-125, S. 4, 9; P.A. 03-182, S. 1; P.A. 04-10, S. 9;
P.A. 05-199, S. 12; P.A. 08-96, S. 1; P.A. 10-5, S. 43.)
History: P.A. 81-83 required that association file statements of expenses paid for processing paid or contested claims
in Subsec. (3); P.A. 87-290 added Subsec. (4) describing the persons from whom the association has the right to recover;
Sec. 38-281 transferred to Sec. 38a-844 in 1991; P.A. 97-125 made a technical change in Subsec. (1) and amended Subsec.
(2) re determinations of covered claim eligibility and settlements of claims made by the association, effective July 1, 1997;
P.A. 03-182 amended Subdiv. (4) to make technical changes and provide that "insured" does not include a municipality,
as defined in Sec. 7-148, effective June 26, 2003; P.A. 04-10 made technical changes in Subdiv. (4) (Revisor's note: In
2005, a provision in Subdiv. (4) defining "insured", added by P.A. 03-182 and inadvertently omitted from P.A. 04-10, was
reinstated editorially by the Revisors); P.A. 05-199 amended Subsec. (4) to exclude the Second Injury Fund from the
definition of "insured", effective July 1, 2006; P.A. 08-96 amended Subsec. (4) by adding provisions that exclude certain
nonprofit corporations from association's right of recovery and by making conforming changes, effective May 27, 2008;
P.A. 10-5 made technical changes, effective May 5, 2010.
Annotation to former section 38-281:
Subsec. (1):
Cited. 217 C. 371.
Annotation to present section:
Subsec. (1):
Cited. 217 C. 371.
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Sec. 38a-845. (Formerly Sec. 38-282). Exhaustion of rights under policy prior
to claim against association. Claims recoverable from more than one association.
Persons required to exhaust rights under governmental insurance or guaranty
program. (a) Any person having a claim against an insurer under any provision in an
insurance policy, other than a policy of an insolvent insurer, which is also a covered
claim under sections 38a-836 to 38a-853, inclusive, shall exhaust first his rights under
such policy. Any amount payable on a covered claim under said sections shall be reduced
by the amount recoverable under the claimant's insurance policy or chapter 568.
(b) Any person having a claim which may be recovered under more than one insurance guaranty association or its equivalent having a like function to that of said association shall seek recovery first from the association operating in the area of the residence
of the insured except that (1) if it is a first party claim for damage to property with a
permanent location, such person shall seek recovery first from the association operating
in the location of the property, and (2) if it is a workers' compensation claim, such person
shall seek recovery first from the association operating in the area of residence of the
claimant. Any recovery under sections 38a-836 to 38a-853, inclusive, shall be reduced
by the amount recoverable from any other insurance guaranty association or its equivalent having a like function to that of said association.
(c) Any person having a claim under any governmental insurance or guaranty program which such claim is also a covered claim shall be required to first exhaust his
rights under such program. Any amount payable on a covered claim under sections
38a-836 to 38a-853, inclusive, shall be reduced by any amount recoverable under such
program.
(1971, P.A. 466, S. 10; P.A. 79-376, S. 65; P.A. 87-290, S. 5, 8; P.A. 88-76, S. 3, 10; P.A. 97-125, S. 5, 9; P.A. 03-49,
S. 2; P.A. 10-5, S. 44.)
History: P.A. 79-376 replaced "workmen's compensation" with "workers' compensation"; P.A. 87-290 amended Subsec. (2) to delete references to the procedure for the recovery of a workers' compensation claim from more than one
association; P.A. 88-76 amended Subsec. (1) to reduce the amount payable to a claimant by the amount of recovery under
the claimant's insurance or workers' compensation; Sec. 38-282 transferred to Sec. 38a-845 in 1991; P.A. 97-125 substituted
"amount recoverable" for "amount of any recovery" in Subsecs. (1) and (2), and added new Subsec. (3) re exhaustion of
claims under governmental insurance or guaranty programs, effective July 1, 1997; P.A. 03-49 amended Subdiv. (2) to
substitute "residence of the insured" for "residence of the claimant", designate existing exception as Subpara. (A) and add
Subpara. (B) re workers' compensation claims, effective May 23, 2003, and applicable to claims filed on or after that date;
P.A. 10-5 made technical changes, effective May 5, 2010.
Annotations to former section 38-282:
Cited. 215 C. 224. Cited. 217 C. 371.
Annotations to present section:
Cited. 217 C. 371. Section inapplicable where plaintiff does not have claim against an insurer under an insurance policy.
247 C. 442. Connecticut Insurance Guaranty Association payment to plaintiff who was injured when her motor vehicle
was struck by municipally owned police cruiser did not relieve plaintiff's automobile insurance company of obligation
for purposes of statutory limitation on association payments for the benefit of a solvent insurer (38a-838(5)(B)(i)), nor did
that payment violate requirement of this section re exhaustion of solvent carrier policies. Those statutory sections do not
have effect of automatically shifting liability from the association to the nearest solvent insurer when liability does not
rest there already. 278 C. 794.
Subsec. (1):
Claimant satisfies the exhaustion requirement of subsec. by pursuing coverage under her own uninsured motorist policy
prior to attempting to collect; claimant's failure to obtain the full policy limits from her own coverage does not preclude
claimant from collecting from guaranty fund or tortfeasor personally, but any recovery is reduced by full amount of those
policy limits. 275 C. 290.
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Sec. 38a-846. (Formerly Sec. 38-283). Detection and prevention of insurer insolvencies. To aid in the detection and prevention of insurer insolvencies:
(1) The board of directors, upon majority vote, shall notify the commissioner of
any information which it may have indicating any member insurer may be insolvent or
in a financial condition hazardous to its policyholders or the public.
(2) The board of directors may, upon majority vote, 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
thirty days of the receipt of such request, the commissioner shall begin such examination.
The examination may be conducted as a National Association of Insurance Commissioners examination or may be conducted by the commissioner or by such persons as the
commissioner may designate. The cost of such examination shall be paid by said association. In no event shall such examination report be released to the board of directors prior
to its release to the public, provided this shall not preclude the commissioner from
complying with subdivision (3) of this section. 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 prior
to the release of the examination report to the public.
(3) The commissioner shall report to the board of directors when he 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 its
policyholders or the public.
(4) The board of directors may, upon majority vote, make reports and recommendations to the commissioner and the chief insurance regulatory official in any jurisdiction
upon any matter germane to the solvency, liquidation, rehabilitation or conservation of
any member insurer. Such reports and recommendations shall not be considered public
documents.
(5) The board of directors may, upon majority vote, make recommendations to the
commissioner and any other public official in any jurisdiction for the detection and
prevention of insurer insolvencies.
(6) At the request of the commissioner, the board of directors shall, at the conclusion
of any insurer insolvency in which said association was obligated to pay any covered
claim, prepare a report on the history and causes of such insolvency, based on the information available to said association, and submit such report to the commissioner.
(1971, P.A. 466, S. 11; P.A. 81-83, S. 5; P.A. 97-125, S. 6, 9; P.A. 98-27, S. 18.)
History: P.A. 81-83 provided that the board shall prepare report "at the request of the commissioner" in Subsec. (6);
Sec. 38-283 transferred to Sec. 38a-846 in 1991; P.A. 97-125 made a technical change in Subdiv. (2), amended Subdiv.
(4) re recommendations to chief insurance regulatory officials and amended Subdiv. (5) re recommendations to any other
public official, effective July 1, 1997; P.A. 98-27 amended Subdiv. (1) to substitute "it" for "they".
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Sec. 38a-847. (Formerly Sec. 38-284). Association subject to examination and
regulation by commissioner. Annual financial report. Said association shall be subject to examination and regulation by the commissioner. The board of directors shall
submit, not later than March thirtieth of each year, a financial report for the preceding
calendar year in a form approved by the commissioner.
(1971, P.A. 466, S. 12.)
History: Sec. 38-284 transferred to Sec. 38a-847 in 1991.
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Sec. 38a-848. (Formerly Sec. 38-285). Exemption from fees and taxes. Exception. Said association shall be exempt from payment of all fees and all taxes levied by
the state or any of its subdivisions provided it shall not be exempt from the payment of
real or personal property taxes.
(1971, P.A. 466, S. 13.)
History: Sec. 38-285 transferred to Sec. 38a-848 in 1991.
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Sec. 38a-849. (Formerly Sec. 38-286). Rates and premiums to include recoupment of assessments. Section 38a-849 is repealed, effective July 1, 2000.
(1971, P.A. 466, S. 14; P.A. 00-174, S. 82, 83.)
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Sec. 38a-850. (Formerly Sec. 38-287). No liability for action taken in performance of powers and duties. No liability for failure to act. There shall be no liability
on the part of and no cause of action of any nature shall arise against any member insurer,
said association or its agents or employees, the board of directors, or any person serving
as an alternate or substitute representative of any director or the commissioner or his
representatives for any action taken or any failure to act by them in the performance of
their powers and duties under sections 38a-836 to 38a-853, inclusive.
(1971, P.A. 466, S. 15; P.A. 97-125, S. 7, 9.)
History: Sec. 38-287 transferred to Sec. 38a-850 in 1991; P.A. 97-125 extended "no liability" provision to any person
serving as an alternate or substitute representative of any director, and to any failure to act, effective July 1, 1997.
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Sec. 38a-851. (Formerly Sec. 38-288). Association rights in proceedings to
which insolvent insurer is party. Access to insolvent insurer's records. (a) All proceedings in which an insolvent insurer is a party or is obligated to defend an insured as
a party in any court in this state shall be stayed for up to six months and for such additional
time thereafter as may be determined by the court from the date of declaration of insolvency or from the time an ancillary proceeding is instituted in the state, whichever is
later, to permit proper defense by said association of all pending causes of action in the
case. Whenever any covered claims arise from a judgment under any decision, verdict
or finding based on the default of an insolvent insurer or based on such insolvent insurer's
failure to defend an insured, said association, either on its own behalf or on behalf of
such insured, may apply to have such judgment, order, decision, verdict or finding set
aside by the same court or administrator that made such judgment, order, decision,
verdict or finding and said association may defend against any such claim on the merits
of the case.
(b) The liquidator, receiver or statutory successor of an insolvent insurer covered by
sections 38a-836 to 38a-853, inclusive, shall permit access by the board or its authorized
representative to such insolvent insurer's records which the board determines are necessary for the board to carry out its functions under said sections 38a-836 to 38a-853,
inclusive, with regard to covered claims. The liquidator, receiver or statutory successor
shall provide the board or its representative with copies of such records upon the request
of the board.
(1971, P.A. 466, S. 16; P.A. 81-83, S. 6; P.A. 86-403, S. 80, 132; P.A. 97-125, S. 8, 9.)
History: P.A. 81-83 required that proceedings be stayed for up to six months and for additional time as determined by
the court, eliminating requirement of stay of 60 days from insolvency determination; P.A. 86-403 made technical change;
Sec. 38-288 transferred to Sec. 38a-851 in 1991; P.A. 97-125 designated existing provisions as Subsec. (a) and added
Subsec. (b) re access to insolvent insurer's records, effective July 1, 1997.
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Sec. 38a-852. (Formerly Sec. 38-288a). Prohibited unfair trade practice. It
shall be a prohibited unfair trade practice and a violation of section 38a-815 for any
person to make use in any manner of the protection afforded by sections 38a-836 to 38a-853, inclusive, in the solicitation, negotiation, procurement or effectuation of insurance
provided, this section shall not apply to the distribution of any publication approved by
the commissioner and describing the general purposes and current limitations of sections
38a-836 to 38a-853, inclusive. Violations of this section shall be subject to the provisions
of section 38a-817.
(P.A. 85-105, S. 1; P.A. 92-60, S. 22.)
History: Sec. 38-288a transferred to Sec. 38a-852 in 1991; P.A. 92-60 included the provisions of this section as a
violation of Sec. 38a-815 and excluded its effect from the distribution of publications approved by the insurance commissioner describing the general purposes or current limitations of the Connecticut Insurance Guaranty Association Act.
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Sec. 38a-853. (Formerly Sec. 38-289). Regulations. The commissioner may promulgate such reasonable regulations as he deems necessary to carry out the intent of
sections 38a-836 to 38a-853, inclusive. Such regulations may include definitions of the
kinds of insurance specified in section 38a-837.
(1971, P.A. 466, S. 17; P.A. 88-76, S. 4, 10.)
History: P.A. 88-76 authorized the commissioner to adopt regulations defining the kinds of insurance specified in Sec.
38a-274; Sec. 38-289 transferred to Sec. 38a-853 in 1991.
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Secs. 38a-854 to 38a-857. Reserved for future use.
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Sec. 38a-858. (Formerly Sec. 38-301). Short title: Connecticut Life and Health
Insurance Guaranty Association Act. Sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive, shall
be known and may be cited as the "Connecticut Life and Health Insurance Guaranty
Association Act".
(1972, P.A. 280, S. 1.)
History: Sec. 38-301 transferred to Sec. 38a-858 in 1991.
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Sec. 38a-859. (Formerly Sec. 38-302). Association of insurers. To provide protection for policyowners, insureds, beneficiaries, annuitants, payees and assignees of
life insurance policies, health insurance policies, annuity contracts, and supplemental
contracts, subject to certain limitations, against failure in the performance of contractual
obligations due to the impairment of the insurer issuing such policies or contracts, an
association of insurers is created to enable the guaranty of payment of benefits and of
continuation of coverages. Members of the association are subject to assessment to
provide funds to carry out the purpose of sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive, and
the association is authorized to assist the commissioner in the prescribed manner in the
detection and prevention of insurer impairments.
(1972, P.A. 280, S. 2.)
History: Sec. 38-302 transferred to Sec. 38a-859 in 1991.
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Sec. 38a-860. (Formerly Sec. 38-303). Application of chapter. Obligations of
association. (a) Sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive, shall provide coverage for the
policies and contracts specified in subsection (f) of this section: (1) To any person,
except for a nonresident certificate holder under a group policy or contract, who is
the beneficiary, assignee or payee of the person covered under subdivision (2) of this
subsection, regardless of where the person resides, and (2) any person who is the owner
of, or certificate holder under, such policy or contract and in each case who (A) is a
resident, or (B) is not a resident, provided (i) the insurer that issued such policy or
contract is domiciled in this state, (ii) the state in which the person resides has an association similar to the association created by this section and sections 38a-837, 38a-838,
38a-845, 38a-853, 38a-862, 38a-863, 38a-865 and 38a-866, and (iii) the person is not
eligible for coverage by an association in any other state because the insurer was not
licensed in the state at the time specified in the state's guaranty association law.
(b) For unallocated annuity contracts specified in subsection (f) of this section,
subdivisions (1) and (2) of subsection (a) of this section shall not apply, and except as
provided in subsections (d) and (e) of this section, sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive, shall apply to: (1) Any person who is the owner of the unallocated annuity contract
if the contract is issued to, or in connection with, a specific benefit plan whose plan
sponsor has its principal place of business in this state; and (2) any person who is the
owner of an unallocated annuity contract issued to, or in connection with, government
lotteries if the owners are residents.
(c) For structured settlement annuities specified in subsection (f) of this section,
subdivisions (1) and (2) of subsection (a) of this section shall not apply, and except as
provided in subsections (d) and (e) of this section, sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive, shall apply to a person who is a payee under a structured settlement annuity, or to
a beneficiary of a payee if the payee is deceased, if the payee: (1) Is a resident, regardless
of where the contract owner resides, or (2) is not a resident, provided: (A) (i) The contract
owner of the structured settlement annuity is a resident, or (ii) the contract owner of the
structured settlement annuity is not a resident, but the insurer that issued the structured
settlement annuity is domiciled in this state, and the state in which the contract owner
resides has an association similar to the association created by sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive; and (B) neither the payee, beneficiary or contract owner is eligible for
coverage by the association of the state in which the payee, beneficiary or contract owner
resides.
(d) Sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive, shall not provide coverage to: (1) A
person who is a payee or beneficiary of a contract owner resident of this state, if the
payee or beneficiary is afforded any coverage by the association of another state; or (2)
a person covered under subsection (b) of this section, if any coverage is provided by
the association of another state to the person.
(e) Sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive, shall provide coverage to a person who
is a resident and, in special circumstances, to a nonresident. In order to avoid duplicate
coverage, if a person who would otherwise receive coverage under sections 38a-858 to
38a-875, inclusive, is provided coverage under the laws of any other state, the person
shall not be provided coverage under sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive. In determining the application of the provisions of this subsection in situations where a person
could be covered by the association of more than one state, whether as an owner, payee,
beneficiary or assignee, sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive, shall be construed in
conjunction with the laws of other states to result in coverage by only one association.
(f) (1) Sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive, shall provide coverage to the persons specified in subsections (a) to (d), inclusive, of this section for direct, nongroup
life, health or annuity policies or contracts and supplemental contracts to such policies
or contracts, for certificates under direct group policies and contracts, and for unallocated
annuity contracts issued by member insurers, except as limited by said sections. Annuity
contracts and certificates under group annuity contracts include, but are not limited to,
guaranteed investment contracts, deposit administration contracts, unallocated funding
agreements, allocated funding agreements, structured settlement annuities, annuities
issued to or in connection with government lotteries and any immediate or deferred
annuity contracts. (2) Said sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive, shall not provide
coverage for: (A) Any portion of a policy or contract not guaranteed by the insurer, or
under which the risk is borne by the policy or contract holder; (B) any policy or contract
of reinsurance, unless assumption certificates have been issued; (C) any portion of a
policy or contract to the extent that the rate of interest on which it is based or the interest
rate, crediting rate or similar factor determined by use of an index or other external
reference stated in the policy or contract employed in calculating returns or changes in
value (i) averaged over the period of four years prior to the date on which the member
insurer becomes an impaired or insolvent insurer under sections 38a-858 to 38a-875,
inclusive, exceeds the rate of interest determined by subtracting two percentage points
from Moody's corporate bond yield average averaged for that same four-year period or
for such lesser period if the policy or contract was issued less than four years before the
member insurer becomes an impaired or insolvent insurer under sections 38a-858 to
38a-875, inclusive, whichever is earlier; and (ii) on and after the date on which the
member insurer becomes an impaired or insolvent insurer under sections 38a-858 to
38a-875, inclusive, whichever is earlier, exceeds the rate of interest determined by subtracting three percentage points from Moody's corporate bond yield average as most
recently available; (D) any plan or program of an employer, association or similar entity
to provide life, health or annuity benefits to its employees or members to the extent that
such plan or program is self-funded or uninsured, including, but not limited to, benefits
payable by an employer, association or similar entity under (i) a multiple employer
welfare arrangement as defined in Section 514 of the federal Employee Retirement
Income Security Act of 1974, as amended from time to time; (ii) a minimum premium
group insurance plan; or (iii) an administrative services only contract; (E) any stop-loss or excess loss insurance policy or contract providing for the indemnification of or
payment to a policy owner, a contract owner, a plan or another person obligated to pay
life, health or annuity benefits; (F) any portion of a policy or contract to the extent that
it provides dividends, experience rating credits, voting rights or provides that any fees
or allowances be paid to any person, including, but not limited to, the policy or contract
holder, in connection with the service to or administration of such policy or contract;
(G) any policy or contract issued in this state by a member insurer at a time when it was
not licensed or did not have a certificate of authority to issue such policy or contract
in this state; (H) any unallocated annuity contract issued to an employee benefit plan
protected under the federal Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation, regardless of whether
the federal Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation has yet become liable to make any
payments with respect to the benefit plan; (I) any portion of an unallocated annuity
contract that is not issued to, or in connection with a specific employee, union or association of natural persons benefit plan or a government lottery; (J) any subscriber contract
issued by a health care center; (K) a contractual agreement that establishes the insurer's
obligation by reference to a portfolio of assets that is not owned or possessed by the
insurance company; (L) an obligation that does not arise under the express written terms
of the policy or contract issued by the insurer to the contract owner or policy owner,
including, but not limited to: (i) A claim based on marketing materials; (ii) a claim based
on side letters, riders or other documents that were issued by the insurer without meeting
applicable policy form filing or approval requirements; (iii) a misrepresentation of or
regarding policy benefits; (iv) an extra-contractual claim; or (v) a claim for penalties
or consequential or incidental damages; (M) a contractual agreement that establishes the
member insurer's obligations to provide a book value accounting guaranty for defined
contribution benefit plan participants by reference to a portfolio of assets that is owned
by the benefit plan or its trustee, which in each case is not an affiliate of the member
insurer; and (N) a portion of a policy or contract to the extent it provides for interest or
other changes in value to be determined by the use of an index or other external reference
stated in the policy or contract, but which have not been credited to the policy or contract,
or as to which the policy or contract owner's rights are subject to forfeiture, as of the
date the member insurer becomes an impaired or insolvent insurer under sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive, whichever is earlier. If a policy's or contract's interest or
changes in value are credited less frequently than annually, then for purposes of determining the values that have been credited and are not subject to forfeiture under this
subparagraph, the interest or change in value determined by using the procedures defined
in the policy or contract shall be credited as if the contractual date of crediting interest
or changing values was the date of impairment or insolvency, whichever is earlier, and
shall not be subject to forfeiture.
(g) The benefits for which the association may become liable shall in no event
exceed the lesser of: (1) The contractual obligations for which the insurer is liable or
would have been liable if it were not an impaired insurer, or (2) (A) with respect to any
one life, regardless of the number of policies or contracts: (i) Five hundred thousand
dollars in life insurance death benefits, but no more than five hundred thousand dollars
in net cash surrender and net cash withdrawal values for life insurance; (ii) five hundred
thousand dollars in health insurance benefits, including, but not limited to, any net cash
surrender and net cash withdrawal values; (iii) five hundred thousand dollars in the
present value of annuity benefits, including, but not limited to, net cash surrender and
net cash withdrawal values; (B) with respect to each individual participating in a governmental retirement plan established under Section 401, 403(b) or 457 of the United States
Internal Revenue Code of 1986, or any subsequent internal revenue code of the United
States, as amended from time to time, covered by an unallocated annuity contract or the
beneficiaries of each such individual if deceased, in the aggregate, five hundred thousand
dollars in present value annuity benefits, including, but not limited to, net cash surrender
and net cash withdrawal values; (C) with respect to each payee of a structured settlement
annuity, or beneficiary or beneficiaries of the payee if deceased, five hundred thousand
dollars in present value annuity benefits, in the aggregate, including, but not limited to,
net cash surrender and net cash withdrawal values, if any, provided in no event shall
the association be liable to expend (i) more than the five hundred thousand dollars in
the aggregate with respect to any one individual under subparagraphs (A), (B) and (C)
of this subdivision, and (ii) with respect to one owner of multiple nongroup policies of
life insurance, whether the policy owner is an individual, firm, corporation or other
person, and whether the persons insured are officers, managers, employees or other
persons, more than five million dollars in benefits, regardless of the number of policies
and contracts held by the owner; (D) with respect to either (i) one contract owner provided coverage under subdivision (2) of subsection (b) of this section, or (ii) one plan
sponsor whose plans own directly or in trust one or more unallocated annuity contracts
not included in subparagraph (B) of subdivision (2) of this subsection, five million
dollars in benefits regardless of the number of contracts with respect to the contract
owner or plan sponsor, except that in the case where one or more unallocated annuity
contracts are covered contracts under sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive, and are
owned by a trust or other entity for the benefit of two or more plan sponsors, coverage
shall be afforded by the association if the largest interest in the trust or entity owning
the contract or contracts is held by a plan sponsor whose principal place of business is
in this state and in no event shall the association be obligated to cover more than five
million dollars in benefits with respect to all such unallocated contracts.
(h) The limits set forth in subsection (g) of this section are limits on the benefits
for which the association is obligated before taking into account either the association's
subrogation and assignment rights or the extent to which those benefits could be provided
out of the assets of the impaired or insolvent insurer that are attributable to covered
policies. The costs of the association's obligations under sections 38a-858 to 38a-875,
inclusive, may be met by the use of assets attributable to covered policies or reimbursed
to the association pursuant to the association's subrogation and assignment rights.
(i) In performing its obligation to provide coverage under section 38a-865, the association shall not be required to guarantee, assume, reinsure or perform, or cause to be
guaranteed, assumed, reinsured or performed, the contractual obligations of the insolvent or impaired insurer under a covered policy or contract that does not materially
affect the economic value or economic benefit of the covered policy or contract.
(1972, P.A. 280, S. 3; P.A. 75-224; P.A. 87-290, S. 6, 8; P.A. 88-76, S. 5, 10; P.A. 90-243, S. 152; P.A. 97-108, S. 4;
P.A. 98-19, S. 1, 2; P.A. 01-67, S. 1; P.A. 04-17, S. 1; P.A. 08-147, S. 10; P.A. 09-74, S. 27, 28.)
History: P.A. 75-224 divided section into Subsecs., rephrased provisions re applicability of chapter, now Subsec. (b),
specifically exempted variable life insurance or annuity contract not guaranteed by an insurer and added reference to
"insolvent" insurers; P.A. 87-290 amended Subsec. (a) to limit the chapter's application to policies and contracts issued
to residents of this state; P.A. 88-76 rewrote section entirely, describing the limits of coverage in greater detail; P.A. 90-243 amended Subsec. (b) to exempt coverage for subscriber contracts issued by a health care center; Sec. 38-303 transferred
to Sec. 38a-860 in 1991; P.A. 97-108 added Subsec. (b)(J) re a contractual agreement that establishes the insurer's obligation
by reference to a portfolio not owned by the insurer; P.A. 98-19 amended Subsec. (c)(2)(A)(ii) to substitute $500,000 for
$300,000 re health insurance, and amended Subsec. (c)(2)(B) to substitute $500,000 for $300,000 re aggregate with respect
to any individual under Subparas. (A) and (B), effective April 24, 1998; P.A. 01-67 amended Subsec. (a) to make a technical
change and replace former Subdivs. (1) and (2) with new Subdivs. (1) and (2), added new Subsecs. (b) to (e), redesignated
existing Subsecs. (b) and (c) as Subsecs. (f) and (g) and made substantial revisions thereto, adding new Subsec. (f)(K) to
(M), and (g)(D), and added new Subsecs. (h) and (i) re obligations of the association; P.A. 04-17 substituted $500,000 for
$300,000 and $100,000 re benefits in Subsec. (g); P.A. 08-147 amended Subsec. (f)(2) to delete former Subpara. (D)(iii)
re stop-loss group insurance plan, redesignate existing Subpara. (D)(iv) as new Subpara. (D)(iii), insert new Subpara. (E)
re stop-loss or excess loss insurance policy or contract and redesignate existing Subparas. (E) to (M) as new Subparas. (F)
to (N) and amended Subsec. (g)(2)(B) by making a technical change; P.A. 09-74 made technical changes in Subsecs. (f)
and (g), effective May 27, 2009.
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Sec. 38a-861. (Formerly Sec. 38-304). Liberal construction. Sections 38a-858
to 38a-875, inclusive, shall be liberally construed to effect the purpose under section
38a-859 which shall constitute an aid and guide to interpretation.
(1972, P.A. 280, S. 4.)
History: Sec. 38-304 transferred to Sec. 38a-861 in 1991.
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Sec. 38a-862. (Formerly Sec. 38-305). Definitions. As used in sections 38a-858
to 38a-875, inclusive:
(1) "Account" means either of the two accounts created under section 38a-863;
(2) "Association" means the Connecticut Life and Health Insurance Guaranty Association created under section 38a-863;
(3) "Authorized assessment" or "authorized" when used in the context of assessments means a resolution that has been passed by the board of directors of the association
whereby an assessment will be called immediately or in the future from member insurers
for a specified amount. An assessment is authorized when the resolution is passed;
(4) "Benefit plan" means a specific employee, union or association of natural persons benefit plan;
(5) "Called assessment" or "called" when used in the context of assessments means
that a notice has been issued by the association to member insurers requiring that an
authorized assessment be paid within the time frame set forth in the notice. An authorized
assessment becomes a called assessment when notice is mailed by the association to
member insurers;
(6) "Commissioner" means the Insurance Commissioner of this state;
(7) "Contractual obligation" means any obligation under a policy or contract or
certificate under a group policy or contract, or portion thereof for which coverage is
provided under section 38a-860;
(8) "Covered policy" means any policy or contract within the scope of section
38a-860;
(9) "Entity" means a person other than a natural person;
(10) "Impaired insurer" means a member insurer that, after October 1, 1972, is not
an insolvent insurer, and is placed under an order of rehabilitation or conservation by
a court of competent jurisdiction;
(11) "Insolvent insurer" means a member insurer that after October 1, 1972, is
placed under an order of liquidation by a court of competent jurisdiction with a finding
of insolvency;
(12) "Member insurer" means any insurer licensed or who holds a certificate of
authority to issue in this state any kind of insurance to which sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive, apply under section 38a-860, and may include an insurer whose license
in this state has been suspended, revoked or voluntarily withdrawn. "Member insurer"
does not include a health care center;
(13) "Moody's corporate bond yield average" means the monthly average corporates as published by Moody's Investors Service, Inc., or any successor thereto;
(14) "Owner", "policy owner" or "contract owner" means the person who is identified as the legal owner under the terms of the policy or contract or who is otherwise
vested with legal title to the policy or contract through a valid assignment completed
in accordance with the terms of the policy or contract and properly recorded as the owner
on the books of the insurer. "Owner", "contract owner" and "policy owner" does not
include a person with a mere beneficial interest in a policy or contract;
(15) "Plan sponsor" means: (A) The employer in the case of a benefit plan established or maintained by a single employer; (B) the employee organization in the case
of a benefit plan established or maintained by an employee organization; or (C) in the
case of a benefit plan established or maintained by two or more employers or jointly
by one or more employers and one or more employee organizations, the association,
committee, joint board of trustees or other similar group of representatives of the parties
who establish or maintain the benefit plan;
(16) "Premiums" means amounts or considerations, by whatever name called, received on covered policies or contracts less premiums, considerations and deposits returned thereon, and less dividends and experience credits thereon. "Premiums" does not
include (A) any amounts or considerations received for any policies or contracts or
for the portions of any policies or contracts for which coverage is not provided under
subsection (f) of section 38a-860, except that assessable premium shall not be reduced
on account of subparagraph (C) of subdivision (2) of subsection (f) of section 38a-860,
relating to interest limitations, and subdivision (2) of subsection (g) of section 38a-860,
relating to limitations with respect to any one individual, any one participant and any
one contract owner; provided that "premiums" shall not include any premiums in excess
of five million dollars on any unallocated annuity contract not issued under a governmental retirement benefit plan established under Section 401, 403(b) or 457 of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, or any subsequent corresponding internal revenue code of the
United States, as from time to time amended, or (B) with respect to multiple nongroup
policies of life insurance owned by one owner, whether the policy owner is an individual,
firm, corporation or other person, and whether the persons insured are officers, managers, employees or other persons, premiums in excess of five million dollars with respect
to such policies or contracts, regardless of the number of policies or contracts held by
the owner;
(17) "Person" means any individual, corporation, limited liability company, partnership, association or voluntary organization;
(18) "Principal place of business" of a plan sponsor or an entity means the single
state in which the natural persons who establish policy for the direction, control and
coordination of the operations of the plan sponsor or entity as a whole primarily exercise
that function, as determined by the association in its reasonable judgment by considering
the factors set forth in subparagraphs (A) to (G), inclusive, of this subdivision: (A) The
state in which the primary executive and administrative headquarters of the plan sponsor
or entity is located; (B) the state in which the principal office of the chief executive officer
of the plan sponsor or entity is located; (C) the state in which the board of directors, or
similar governing person or persons, of the plan sponsor or entity conducts the majority
of its meetings; (D) the state in which the executive or management committee of the
board of directors, or similar governing person or persons, of the plan sponsor or entity
conducts the majority of its meetings; (E) the state from which the management of the
overall operations of the plan sponsor or entity is directed; (F) in the case of a benefit
plan sponsored by affiliated companies comprising a consolidated corporation, the state
in which the holding company or controlling affiliate has its principal place of business
as determined using the factors set forth in subparagraphs (A) to (E), inclusive, of this
subdivision; and (G) notwithstanding subparagraphs (A) to (F), inclusive, of this subdivision, in the case of a plan sponsor, if more than fifty per cent of the participants in the
benefit plan are employed in a single state, that state shall be deemed to be the principal
place of business of the plan sponsor. The principal place of business of a plan sponsor
of a benefit plan described in subparagraph (C) of subdivision (15) of this section shall
be deemed to be the principal place of business of the association, committee, joint
board of trustees or other similar group of representatives of the parties who establish
or maintain the benefit plan that, in lieu of a specific or clear designation of a principal
place of business, shall be deemed to be the principal place of business of the employer
or employee organization that has the largest investment in the benefit plan in question;
(19) "Receivership court" means the court in the insolvent or impaired insurer's
state having jurisdiction over the conservation, rehabilitation or liquidation of the insurer;
(20) "Resident" means a person to whom a contractual obligation is owed and who
resides in this state on the date of entry of a court order that determines a member insurer
to be an impaired insurer or a court order that determines a member insurer to be an
insolvent insurer, whichever occurs first. A person may be a resident of only one state,
which in the case of an entity shall be its principal place of business. Citizens of the
United States that are either (A) residents of foreign countries, or (B) residents of United
States possessions, territories or protectorates that do not have an association similar
to the association created by sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive, shall be deemed
residents of the state of domicile of the insurer that issued the policies or contracts;
(21) "Structured settlement annuity" means an annuity purchased to fund periodic
payments for a plaintiff or other claimant in payment for or with respect to personal
injury suffered by the plaintiff or other claimant;
(22) "Supplemental contract" means any agreement entered into for the distribution
of policy or contract proceeds under a life, health or annuity policy or contract; and
(23) "Unallocated annuity contract" means any annuity contract or group annuity
certificate that is not issued to and owned by an individual, except to the extent of
any annuity benefits guaranteed to an individual by an insurer under such contract or
certificate.
(1972, P.A. 280, S. 5; P.A. 77-614, S. 163, 610; P.A. 80-482, S. 323, 345, 348; P.A. 88-76, S. 6, 10; P.A. 90-243, S.
153; P.A. 93-57, S. 11; P.A. 95-79, S. 151, 189; P.A. 01-67, S. 2; P.A. 02-24, S. 4.)
History: P.A. 77-614 placed insurance commissioner within the department of business regulation and made insurance
department a division within that department, effective January 1, 1979; P.A. 80-482 restored insurance commissioner
and division to prior independent status and abolished the department of business regulation; P.A. 88-76 revised the
definitions of "account", "contractual obligation", "premiums" and "resident", and added definitions of "Moody's corporate
bond yield average", "supplemental contract" and "unallocated annuity contract"; P.A. 90-243 amended the definition of
"member insurer" to exclude "health care center"; Sec. 38-305 transferred to Sec. 38a-862 in 1991; P.A. 93-57 redefined
"member insurer"; P.A. 95-79 redefined "person" to include a limited liability company, effective May 31, 1995; P.A. 01-67 changed alphabetic Subdiv. designators to numeric designators, defined "authorized assessment", "authorized", "benefit
plan", "called assessment", "called", "entity", "insolvent insurer", "owner", "policy owner", "contract owner", "plan
sponsor", "principal place of business", "receivership court", and "structured settlement annuity", redefined "impaired
insurer", "premiums", "resident" and "supplemental contract", and made technical changes; P.A. 02-24 substituted "exercise" for "exercises" in Subdiv. (18).
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Sec. 38a-863. (Formerly Sec. 38-306). Creation of association. Accounts. Supervision. (a) There is created a nonprofit legal entity to be known as the Connecticut
Life and Health Insurance Guaranty Association. All member insurers shall be and
remain members of the association as a condition of their authority to transact insurance
in this state. The association shall perform its functions under the plan of operation
established and approved under section 38a-867 and shall exercise its powers through
a board of directors established under section 38a-864. For purposes of administration
and assessment, the association shall maintain two accounts: (1) The life insurance and
annuity account which includes the following subaccounts: (A) Life insurance account;
(B) annuity account which shall include, but is not limited to, annuity contracts owned
by a governmental retirement plan, or its trustee, established under Section 401, 403(b)
or 457 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, or any subsequent corresponding internal
revenue code of the United States, as from time to time amended, but shall otherwise
exclude unallocated annuities; and (C) unallocated annuity account which shall exclude
contracts owned by a governmental retirement benefit plan, or its trustee, established
under Section 401, 403(b) or 457 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, or any subsequent corresponding internal revenue code of the United States, as from time to time
amended; and (2) the health insurance account.
(b) The association shall come under the immediate supervision of the commissioner and shall be subject to the applicable provisions of the insurance laws of this state.
(1972, P.A. 280, S. 6; P.A. 88-76, S. 7, 10; P.A. 01-67, S. 3.)
History: P.A. 88-76 amended Subsec. (a) restructuring the accounts to be maintained by the association by reducing
their number from three to two, combining the life insurance account and the annuity account, and creating three subaccounts
under such combined account; Sec. 38-306 transferred to Sec. 38a-863 in 1991; P.A. 01-67 amended Subsec. (a)(1)(B) and
(C) to include in annuity accounts, and exclude from unallocated annuity accounts, those contracts owned by a governmental
retirement plan or its trustee established under the internal revenue code.
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Sec. 38a-864. (Formerly Sec. 38-307). Board of directors. (a) The board of directors of the association shall consist of not less than five nor more than nine members
serving terms as established in the plan of operation. The members of the board shall
be selected by member insurers subject to the approval of the commissioner. Vacancies
on the board shall be filled for the remaining period of the term in the manner described
in the plan of operation. To select the initial board of directors, and initially organize
the association, the commissioner shall give notice to all member insurers of the time and
place of the organizational meeting. In determining voting rights at the organizational
meeting each member insurer shall be entitled to one vote in person or by proxy. If the
board of directors is not selected within sixty days after notice of the organizational
meeting, the commissioner may appoint the initial members.
(b) In approving selections or in appointing members to the board, the commissioner
shall consider, among other things, whether all member insurers are fairly represented.
(c) Members of the board may be reimbursed from the assets of the association for
expenses incurred by them as members of the board of directors but members of the
board shall not otherwise be compensated by the association for their services.
(1972, P.A. 280, S. 7.)
History: Sec. 38-307 transferred to Sec. 38a-864 in 1991.
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Sec. 38a-865. (Formerly Sec. 38-308). Powers. (a) If a member insurer is an impaired insurer, the association may, in its discretion, and subject to any conditions imposed by the association that do not impair the contractual obligations of the impaired
insurer and that are approved by the commissioner, (1) guarantee, assume or reinsure,
or cause to be guaranteed, assumed or reinsured, any or all of the policies or contracts
of the impaired insurer; or (2) provide such moneys, pledges, loans, notes, guarantees
or other means as are proper to effectuate subdivision (1) of this subsection and assure
payment of the contractual obligations of the impaired insurer pending action under
subdivision (1) of this subsection.
(b) If a member insurer is an insolvent insurer, the association shall, in its discretion,
either:
(1) (A) (i) Guarantee, assume or reinsure, or cause to be guaranteed, assumed or
reinsured, the policies or contracts of the insolvent insurer, or (ii) assure payment of the
contractual obligations of the insolvent insurer, and (B) provide moneys, pledges, loans,
notes, guarantees or other means reasonably necessary to discharge the association's
duties; or
(2) Provide benefits and coverages in accordance with the following provisions:
(A) With respect to life and health insurance policies and annuities, assure payment
of benefits for premiums identical to the premiums and benefits, except for terms of
conversion and renewability that would have been payable under the policies or contracts
of the insolvent insurer, for claims incurred: (i) With respect to group policies and
contracts, not later than the earlier of the next renewal date under those policies or
contracts or forty-five days, but in no event less than thirty days after the date on which
the association becomes obligated with respect to the policies and contracts; (ii) with
respect to nongroup policies, contracts and annuities, not later than the earlier of the
next renewal date, if any, under the policies or contracts or one year, but in no event
less than thirty days from the date on which the association becomes obligated with
respect to the policies or contracts;
(B) Make diligent efforts to provide all known insureds or annuitants, for nongroup
policies and contracts, or group policy owners with respect to group policies and contracts, thirty days' notice of the termination of benefits pursuant to subparagraph (A)
of this subdivision;
(C) With respect to nongroup life and health insurance policies and annuities covered by the association, make available to each known insured or annuitant, or owner
if other than the insured or annuitant, and with respect to an individual formerly insured
or formerly an annuitant under a group policy who is not eligible for replacement group
coverage, make available substitute coverage on an individual basis in accordance with
the provisions of subparagraph (D) of this subdivision, if the insureds or annuitants had
a right under law or the terminated policy or annuity to convert coverage to individual
coverage or to continue an individual policy or annuity in force until a specified age or
for a specified time during which the insurer had no right to make unilateral changes in
any provision of the policy or annuity or had a right only to make changes in premium
by class;
(D) In providing the substitute coverage required under subparagraph (C) of this
subdivision, the association may offer either to reissue the terminated coverage or to
issue an alternative policy. Alternative or reissued policies shall be offered without
requiring evidence of insurability, and shall not provide for any waiting period or exclusion that would not have applied under the terminated policy. The association may
reinsure any alternative or reissued policy;
(E) Alternative policies adopted by the association shall be subject to the approval
of the domiciliary insurance commissioner and the receivership court. The association
may adopt alternative policies of various types for future issuance without regard to any
particular impairment or insolvency;
(F) Alternative policies adopted by the association shall contain at least the minimum statutory provisions required in this state and provide benefits that shall not be
unreasonable in relation to the premium charged. The association shall set the premium
in accordance with a table of rates that it shall adopt. The premium shall reflect the
amount of insurance to be provided and the age and class of risk of each insured, but
shall not reflect any changes in the health of the insured after the original policy was
last underwritten;
(G) Any alternative policy issued by the association shall provide coverage of a
type similar to that of the policy issued by the impaired or insolvent insurer as determined
by the association;
(H) If the association elects to reissue terminated coverage at a premium rate different from that charged under the terminated policy, the premium shall be set by the
association in accordance with the amount of insurance provided and the age and class of
risk, subject to approval of the domiciliary insurance commissioner and the receivership
court;
(I) The association's obligations with respect to coverage under any policy of the
impaired or insolvent insurer or under any reissued or alternative policy shall cease on
the date the coverage or policy is replaced by another similar policy by the owner, the
insured or the association;
(J) When proceeding under this subdivision with respect to a policy or contract
carrying guaranteed minimum interest rates, the association shall assure the payment
or crediting of a rate of interest consistent with subparagraph (C) of subdivision (2) of
subsection (f) of section 38a-860.
(c) Nonpayment of premiums by the thirty-first day after the date required under the
terms of any guaranteed, assumed, alternative or reissued policy or contract or substitute
coverage shall terminate the association's obligations under the policy or coverage under
sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive, with respect to the policy or coverage, except
with respect to any claims incurred or any net surrender value that may be due in accordance with the provisions of sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive.
(d) Premiums due for coverage after entry of an order of liquidation of an insolvent
insurer shall belong to and be payable at the direction of the association, and the association shall be liable for unearned premiums due to policy or contract owners arising after
the entry of the order.
(e) The protection provided by sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive, shall not
apply where any guaranty protection is provided to residents of this state by the laws
of the domiciliary state or jurisdiction of the impaired or insolvent insurer other than
this state.
(f) Repealed by P.A. 87-290, S. 7, 8.
(g) In carrying out its duties under subsection (b) of this section, the association may:
(1) Subject to approval by a court in this state, impose permanent policy or contract
liens in connection with a guarantee, assumption or reinsurance agreement, if the association finds that the amounts which can be assessed under sections 38a-858 to 38a-875,
inclusive, are less than the amounts needed to assure full and prompt performance of the
association's duties under sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive, or that the economic or
financial conditions as they affect member insurers are sufficiently adverse to render
the imposition of such permanent policy or contract liens to be in the public interest;
(2) Subject to approval by a court in this state, impose temporary moratoriums or
liens on payments of cash values and policy loans, or any other right to withdraw funds
held in conjunction with policies or contracts, in addition to any contractual provisions
for deferral of cash or policy loan value. In addition, in the event of a temporary moratorium or moratorium charge imposed by the receivership court on payment of cash values
or policy loans, or on any other right to withdraw funds held in conjunction with policies
or contracts, out of the assets of the impaired or insolvent insurer, the association may
defer the payment of cash values, policy loans or other rights by the association for the
period of the moratorium or moratorium charge imposed by the receivership court,
except for claims covered by the association to be paid in accordance with a hardship
procedure established by the liquidator or rehabilitator and approved by the receivership
court.
(h) If the association fails to act within a reasonable period of time with respect to
any insolvent insurer, as provided in subsection (b) of this section, the commissioner
shall have the powers and duties of the association under sections 38a-858 to 38a-875,
inclusive, with respect to the insolvent insurer.
(i) The association may render assistance and advice to the commissioner, upon the
commissioner's request, concerning rehabilitation, payment of claims, continuation of
coverage, or the performance of other contractual obligations of an impaired or insolvent
insurer.
(j) The association shall have standing to appear or intervene before a court or
agency in this state with jurisdiction over an impaired or insolvent insurer concerning
which the association is or may become obligated under sections 38a-858 to 38a-875,
inclusive, or with jurisdiction over any person or property against which the association
may have rights through subrogation or otherwise. Such standing shall extend to all
matters germane to the powers and duties of the association, including, but not limited
to, proposals for reinsuring, modifying or guaranteeing the policies or contracts and
contractual obligations. The association shall also have the right to appear or intervene
before a court or agency in another state with jurisdiction over an impaired or insolvent
insurer for which the association is or may become obligated or with jurisdiction over any
person or property against whom the association may have rights through subrogation or
otherwise.
(k) (1) A person receiving benefits under sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive,
whether the benefits are payments of or on account of contractual obligations, continuation of coverage or provision of substitute or alternative coverages, shall be deemed to
have assigned (A) the rights under the covered policy or contract to the association to
the extent of the benefits received under sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive, and
(B) any causes of action against any person for losses arising under, resulting from or
otherwise relating to, the covered policy or contract to the association to the extent of
the benefits received because of sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive. The association
may require an assignment to it of such rights or cause of action by any payee, policy
or contract owner, beneficiary, insured or annuitant as a condition precedent to the
receipt of any right or benefits under sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive, upon the
person.
(2) The subrogation rights of the association under this subsection shall have the
same priority against the assets of the impaired or insolvent insurer as that possessed
by the person entitled to receive benefits under sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive.
(3) In addition to subdivisions (1) and (2) of this subsection, the association shall
have, originally or by succession, all common law rights of subrogation and any other
equitable or legal remedy that would have been available to the impaired or insolvent
insurer or owner, beneficiary or payee of a policy or contract with respect to the policy
or contracts, against a person responsible for the losses arising from the personal injury
relating to the annuity or payment thereof, except any such person responsible solely
by reason of serving as an assignee with respect to a qualified assignment under Section
130 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, or any subsequent corresponding internal
revenue code of the United States, as from time to time amended. Such rights of the
association shall include, but are not limited to, in the case of a structured settlement
annuity, any rights of the owner, beneficiary or payee of the annuity, to the extent of
benefits received pursuant to sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive.
(4) If the provisions of subdivisions (1) to (3), inclusive, of this subsection are
invalid or ineffective with respect to any person or claim for any reason, the amount
payable by the association with respect to the related covered obligations shall be reduced by the amount realized by any other person with respect to the person or claim
that is attributable to the policies, or portion thereof, covered by the association.
(5) If the association has provided benefits with respect to a covered obligation
and a person recovers amounts as to which the association has rights as described in
subdivisions (1) to (4), inclusive, of this subsection, the person shall pay to the association the portion of the recovery attributable to the policies, or portion thereof, covered
by the association.
(l) In addition to the rights and powers elsewhere in sections 38a-858 to 38a-875,
inclusive, the association may:
(1) Enter into such contracts as are necessary or proper to carry out the provisions
and purposes of sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive;
(2) Sue or be sued, including, but not limited to, taking any legal actions necessary
or proper to recover any unpaid assessments under section 38a-866, and to settle claims
or potential claims against it;
(3) Borrow money to effect the purposes of sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive,
and any notes or other evidence of indebtedness of the association not in default shall
be legal investments for domestic insurers and may be carried as admitted assets;
(4) Employ or retain such persons as are necessary or proper to handle the financial
transactions of the association, and to perform such other functions as become necessary
or proper under sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive;
(5) Take such legal action as may be necessary or proper to avoid or recover payment
of improper claims;
(6) Exercise, for the purposes of sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive, and to the
extent approved by the commissioner, the powers of a domestic life or health insurer,
but in no case may the association issue insurance policies or annuity contracts other
than those issued to perform its obligations under sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive;
(7) Request information from a person seeking coverage from the association in
order to aid the association in determining its obligations under sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive, with respect to the person, and the person shall promptly comply with
the request; and
(8) Take other necessary or proper action to discharge its duties and obligations
under sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive, or to exercise its powers under sections
38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive.
(m) The association may join an organization of one or more other state associations
of similar purposes to further the purposes and administer the powers and duties of the
association.
(n) (1) At any time within one year after the date on which the association becomes
responsible for the obligations of a member insurer, which date shall be deemed the
coverage date, the association may elect to succeed to the rights and obligations of the
member insurer that accrue on or after the coverage date and that relate to contracts
covered, in whole or in part, by the association, under any one or more indemnity reinsurance agreements entered into by the member insurer as a ceding insurer and selected
by the association, except that the association may not exercise an election with respect
to a reinsurance agreement if the receiver, rehabilitator or liquidator of a member insurer
has previously and expressly disaffirmed the reinsurance agreement. The election shall
be effected by a notice to the receiver, rehabilitator or liquidator and to the affected
reinsurers. If the association makes an election, then subparagraphs (A) to (D), inclusive,
of this subdivision shall apply with respect to the agreements selected by the association:
(A) The association shall be responsible for all unpaid premiums due under the
agreements for periods before, on and after the coverage date, and shall be responsible
for the performance of all other obligations to be performed after the coverage date, in
each case which relate to contracts covered in whole or in part by the association. The
association may charge contracts covered in part by the association, through reasonable
allocation methods, the costs for reinsurance in excess of the obligations of the association. (B) The association shall be entitled to any amounts payable by the reinsurer under
the agreements with respect to losses or events that occur in periods after the coverage
date and that relate to contracts covered by the association in whole or in part, and upon
the association's receipt of any such amount, the association shall pay any beneficiary
of a policy or contract under which the association paid only a portion of the policy or
contract amount: (i) The amount received by the association that exceeds the benefits
paid the beneficiary under the policy, less (ii) the benefits paid by the association on
account of the policy or contract less the retention of the impaired or insolvent member
insurer applicable to the loss or event. (C) Not later than thirty days after the association's
election, the association and each indemnity reinsurer shall calculate the net balance
due to or from the association under each reinsurance agreement as of the date of the
association's election, giving full credit to all items paid by either the member insurer
or its receiver, rehabilitator or liquidator or the indemnity reinsurer during the period
between the coverage date and the date of the association's election. Either the association or indemnity reinsurer shall pay the net balance due the other not later than five
days after the completion of the calculation. If the receiver, rehabilitator or liquidator
has received any amounts due the association pursuant to subparagraph (B) of this subdivision, the receiver, rehabilitator or liquidator shall remit the same to the association as
promptly as practicable. (D) If the association, not later than sixty days after the election,
pays the premiums due for periods before, on and after the coverage date that relate to
contracts covered by the association in whole or in part, the reinsurer shall not be entitled
to terminate the reinsurance agreements insofar as the agreements relate to contracts
covered by the association in whole or in part and shall not be entitled to set off any
unpaid premium due for periods prior to the coverage date against amounts due the
association.
(2) If the association transfers its obligations to another insurer, and if the association and the other insurer agree, the other insurer shall succeed to the rights and obligations of the association under subdivision (1) of this subsection, provided: (A) The
indemnity reinsurance agreements shall automatically terminate for new reinsurance
unless the indemnity reinsurer and the other insurer agree to the contrary; and (B) the
association's obligation to pay the beneficiary pursuant to subparagraph (B) of subdivision (1) of this subsection shall no longer apply on or after the date the indemnity reinsurance agreement is transferred to the third party insurer. This subdivision shall not apply
if the association has previously expressly determined in writing that it will not exercise
the election referred to in subdivision (1) of this subsection.
(3) The provisions of this subsection shall supersede the provisions of any law of
this state or of any affected reinsurance agreement that provides for or requires any
payment of reinsurance proceeds on account of losses or events that occur in periods
after the coverage date to the receiver, liquidator or rehabilitator of the insolvent member
insurer. The receiver, rehabilitator or liquidator shall remain entitled to any amount
payable by the reinsurer under the reinsurance agreement with respect to losses or events
that occur in periods prior to the coverage date subject to applicable setoff provisions.
(4) Except as otherwise expressly provided in this subsection, nothing in this section
shall alter or modify the terms and conditions of the indemnity reinsurance agreements
of the insolvent member insurer. Nothing in this section shall abrogate or limit any rights
of any reinsurer to claim that it is entitled to rescind a reinsurance agreement. Nothing
in this section shall give a policy owner or beneficiary an independent cause of action
against an indemnity reinsurer that is not otherwise set forth in the indemnity reinsurance
agreement.
(o) The board of directors of the association shall have discretion and may exercise
reasonable business judgment to determine the means by which the association is to
provide the benefits of sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive, in an economical and
efficient manner.
(p) Where the association has arranged or offered to provide the benefits of sections
38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive, to a covered person under a plan or arrangement that
fulfills the association's obligations under sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive, the
person shall not be entitled to benefits from the association in addition to or other than
those provided under the plan or arrangement.
(q) Venue in a suit against the association arising under sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive, shall be in the superior court for the judicial district of Hartford. The
association shall not be required to give an appeal bond in an appeal that relates to a
cause of action arising under sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive.
(r) In carrying out its duties in connection with guaranteeing, assuming or reinsuring
policies or contracts under subsections (a) or (b) of this section, the association may,
subject to approval of the receivership court, issue substitute coverage for a policy or
contract that provides an interest rate, crediting rate or similar factor determined by use
of an index or other external reference stated in the policy or contract employed in
calculating returns or changes in value by issuing an alternative policy or contract in
accordance with subdivisions (1) to (3), inclusive, of this subsection: (1) In lieu of the
index or other external reference provided for in the original policy or contract, the
alternative policy or contract provides for (A) a fixed interest rate, (B) payment of dividends with minimum guarantees, or (C) a different method for calculating interest or
changes in value; (2) there is no requirement for evidence of insurability, waiting period
or other exclusion that would not have applied under the replaced policy or contract;
and (3) the alternative policy or contract is substantially similar to the replaced policy
or contract in all other material terms.
(1972, P.A. 280, S. 8; P.A. 75-18; P.A. 78-58, S. 1; P.A. 87-290, S. 7, 8; P.A. 88-76, S. 8, 10; P.A. 01-67, S. 4.)
History: P.A. 75-18 raised liability limit in Subsec. (j) from $25,000 to $300,000; P.A. 78-58 imposed new liability
limits in Subsec. (j); P.A. 87-290 repealed Subsec. (f) which specified that association had no liability under the section
for covered policies of a lien or foreign insurers whose domiciliary jurisdiction or state of entry provides for Connecticut
residents, similar protection provided by the chapter to other states' residents; P.A. 88-76 deleted Subsec. (j) and transferred
its provisions to Subsec. (c) of Sec. 38-303, relettered Subsec. (k) as (j), and added new Subsecs. (k) and (l); Sec. 38-308
transferred to Sec. 38a-865 in 1991; P.A. 01-67 replaced former Subsecs. (a) to (e) and (g) to (1) with new Subsecs. (a) to
(e) and (g) to (r).
Annotations to former section 38-308:
Subsec. (j):
Cited. 173 C. 352.
Cited. 35 CS 13; Id., 186.
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Sec. 38a-866. (Formerly Sec. 38-309). Assessments. (a) For the purpose of providing the funds necessary to carry out the powers and duties of the association, the
board of directors shall assess the member insurers, separately for each account, at such
times and for such amounts as the board finds necessary. The association shall establish
a due date for each assessment which shall be at least thirty days after the association
has provided the member notice of the assessment. Each member insurer shall pay
interest on any late payment at the rate of one per cent per month, or any portion thereof,
from the due date to the date of payment.
(b) There shall be two classes of assessments, as follows: (1) Class A assessments
shall be made for the purpose of meeting administrative costs and other general expenses
not related to a particular impaired or insolvent insurer; (2) Class B assessments shall
be authorized and called to the extent necessary to carry out the powers and duties of
the association under section 38a-865 with regard to an impaired or insolvent insurer.
(c) (1) The amount of any Class A assessment shall be determined by the board
and may be authorized and called on a pro-rata or non-pro-rata basis. If an assessment
is made on a pro-rata basis, the board may provide that the assessment be credited against
future Class B assessments. The amount of any Class B assessment shall be allocated
for assessment purposes among the accounts pursuant to an allocation formula which
may be based on the premiums or reserves of the impaired or insolvent insurer or any
other standard that the board, in its sole discretion, deems as being fair and reasonable
under the circumstances.
(2) Class B assessments against member insurers for each account and subaccount
shall be in the proportion that the premiums received on business in this state by each
assessed member insurer on policies or contracts covered by each account for the three
most recent calendar years for which information is available preceding the year in
which the insurer became insolvent or, in the case of an assessment with respect to an
impaired insurer, the three most recent calendar years for which information is available
preceding the year in which the insurer became impaired bear to such premiums received
on business in this state for those calendar years by all assessed member insurers.
(3) Assessments for funds to meet the requirements of the association with respect
to an impaired or insolvent insurer shall not be authorized or called until necessary to
implement the purposes of sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive. Classification of
assessments under subsection (b) of this section and computation of assessments under
this subsection shall be made with a reasonable degree of accuracy, recognizing that
exact determinations may not always be possible. The association shall notify each
member insurer of its anticipated pro-rata share of an authorized assessment that is not
yet called not later than one hundred eighty days after the association authorizes the
assessment.
(d) The association may abate or defer, in whole or in part, the assessment of a
member insurer if, in the opinion of the board, payment of the assessment would endanger the ability of the member insurer to fulfill its contractual obligations. In the event
an assessment against a member insurer is abated, or deferred in whole or in part, the
amount by which such assessment is abated or deferred may be assessed against the
other member insurers in a manner consistent with the basis for assessments set forth
in this section. Once the conditions that caused a deferral have been removed or rectified,
the member insurer shall pay all assessments that were deferred pursuant to a repayment
plan approved by the association.
(e) (1) (A) Subject to the provisions of subparagraph (B) of this subdivision, the
total of all assessments authorized by the association with respect to a member insurer
for each subaccount of the life insurance and annuity account and for the health insurance
account shall not in any one calendar year exceed two per cent of such insurer's average
annual premiums received in this state on the policies and contracts covered by the
subaccount or account during the three calendar years preceding the year in which the
insurer became an impaired or insolvent insurer. (B) If two or more assessments are
authorized in one calendar year with respect to insurers that become impaired or insolvent in different calendar years, the average annual premiums for purposes of the aggregate assessment percentage shall be equal and limited to the higher of the three-year
average annual premium for the applicable subaccount or account as calculated pursuant
to this section. (C) If the maximum assessment, together with the other assets of the
association in any account, does not provide in any one year in either account an amount
sufficient to carry out the responsibilities of the association, the necessary additional
funds shall be assessed as soon thereafter as permitted by sections 38a-858 to 38a-875,
inclusive.
(2) The board may provide in the plan of operation a method of allocating funds
among claims, whether relating to one or more impaired insurers, when the maximum
assessment will be insufficient to cover anticipated claims.
(3) If the maximum assessment for any subaccount of the life insurance and annuity
account in any one year does not provide an amount sufficient to carry out the responsibilities of the association, then pursuant to subdivision (2) of subsection (c) of this
section, the board shall access the other subaccounts of the life insurance and annuity
account for the necessary additional amount, subject to the maximum stated in subdivision (1) of this subsection.
(f) The board may, by an equitable method as established in the plan of operation,
refund to member insurers, in proportion to the contribution of each insurer to that
account, the amount by which the assets of the account exceed the amount the board
finds is necessary to carry out during the coming year the obligations of the association
with regard to that account, including assets accruing from assignment, subrogation,
net realized gains and income from investments. A reasonable amount may be retained
in any account to provide funds for the continuing expenses of the association and for
future losses if refunds are impractical.
(g) It shall be proper for any member insurer, in determining its premium rates and
policy owner dividends as to any kind of insurance within the scope of sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive, to consider the amount reasonably necessary to meet its
assessment obligations under said sections.
(h) (1) Each insurer paying an assessment under sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive, may offset one hundred per cent of the amount of such assessment against its
premium tax liability to this state under chapter 207. Such offset shall be taken over a
period of the five successive tax years following the year of payment of the assessment,
at the rate of twenty per cent per year of the assessment paid to the association. Each
insurer to which has been refunded by the association, pursuant to subsection (f) of this
section, all or a portion of an assessment previously paid to the association by the insurer
shall be required to pay to the Department of Revenue Services an amount equal to the
total amount that has been claimed as an offset against the premiums tax liability on the
premiums tax return or returns, as the case may be, filed by such insurer and that is
attributable to such refunded assessment, provided the amount required to be paid to
said department shall not exceed the amount of the refunded assessment. If the amount
of the refunded assessment exceeds the total amount that has been claimed as an offset
against the premiums tax liability on the premiums tax return or returns filed by such
insurer and that is attributable to such refunded assessment, such excess may not be
claimed as an offset against the premiums tax liability on a premiums tax return or
returns filed by such insurer or, if the offset has been transferred to another person
pursuant to subdivision (2) of this subsection, by such other person. For purposes of
this subdivision, if the offset has been transferred to another person pursuant to subdivision (2) of this subsection, the total amount that has been claimed as an offset against
the premiums tax liability on the premiums tax return or returns filed by such insurer
includes the total amount that has been claimed as an offset against the premiums tax
liability on the premiums tax return or returns filed by such other person. The association
shall promptly notify the Commissioner of Revenue Services of the name and address
of the insurers to which such refunds have been made, the amount of such refunds, and
the date on which such refunds were mailed to each such insurer. If the amount that an
insurer is required to pay to the Department of Revenue Services has not been so paid
on or before the forty-fifth day after the date of mailing of such refunds, the insurer shall
be liable for interest on such amount at the rate of one per cent per month, or fraction
thereof, from such forty-fifth day to the date of payment.
(2) An insurer, in this subdivision called "the transferor", may transfer any offset
provided under subdivision (1) of this subsection to an affiliate, as defined in section 38a-1, of the transferor. Any such transfer of the offset by the transferor, and any subsequent
transfer or transfers of the same offset, shall not affect the obligation of the transferor
to pay to the Department of Revenue Services any sums which are acquired by refund
from the association pursuant to subsection (f) of this section and which are required
to be paid to the Department of Revenue Services pursuant to subdivision (1) of this
subsection. Such offset may be taken by any transferee only against the transferee's
premium tax liability to this state under chapter 207. The Commissioner of Revenue
Services shall not allow such offset to a transferee against its premium tax liability unless
the transferor, the affiliate to which the offset was originally transferred, each subsequent
transferor and each subsequent transferee have filed such information as may be required
on forms provided by said commissioner with respect to any such transfer or transfers
on or before the due date of the premium tax return on which such offset would have
been taken by the transferor, if no transfer had been made by the transferor.
(i) (1) A member insurer that wishes to protest all or part of an assessment shall
pay when due the full amount of the assessment as set forth in the notice provided by
the association. The payment shall be available to meet association obligations during
the pendency of the protest or any subsequent appeal. Payment shall be accompanied
by a written statement that (A) the payment is made under protest, and (B) includes a
brief statement of the grounds for the protest. (2) Not later than sixty days following
the payment of an assessment under protest by a member insurer, the association shall
notify the member insurer in writing of its determination with respect to the protest
unless the association notifies the member insurer that additional time is required to
resolve the issues raised by the protest. (3) Not later than thirty days after a final decision
has been made, the association shall notify the protesting member insurer in writing of
the final decision. (4) Not later than sixty days after receipt of notice of the final decision,
the protesting member insurer may appeal the final action to the commissioner. (5) In
the alternative to rendering a final decision with respect to a protest based on a question
regarding the assessment base, the association may refer protests to the commissioner
for a final decision, with a recommendation from the association. (6) If the protest or
appeal on the assessment is upheld, the amount paid in error or excess shall be returned
to the member company. Interest on a refund due a protesting member shall be paid at
the rate actually earned by the association.
(j) The association may request information from member insurers in order to aid
in the exercise of its power under this section and member insurers shall promptly comply
with such request.
(1972, P.A. 280, S. 9; P.A. 78-58, S. 2; P.A. 81-101, S. 9; P.A. 88-76, S. 9, 10; P.A. 93-239, S. 8; P.A. 00-174, S. 50,
76, 83; P.A. 01-67, S. 5; June Sp. Sess. P.A. 01-6, S. 42, 43, 85; P.A. 02-24, S. 14; P.A. 03-225, S. 15; P.A. 04-17, S. 2.)
History: P.A. 78-58 authorized making Class A assessments on non pro rata basis in Subsec. (c)(1) and removed
Class A assessments from provisions of Subsec. (c)(2); P.A. 81-101 deleted Subsec. (h) re certificates of contribution and
relettered Subsec. (i) as (h), substituting "this chapter" for reference to repealed Subsec. (h); P.A. 88-76 amended Subsecs.
(d) and (e) revising the methods by which the association may assess member insurers and subaccounts for amounts abated
or deferred; Sec. 38-309 transferred to Sec. 38a-866 in 1991; P.A. 93-239 amended Subsec. (h) re refunds paid due to
offset assessments made to the Connecticut Life and Health Insurance Guaranty Association from the insurer's premium
tax liability; P.A. 00-174 amended Subsec. (h) to require specific details from the association in reports to the Department
of Revenue Services re refunds under Subsec. (f), to provide for interest on late payments under this section, to allow 100%
of an assessment to be offset from the premium tax liability, to require the offset to be taken over five years and to allow
transfer of the offset to an affiliate, effective May 26, 2000, and applicable to income years commencing on and after
January 1, 2000, and to refunds made on or after July 1, 2000; P.A. 01-67 amended Subsec. (a) to delete provision re 30
days' written notice of assessments and substitute requirement that association establish a due date for assessment and to
require insurers to pay interest on any late payment, amended Subsecs. (b) and (c) to delete provisions re Class C assessments,
provide for two classes of assessments and revise provisions re assessments, amended Subsec. (d) to add provisions re
repayment of deferrals, amended Subsec. (e) to designate provisions of Subdiv. (1) as Subparas. (A) and (C), revising
Subpara. (A) and adding Subpara. (B) re two or more assessments in one calendar year, amended Subsec. (f) to substitute
"account" for "amount" and insert "assignment" and "subrogation" re asset accrual, deleted Subsec. (h)(2) allowing an
insurer to transfer any offset, added new Subsec. (i) re insurer protests of assessments and new Subsec. (j) re requests for
information from member insurers, and made technical and conforming changes in Subsecs. (b), (c), (e) and (h); June Sp.
Sess. P.A. 01-6 amended Subsec. (h)(1) to delete former provisions re offset assessments paid to association against
premium tax liability, add provisions to specify procedures for tax treatment of refunds of assessments of association
members, change "thirtieth day" to "forty-fifth day" and make a technical change, effective July 1, 2001, and would have
amended Subsec. (h)(2) to add procedures for the transfer to affiliates of tax offsets for association members, effective
July 1, 2001, and applicable to calendar years commencing on or after January 1, 2001, but failed to take effect, subdivision
(2) having been previously deleted by P.A. 01-67; P.A. 02-24 amended Subsec. (h) to add "each" to "such insurer" re
mailing of refunds; P.A. 03-225 amended Subsec. (h) to designate existing provisions as Subdiv. (1), make technical
changes therein and add new Subdiv. (2) re transfer of certain offsets, effective July 9, 2003, and applicable to calendar
years commencing on or after January 1, 2001; P.A. 04-17 amended Subsec. (c)(1) to delete $150 limit on all non-pro-rata assessments per member insurer.
| (Return to Chapter Table of Contents) | (Return to List of Chapters) | (Return to List of Titles) |
Sec. 38a-867. (Formerly Sec. 38-310). Plan of operation. (a)(1) The association
shall submit to the commissioner a plan of operation and any amendments thereto necessary or suitable to assure the fair, reasonable and equitable administration of the association. The plan of operation and any amendments thereto shall become effective upon
approval in writing by the commissioner. (2) If the association fails to submit a suitable
plan of operation within one hundred and eighty days following October 1, 1972, or if
at any time thereafter the association fails to submit suitable amendments to the plan,
the commissioner shall, after notice and hearing, adopt and promulgate such reasonable
rules as are necessary or advisable to effectuate the provisions of sections 38a-858 to
38a-875, inclusive. Such rules shall continue in force until modified by the commissioner
or superseded by a plan submitted by the association and approved by the commissioner.
(b) All member insurers shall comply with the plan of operation.
(c) The plan of operation shall, in addition to requirements enumerated elsewhere
in sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive: (1) Establish procedures for handling the
assets of the association; (2) establish the amount and method of reimbursing members
of the board of directors under section 38a-864; (3) establish regular places and times
for meetings of the board of directors; (4) establish procedures for records to be kept
of all financial transactions of the association, its agents and the board of directors; (5)
establish the procedures whereby selections for the board of directors will be made and
submitted to the commissioner; (6) establish any additional procedures for assessments
under section 38a-866; (7) contain additional provisions necessary or proper for the
execution of the powers and duties of the association.
(d) The plan of operation may provide that any or all powers and duties of the
association except those under subdivision (3) of subsection (k) of section 38a-865 and
section 38a-866, are delegated to a corporation, association or other organization which
performs or will perform functions similar to those of this association, or its equivalent,
in two or more states. Such a corporation, association or organization shall be reimbursed
for any payments made on behalf of the association and shall be paid for its performance
of any function of the association. A delegation under this subsection shall take effect
only with the approval of both the board of directors and the commissioner, and may
be made only to a corporation, association or organization which extends protection not
substantially less favorable and effective than that provided by sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive.
(1972, P.A. 280, S. 10.)
History: Sec. 38-310 transferred to Sec. 38a-867 in 1991.
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Sec. 38a-868. (Formerly Sec. 38-311). Duties of commissioner. In addition to
the duties and powers enumerated elsewhere in sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive:
(a) The commissioner shall: (1) Notify the board of directors of the existence of an
impaired insurer not later than three days after a determination of impairment is made
or he receives notice of impairment; (2) upon request of the board of directors, provide
the association with a statement of the premiums in the appropriate states for each member insurer; (3) when an impairment is declared and the amount of the impairment is
determined, serve a demand upon the impaired insurer to make good the impairment
within a reasonable time. Notice to the impaired insurer shall constitute notice to its
shareholders, if any. The failure of the insurer to promptly comply with such demand
shall not excuse the association from the performance of its powers and duties under
sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive; (4) in any liquidation or rehabilitation proceeding involving a domestic insurer, be appointed as the liquidator or rehabilitator. If a
foreign or alien member insurer is subject to a liquidation proceeding in its domiciliary
jurisdiction or state of entry, the commissioner shall be appointed conservator.
(b) The commissioner may suspend or revoke, after notice and hearing, the certificate of authority issued by this state to any member insurer that fails to pay an assessment
when due or fails to comply with the plan of operation. As an alternative the commissioner may levy a forfeiture on any member insurer that fails to pay an assessment when
due. Such forfeiture shall not exceed five per cent of the unpaid assessment per month,
but no forfeiture shall be less than five hundred dollars per month.
(c) Any action of the board of directors or the association may be appealed to the
commissioner by any member insurer if such appeal is taken within thirty days of the
action being appealed. Any final action or order of the commissioner shall be subject
to judicial review in the superior court for the judicial district of Hartford.
(d) The liquidator, rehabilitator or conservator of any impaired insurer may notify
all interested persons of the effect of sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive.
(1972, P.A. 280, S. 11; P.A. 76-436, S. 635, 681; P.A. 78-280, S. 5, 127; P.A. 88-230, S. 1, 12; P.A. 90-98, S. 1, 2;
P.A. 93-142, S. 4, 7, 8; P.A. 95-220, S. 4-6; P.A. 08-178, S. 43.)
History: P.A. 76-436 replaced court of common pleas with superior court in Subsec. (c), effective July 1, 1978; P.A.
78-280 substituted "judicial district of Hartford-New Britain" for "Hartford county" in Subsec. (c); P.A. 88-230 replaced
"judicial district of Hartford-New Britain" with "judicial district of Hartford", effective September 1, 1991; P.A. 90-98
changed the effective date of P.A. 88-230 from September 1, 1991, to September 1, 1993; Sec. 38-311 transferred to Sec.
38a-868 in 1991; P.A. 93-142 changed the effective date of P.A. 88-230 from September 1, 1993, to September 1, 1996,
effective June 14, 1993; P.A. 95-220 changed the effective date of P.A. 88-230 from September 1, 1996, to September 1,
1998, effective July 1, 1995; P.A. 08-178 amended Subsec. (b) by making technical changes and increasing per month
minimum forfeiture from $100 to $500.
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Sec. 38a-869. (Formerly Sec. 38-312). Action by board of directors. Examination of insurer. To aid in the detection and prevention of insurer impairments:
(a) The board of directors shall, upon majority vote, notify the commissioner of any
information indicating any member insurer may be unable or potentially unable to fulfill
its contractual obligations.
(b) The board of directors may, upon majority vote, request that the commissioner
order an examination of any member insurer which the board in good faith believes
may be unable or potentially unable to fulfill its contractual obligations. The commissioner may conduct such examination. The examination may be conducted as a National
Association of Insurance Commissioners examination or may be conducted by such
persons as the commissioner designates. The cost of such examination shall be paid by
the association and the examination report shall be treated as are other examination
reports. In no event shall such examination report be released to the board of directors
of the association prior to its release to the public, but this shall not excuse the commissioner from his obligation to comply with subsection (c) of this section. 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 prior to the release of the examination report to the public and shall
be released at that time only if the examination discloses that the examined insurer is
unable or potentially unable to meet its contractual obligations.
(c) The commissioner shall report to the board of directors when he has reasonable
cause to believe that any member insurer examined at the request of the board of directors
may be unable or potentially unable to fulfill its contractual obligations.
(d) 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. Such reports and recommendations shall
not be considered public documents.
(e) The board of directors may, upon majority vote, make recommendations to the
commissioner for the detection and prevention of insurer impairments.
(f) The board of directors shall, at the conclusion of any insurer impairment in which
the association carried out its duties under sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive, or
exercised any of its powers under said sections, prepare a report on the history and
causes of such impairment, based on the information available to the association, and
submit such report to the commissioner.
(1972, P.A. 280, S. 12.)
History: Sec. 38-312 transferred to Sec. 38a-869 in 1991.
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Sec. 38a-870. (Formerly Sec. 38-313). Special deputy to supervise liquidation,
rehabilitation or conservation. The association may recommend a natural person to
serve as a special deputy to act for the commissioner and under his supervision in the
liquidation, rehabilitation or conservation of any member insurer.
(1972, P.A. 280, S. 13.)
History: Sec. 38-313 transferred to Sec. 38a-870 in 1991.
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Sec. 38a-871. (Formerly Sec. 38-314). Liability for unpaid assessments. Records. Use of assets of impaired insurer. Distributions. (a) Nothing in sections 38a-858
to 38a-875, inclusive, shall be construed to reduce the liability for unpaid assessments of
the insureds of an impaired insurer operating under a plan with assessment liability.
(b) Records shall be kept of all negotiations and meetings in which the association
or its representatives are involved to discuss the activities of the association in carrying
out its powers and duties under section 38a-865. Records of such negotiations or meetings shall be made public only upon the termination of a liquidation, rehabilitation, or
conservation proceeding involving the impaired insurer, upon the termination of the
impairment of the insurer, or upon the order of a court of competent jurisdiction. Nothing
in this subsection shall limit the duty of the association to render a report of its activities
under section 38a-872.
(c) For the purpose of carrying out its obligations under sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive, the association shall be deemed to be a creditor of the impaired insurer
to the extent of assets attributable to covered policies reduced by any amounts to which
the association is entitled as subrogee pursuant to subdivision (i) of section 38a-865.
All assets of the impaired insurer attributable to covered policies shall be used to continue
all covered policies and pay all contractual obligations of the impaired insurer as required
by sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive. Assets attributable to covered policies, as
used in this subsection, is that proportion of the assets which the reserves that should
have been established for such policies bear to the reserve that should have been established for all policies of insurance written by the impaired insurer.
(d) (1) Prior to the termination of any liquidation, rehabilitation or conservation
proceeding, the court may take into consideration the contributions of the respective
parties, including the association, the shareholders and policyowners of the impaired
insurer, and any other party with a bona fide interest, in making an equitable distribution
of the ownership rights of such impaired insurer. In such a determination, consideration
shall be given to the welfare of the policyholders of the continuing or successor insurer.
(2) No distribution to stockholders, if any, of an impaired insurer shall be made until
and unless the total amount of assessments levied by the association with respect to
such insurer has been fully recovered by the commission.
(e) It shall be a prohibited unfair trade practice and a violation of section 38a-815
for any person to make use in any manner of the protection afforded by sections 38a-858 to 38a-875, inclusive, in the solicitation, negotiation, procurement or effectuation of
insurance provided, this subsection shall not apply to the distribution of any publication
approved by the commissioner and describing the general purposes and current limitations of sections 38a-858 to 38a-874, inclusive. Violations of this section shall be subject
to the provisions of section 38a-817.
(f) (1) If an order for liquidation or rehabilitation of an insurer domiciled in this
state has been entered, the receiver appointed under such order shall have a right to
recover on behalf of the insurer, from any affiliate that controlled it, the amount of
distributions, other than stock dividends paid by the insurer on its capital stock, made
at any time during the five years preceding the petition for liquidation or rehabilitation
subject to the limitations of subdivisions (2) to (4), inclusive. (2) No such dividend
shall be recoverable if the insurer shows that when paid the distribution was lawful and
reasonable, and that the insurer did not know and could not reasonably have known that
the distribution might adversely affect the ability of the insurer to fulfill its contractual
obligations. (3) Any person who was an affiliate that controlled the insurer at the time
the distributions were paid shall be liable up to the amount of distributions he received.
Any person who was an affiliate that controlled the insurer at the time the distributions
were declared shall be liable up to the amount of distributions he would have received
if they had been paid immediately. If two persons are liable with respect to the same
distributions, they shall be jointly and severally liable. (4) The maximum amount recoverable under this subsection shall be the amount needed in excess of all other available
assets of the impaired insurer to pay the contractual obligations of the impaired insurer.
(5) If any person liable under subdivision (3) of this subsection is insolvent, all its
affiliates that controlled it at the time the dividend was paid shall be jointly and severally
liable for any resulting deficiency in the amount recovered from the insolvent affiliate.
(1972, P.A. 280, S. 14; P.A. 85-105, S. 2; P.A. 92-60, S. 23.)
History: P.A. 85-105 amended Subsec. (e) to expand the prohibition to any "solicitation, negotiation, procurement or
effectuation" of insurance, rather than the "sale" of insurance; Sec. 38-314 transferred to Sec. 38a-871 in 1991; P.A. 92-60 amended Subsec. (e) making the provisions of this section a violation of Sec. 38a-815 and excluding its effect from the
distribution of publications approved by the insurance commissioner describing the general purposes or current limitations
of the Connecticut Insurance Guaranty Association Act.
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Sec. 38a-872. (Formerly Sec. 38-315). Examination and regulation of association. Reports. The association shall be subject to examination and regulation by the
commissioner. The board of directors shall submit to the commissioner, not later than
May first of each year, a financial report for the preceding calendar year in a form
approved by the commissioner and a report of its activities during the preceding calendar year.
(1972, P.A. 280, S. 15.)
History: Sec. 38-315 transferred to Sec. 38a-872 in 1991.
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Sec. 38a-873. (Formerly Sec. 38-316). Exemption from fees and taxes. The association shall be exempt from payment of all fees and all taxes levied by this state or
any of its subdivisions, except taxes levied on real or personal property.
(1972, P.A. 280, S. 16.)
History: Sec. 38-316 transferred to Sec. 38a-873 in 1991.
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Sec. 38a-874. (Formerly Sec. 38-317). Immunity. There shall be no liability on
the part of, and no cause of action of any nature shall arise against, any member insurer
or its agents or employees, the association or its agents or employees, members of the
board of directors, or the commissioner or his representatives, for any action taken by
them in the performance of their powers and duties under sections 38a-858 to 38a-875,
inclusive.
(1972, P.A. 280, S. 17.)
History: Sec. 38-317 transferred to Sec. 38a-874 in 1991.
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Sec. 38a-875. (Formerly Sec. 38-318). Stay of proceedings in which impaired
insurer a party. All proceedings in which the impaired insurer is a party in any court
in this state shall be stayed one hundred eighty days from the date an order of liquidation,
rehabilitation or conservation is final to permit proper legal action by the association
on any matters germane to its powers or duties. The association may apply to have any
judgment under any decision, order, verdict, or finding based on default set aside by
the same court that made such judgment and shall be permitted to defend against such
suit on the merits.
(1972, P.A. 280, S. 18.)
History: Sec. 38-318 transferred to Sec. 38a-875 in 1991.
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Secs. 38a-876 to 38a-879. Reserved for future use.
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Sec. 38a-880. Brokered Transactions Guaranty Fund. The Insurance Department shall establish and maintain a Brokered Transactions Guaranty Fund from which
any resident aggrieved by an action of an insurance producer duly licensed in this state
under section 38a-769, or an unlicensed person acting as a producer engaged in the
business of insurance, concerning the business of insurance, by reason of the embezzlement of money or property, or the unlawful obtainment of money or property from
any person by false pretenses, artifice, trickery or forgery, or by reason of any fraud,
misrepresentation or deceit, by or on the part of any such producer or unlicensed person
acting as a producer engaged in the business of insurance, excluding the failure in performance of contractual obligations due to the impairment of an insurer, may recover,
upon approval by the department of an application brought pursuant to section 38a-884,
compensation in an amount not exceeding in the aggregate the sum of ten thousand
dollars.
(P.A. 89-106, S. 1; P.A. 93-236, S. 1; P.A. 96-193, S. 24, 36.)
History: P.A. 93-236 clarified that an "unlicensed person" would be a person acting as an insurance agent or broker,
allowed payment from the guaranty fund except in cases when the insurer is impaired and decreased the compensation
allowed from the guaranty fund from $25,000 to $10,000; P.A. 96-193 substituted "producer" for "agent" and "broker",
effective June 3, 1996.
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Sec. 38a-881. Fee payable to fund. Any individual who is licensed as an insurance
broker or an insurance agent on October 1, 1989, shall pay a fee of ten dollars which
shall be credited to the Brokered Transactions Guaranty Fund. Any individual who
receives an insurance broker's license or an insurance agent's license for the first time
prior to June 3, 1996, or an insurance producer's license for the first time on or after
June 3, 1996, shall pay a fee of ten dollars, in addition to all other fees payable, to be
credited to the Brokered Transactions Guaranty Fund.
(P.A. 89-106, S. 2; P.A. 96-193, S. 25, 36.)
History: P.A. 96-193 substituted "producer" for "agent" and "broker" re licenses, effective June 3, 1996.
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Sec. 38a-882. Level of guaranty fund. Credits to General Fund. Assessment of
additional fee. (a) The Insurance Department shall maintain the Brokered Transactions
Guaranty Fund at a level not to exceed five hundred thousand dollars and to this intent
moneys received under section 38a-881 shall be credited to such guaranty fund whenever
the fund balance is below five hundred thousand dollars and any such moneys may be
invested or reinvested in the same manner as funds of the state employees retirement
system, and the interest arising from such investments shall be credited to the General
Fund. Any moneys received under section 38a-881 not required to maintain such guaranty fund balance shall be deposited to the General Fund. All moneys in such guaranty
fund in excess of five hundred thousand dollars shall be transferred by the Treasurer to
the General Fund.
(b) If, at any time, the amount deposited in the Brokered Transactions Guaranty
Fund is under one hundred thousand dollars, the department, in its discretion, may assess
all persons licensed as insurance producers a fee not to exceed ten dollars which shall
be credited to said guaranty fund.
(P.A. 89-106, S. 3; P.A. 96-193, S. 26, 36; P.A. 98-27, S. 9.)
History: P.A. 96-193 amended Subsec. (b) to substitute "producer" for "agent" and "broker", effective June 3, 1996;
P.A. 98-27 amended Subsec. (b) to substitute "said" for "such".
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Sec. 38a-883. Limitation of actions. No application to recover compensation under sections 38a-880 to 38a-889, inclusive, which might subsequently result in an order
for collection from the Brokered Transactions Guaranty Fund shall be brought later than
two years from the action of an insurance producer duly licensed in this state under
section 38a-769, or an unlicensed person acting as a producer engaged in the business
of insurance, by reason of the embezzlement of money or property, or the unlawful
obtainment of money or property from any person by false pretenses, artifice, trickery
or forgery, or by reason of any fraud, misrepresentation or deceit by or on the part of
any such producer or unlicensed person acting as a producer engaged in the business
of insurance, excluding the failure in performance of contractual obligations due to the
impairment of an insurer.
(P.A. 89-106, S. 4; P.A. 93-236, S. 2; P.A. 96-193, S. 27, 36; P.A. 98-27, S. 8.)
History: P.A. 93-236 deleted ambiguous language and substituted clear language regarding the limitation of actions
which may be brought and outlined the specific actions covered by the limitation; P.A. 96-193 substituted "producer" for
"agent" and "broker", effective June 3, 1996; P.A. 98-27 substituted "the Brokered Transactions Guaranty Fund" for "such
guaranty fund".
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Sec. 38a-884. Procedure. (a) Any person aggrieved under section 38a-880 may
apply to the Insurance Department for an order directing payment out of the Brokered
Transactions Guaranty Fund subject to the limitations stated in said section and the
limitations specified in this section.
(b) The department shall proceed upon such application in a summary manner,
after giving reasonable notice to such producer pursuant to section 38a-774, or to an
unlicensed person acting as a producer engaged in the business of insurance, alleged to
have caused the aggrieved person's loss or damages and, upon the hearing thereof, the
aggrieved person shall be required to show: (1) He is not a spouse of the debtor, or the
personal representative of such spouse; (2) he is aggrieved by the action of such insurance
producer duly licensed in this state under section 38a-769, or that he is aggrieved by
the action of such unlicensed person acting as a producer engaged in the business of
insurance, by reason of the embezzlement of money or property, or the unlawful obtainment of money or property by false pretenses, artifice, trickery or forgery, or by
reason of any fraud, misrepresentation or deceit; and (3) the aggrieved person's loss or
damages are equivalent to either the amount of unearned premium or the expense of
obtaining duplicate coverage, or the amount of unpaid claims in conformance with the
aggrieved person's insurance contract applying any deductibles, copayment requirements or exclusions.
(c) The commissioner shall make an order requiring payment from the Brokered
Transactions Guaranty Fund of whatever sum he shall find to be payable upon the claim,
pursuant to the provisions of and in accordance with the limitations contained in this
section and section 38a-880, if the commissioner is satisfied, upon the hearing, of the
truth of all matters required to be shown by the aggrieved person by subsection (b) of
this section.
(d) The payment from said fund of any amount in settlement of a claim against a
licensed insurance producer or an unlicensed person acting as a producer engaged in
the business of insurance pursuant to an order under subsection (c), shall constitute
cause for the suspension or revocation of any license issued by the commissioner or for
the imposition of a fine pursuant to section 38a-774 and for an order of restitution to
the fund in the amount it has paid, and such producer or unlicensed person shall not be
eligible to apply for a license until he has repaid in full, plus interest at a rate to be
determined by the department and which shall reflect current market rates, the amount
paid from said guaranty fund on his account. A discharge in bankruptcy shall not relieve
a person from the penalties and disabilities provided in this subsection.
(e) If, at any time, the money deposited in said guaranty fund is insufficient to satisfy
any duly authorized claim or portion thereof, the department shall, when sufficient
money has been deposited in said guaranty fund, satisfy such unpaid claims or portions
thereof, in the order that such claims or portions thereof were originally filed, plus
accumulated interest at the rate of four per cent a year.
(P.A. 89-106, S. 5; P.A. 93-236, S. 3; P.A. 96-193, S. 28, 36; P.A. 98-27, S. 5-7.)
History: P.A. 93-236 substantially revised procedure to secure payment from the guaranty fund, deleting Subsecs. (a)
and (b), which had required aggrieved person to notify department of commencement of action and had detailed circumstances for payment from fund of amounts unpaid after judgment, substituting new Subsec. (a) re application for payment
from fund, rewrote Subsec. (c), relettered as Subsec. (b), to provide notice requirements to the agent or broker or unlicensed
agent or broker engaged in the business of insurance and to outline the showing required to state a claim against the guaranty
fund, deleted Subsec. (d) re waiver of compliance with certain requirements by aggrieved person, relettered Subsec. (e)
as (c), substituting "commissioner" for "department" and making certain technical changes for accuracy, relettered Subsec.
(f) as (d) and made provision for suspension or revocation of license or imposition of a fine and relettered Subsec. (g) as
(e) (Revisor's note: The word "that" was deleted editorially by the Revisors from the beginning of Subdivs. (2) and (3) of
Subsec. (b) for consistency with Subdiv. (1)); P.A. 96-193 substituted "producer" for "agent" and "broker", effective June
3, 1996; P.A. 98-27 amended Subsec. (a) to substitute "the Brokered Transactions Guaranty Fund" for "such guaranty
fund", amended Subsec. (d) to substitute "said" for "such" and amended Subsec. (e) to substitute "said" for "such" (Revisor's
note: A missed reference in Subsec. (e) to "such guaranty fund" was changed editorially by the Revisors to "said guaranty fund").
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Sec. 38a-885. Penalty for false or untrue claim. Any person filing with the department any notice, statement or other document required under the provisions of section 38a-884 that is false or untrue or contains any material misstatement of fact shall
be fined not less than three hundred dollars.
(P.A. 89-106, S. 6; P.A. 08-178, S. 44.)
History: P.A. 08-178 made a technical change and increased minimum fine from $200 to $300.
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Sec. 38a-886. Procedure. Application to the Superior Court. When the department receives an application, as provided in section 38a-884, the Attorney General, at
the request of the commissioner, may apply in the name of the state of Connecticut to
the Superior Court for an order temporarily or permanently restraining and enjoining
the continuance of such act or acts, for an order directing restitution to any aggrieved
person, payment to the guaranty fund for any payments the fund made to aggrieved
persons, attorney's fees, costs, a civil penalty of not more than one thousand five hundred
dollars per violation and such other relief as may be granted in equity.
(P.A. 89-106, S. 7; P.A. 93-236, S. 4; P.A. 08-178, S. 45.)
History: P.A. 93-236 replaced prior general provisions re attorney general's authority with more specific provisions;
P.A. 08-178 increased maximum penalty from $1,000 to $1,500 per violation.
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Sec. 38a-887. Payment from guaranty fund. When the commissioner has caused
to be paid from the Brokered Transactions Guaranty Fund any sum to the aggrieved
person, the department shall be subrogated to all of the rights of the aggrieved person
up to the amount paid, and the aggrieved person shall assign all of his right, title and
interest in the claim. By accepting payment from the guaranty fund the aggrieved person
shall agree to cooperate with the department in any action it takes against the licensed
insurance producer or unlicensed person acting as a producer engaged in the business
of insurance. Any amount and interest recovered by the department shall be deposited
to said guaranty fund.
(P.A. 89-106, S. 8; P.A. 93-236, S. 5; P.A. 96-193, S. 29, 36; P.A. 98-27, S. 4.)
History: P.A. 93-236 substituted "commissioner" for "department" and "aggrieved person" for "judgment creditor"
and clarified the procedures in accepting payment from the guaranty fund; P.A. 96-193 substituted "producer" for "agent"
and "broker", effective June 3, 1996; P.A. 98-27 substituted "the Brokered Transactions Guaranty Fund" for "such guaranty
fund" and substituted "said" for "such".
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Sec. 38a-888. Regulations. The Insurance Commissioner may adopt such regulations as he deems necessary, in accordance with chapter 54, to carry out the purposes
of sections 38a-880 to 38a-889, inclusive.
(P.A. 89-106, S. 9.)
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Sec. 38a-889. Department rulings: Appeal. Any person aggrieved by any decision, order or regulation of the department under sections 38a-880 to 38a-888, inclusive,
may appeal in accordance with the provisions of section 38a-19.
(P.A. 89-106, S. 10.)
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Secs. 38a-890 to 38a-893. Reserved for future use.
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