Session of 1998
                   
HOUSE BILL No. 2741
         
By Committee on Insurance
         
1-29
            9             AN ACT concerning insurance; relating to the licensure and regulation
10             of producers thereof; amending K.S.A. 40-214, 40-246c, 40-246d,
11             40-246e, 40-282, 40-299, 40-2,106, 40-2,107, 40-2,131, 40-2,132, 40-
12             2,133, 40-741, 40-1612, 40-1613, 40-2209l, 40-2209m, 40-2406, 40-
13             2508, 40-2612, 40-3608, 40-3618, 40-37a01, 40-37a02, 40-37a04,
14             40-37a05, 40-37a06, 40-4103, 40-4117, 40-4119 and 44-592 and K.S.A.
15             1997 Supp. 40-246b, 40-2,118, 40-2,125, 40-2,135, 40-2c21, 40-1909,
16             40-19a10, 40-19c09 and 40-2404 and repealing the existing sections;
17             also repealing K.S.A. 40-240g, 40-241a, 40-241b, 40-241c, 40-241e, 40-
18             241f, 40-241g, 40-241h, 40-241j, 40-241k, 40-244, 40-245, 40-246a, 40-
19             246f, 40-3701, 40-3702, 40-3703, 40-3704, 40-3705, 40-3707, 40-3708,
20             40-3709, 40-3710, 40-3711, 40-3712, 40-3713, 40-3714 and 40-4109
21             and K.S.A. 1997 Supp. 40-239, 40-240, 40-240f, 40-241, 40-241i, 40-
22             242, 40-246, 40-247 and 40-3706.
23            
24       Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Kansas:
25           Section 1. K.S.A. 40-214 is hereby amended to read as follows: 40-
26       214. It shall be unlawful for any person, company, corporation or fraternal
27       benefit society to transact the business of insurance, indemnity or sure-
28       tyship, or do any act toward transacting such business, unless such person,
29       company, corporation or fraternal benefit society shall have been duly
30       authorized under the laws of this state to transact such business and shall
31       have received proper written authority from the commissioner of insur-
32       ance in conformity with the provisions of the laws of this state relative to
33       insurance, indemnity and suretyship, and further, it shall be unlawful for
34       any insurance company to effect contracts of insurance in this state on
35       the life or person of residents of this state or on property located in this
36       state except through persons duly licensed and certified in accordance
37       with the insurance laws of this state and subject to the provisions of K.S.A.
38       40-245 and amendments thereto. Neither the enrollment of individuals
39       under a group policy nor the inclusion of insurance in a credit transaction
40       under an arrangement for its purchase by the creditor in compliance with
41       the applicable provisions of the uniform consumer credit code shall con-
42       stitute the effecting of a contract of insurance.
43           It shall be unlawful for any insurance company organized under the

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  1       laws of this state to do business in any other state or territory of the United
  2       States without being first legally admitted and authorized to do business
  3       under the laws of such state or territory, and the insurance commissioner
  4       may revoke the license of any insurance company organized under the
  5       laws of this state and doing business in another state or territory without
  6       being first authorized so to do, and may require said company to pay the
  7       taxes upon the business so unlawfully written to the state or territory in
  8       which the business was written as provided by the laws of said state or
  9       territory. A company shall be considered admitted and authorized for the
10       purposes of this section when it has been legally authorized to operate in
11       such other state or territory as a nonadmitted insurer.
12           Sec. 2. K.S.A. 1997 Supp. 40-246b is hereby amended to read as
13       follows: 40-246b. The commissioner of insurance may issue to any duly
14       licensed ;(Rx)sident agent producer of this state, who has been licensed as
15       a fire or casualty, or both, ;(Rx)sident agent producer in this or any other
16       state or combination thereof, for three consecutive years immediately
17       prior to application for the type of license herein prescribed, upon proper
18       application, an excess coverage a surplus lines license to negotiate the
19       types of contracts of fire insurance enumerated in K.S.A. 40-901, and
20       amendments thereto, and the type of casualty insurance contracts enu-
21       merated in K.S.A. 40-1102, and amendments thereto, or reinsurance, or
22       to place risks, or to effect insurance or reinsurance for persons or cor-
23       porations other than such agent producer, with insurers not authorized
24       to do business in this state. An agent, as defined in K.S.A. 40-241e, and
25       amendments thereto, A producer may place the kind or kinds of business
26       specified in this act for which such agent producer is licensed pursuant
27       to K.S.A. 40-240 and 40-241, and amendments thereto this act, with an
28       insurer not authorized to do business in this state by placing such business
29       with a person licensed pursuant to the provisions of this act and may
30       share in the applicable commissions on such business. Before any such
31       license shall be issued, the applicant shall submit proper application on a
32       form prescribed by the commissioner, which application shall be accom-
33       panied by a fee of $50 the fee as provided in section 26. Such license shall
34       be renewable each year on May 1, upon the payment of a $50 fee the fee
35       as provided in section 26 and certification of appropriate errors and
36       omissions coverage as required by K.S.A. 40-246f, and amendments
37       thereto. Excess lines agents licensed by the department on the effective
38       date of this act shall be exempt from the experience requirement.
39           The agent producer so licensed shall on or before March 1 of each
40       year, file with the insurance department of this state, every calendar quar-
41       ter, a sworn affidavit or statement to the effect that, after diligent effort,
42       such agent producer has been unable to secure the amount of insurance
43       required to protect the property, person, or firm described in such agent's

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  1       producer's affidavit or statement from loss or damage in regularly admit-
  2       ted companies during the preceding year quarter. Mere rate differential
  3       shall not be grounds for placing a particular risk in a nonadmitted carrier
  4       when an admitted carrier would accept such risk at a different rate. The
  5       licensed excess coverage agent surplus lines producer must, prior to plac-
  6       ing insurance with an insurer not authorized to do business in this state,
  7       obtain the written consent of the prospective named insured and provide
  8       such insured the following information in a form promulgated by the
  9       commissioner:
10           (a) A statement that the coverage will be obtained from an insurer
11       not authorized to do business in this state;
12           (b) a statement that the insurer's name appears on the list of com-
13       panies maintained by the commissioner pursuant to K.S.A. 40-246e, and
14       amendments thereto;
15           (c) a notice that the insurer's financial condition, policy forms, rates
16       and trade practices are not subject to the review or jurisdiction of the
17       commissioner;
18           (d) a statement that the protection of the guaranty associations is not
19       afforded to policyholders of the insurer; and
20           (e) a statement or notice with respect to any other information
21       deemed necessary by the commissioner pertinent to insuring with an
22       insurer not authorized to do business in this state.
23           In the event the insured desires that coverage be bound with an insurer
24       not admitted to this state and it is not possible to obtain the written
25       consent of the insured prior to binding the coverage, the excess lines
26       agent surplus lines producer may bind the coverage after advising the
27       insured of the information set out above and shall obtain written confir-
28       mation that the insured desires that coverage be placed with an insurer
29       not admitted to this state within 30 days after binding coverage.
30           When business comes to a licensed excess lines agent surplus lines
31       producer for placement with an insurer not authorized to do business in
32       this state from an agent a producer not licensed as an excess lines agent
33       a surplus lines producer, it shall be the responsibility of the licensed
34       excess lines agent surplus lines producer to ascertain that the insured has
35       been provided the preceding information and has consented to being
36       insured with an insurer not authorized to do business in this state. Each
37       excess lines agent surplus lines producer shall keep a separate record book
38       in such agent's producer's office showing the transactions of fire and ca-
39       sualty insurance and reinsurance placed in companies not authorized to
40       do business in this state, the amount of gross premiums charged thereon,
41       the insurer in which placed, the date, term and number of the policy, the
42       location and nature of the risk, the name of the assured and such other
43       information as the commissioner may require and such record shall be

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  1       available at all times for inspection by the commissioner of insurance or
  2       the commissioner's authorized representatives. The commissioner may
  3       revoke or suspend any license issued pursuant to the provisions of this
  4       act in the same manner and for the same reasons prescribed by K.S.A.
  5       40-242, and amendments thereto.
  6           Any policy issued under the provisions of this statute shall have
  7       stamped or endorsed in a prominent manner thereon, the following: This
  8       policy is issued by an insurer not authorized to do business in Kansas and,
  9       as such, the form, financial condition and rates are not subject to review
10       by the commissioner of insurance and the insured is not protected by any
11       guaranty fund.
12           If business is placed with a nonadmitted company that is subsequently
13       determined to be insolvent, the excess lines agent surplus lines producer
14       placing such business with such company is relieved of any responsibility
15       to the insured as it relates to such insolvency, if the excess lines agent
16       surplus lines producer has satisfactorily complied with all requirements
17       of this section pertaining to notification of the insured, has properly ob-
18       tained the written consent of the insured and has used due diligence in
19       selecting the insurer. It shall be presumed that due diligence was used in
20       selecting the insurer if such insurer was on the list compiled pursuant to
21       K.S.A. 40-246e, and amendments thereto, at the time coverage first be-
22       came effective.
23           Sec. 3. K.S.A. 40-246c is hereby amended to read as follows: 40-
24       246c. Each licensed agent surplus lines producer shall file with the com-
25       missioner on or before March 1 of each year every quarter a statement
26       on a form prescribed by the commissioner, accounting for the gross pre-
27       miums upon all policies written on risks situated in this state up to January
28       1 in each year for the year for the quarter next preceding and the licensee
29       shall transmit to the commissioner, with such affidavit or statement, a
30       sum equal to 6% 4% of the gross premiums upon all policies procured
31       by such agent producer on risks situated in this state written under the
32       provisions of this act. Any individual placing a policy with an insurer not
33       authorized to do business in this state on a risk domiciled in a state other
34       than this state, but also covering a risk or location in Kansas, shall file
35       with the commissioner a statement in the form prescribed by the com-
36       missioner, describing the risk and shall pay to the commissioner a sum
37       equal to 6% 4% of the portion of the premium applicable to the risk
38       located in Kansas within 120 days after writing the risk. The individual
39       responsible for filing the statement shall be the agent producer who signs
40       the policy or the agent producer of record with the company. The com-
41       missioner of insurance shall collect double the amount of tax herein pro-
42       vided from any licensee or other responsible individual as herein de-
43       scribed who shall fail, refuse or neglect to transmit the required affidavit

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  1       or statement or shall fail to pay the tax imposed by this section, to the
  2       commissioner within the period specified.
  3           Sec. 4. K.S.A. 40-246d is hereby amended to read as follows: 40-
  4       246d. The commissioner may, in the manner prescribed by law, revoke
  5       or suspend the license of any agent producer issued pursuant to sections
  6       40-241 and 40-246 of the Kansas Statutes Annotated this act when such
  7       agent producer shall engage in any transaction permitted only to licensees
  8       under the provisions of K.S.A. 40-246b, without first obtaining the license
  9       as required by K.S.A. 40-246b and amendments thereto.
10           Sec. 5. K.S.A. 40-246e is hereby amended to read as follows: 40-
11       246e. The commissioner shall maintain a list of insurers not authorized
12       to do business in this state for review by any interested person. Only those
13       insurers who have filed a certified copy of their most recent annual state-
14       ment with the commissioner in the form prescribed by K.S.A. 40-225 and
15       amendments thereto or, if domiciled outside the United States, have filed
16       their most recent annual statement with the national association of in-
17       surance commissioners may appear on the list. No excess lines agent
18       producer shall place insurance on a Kansas domiciled risk with an insurer
19       whose name does not appear on this list. No company shall appear on
20       the list whose capital or surplus as shown on the annual statement does
21       not equal or exceed $1,500,000. Individual unincorporated insurers not
22       listed by the national association of insurance commissioners may appear
23       on the list if they are authorized to transact an insurance business in at
24       least one state of the United States, possess assets which are held in trust
25       for the benefit of American policyholders in the sum of not less than
26       $50,000,000 and pay the filing fee required by this section. Insurance
27       exchanges who issue contracts on behalf of their members and pay the
28       filing fee required by this section may appear on the list if their individual
29       members have a capital or surplus equal to or in excess of $1,500,000 and
30       the aggregate capital or surplus of all members of the exchange is at least
31       $15,000,000. A nonrefundable filing fee of $200 shall be required of any
32       insurer submitting its annual statement for review by the commissioner
33       for inclusion on such list. The commissioner shall remove an insurer's
34       name from the listing only when: (a) The insurer requests such removal;
35       or (b) the insurer fails to file its latest annual statement and required
36       filing fee prior to May 1 of each year as required by this section; or (c)
37       the commissioner is notified by the insurance supervisory authority of any
38       state of the United States that such insurer has had its authority to transact
39       business restricted; or has been declared insolvent or placed in receiv-
40       ership, conservatorship, rehabilitation or any similar status wherein the
41       business of the insurer is formally supervised by an insurance supervisory
42       authority; or (d) the commissioner is notified by the N.A.I.C. national
43       association of insurance commissioners that any insurer domiciled outside

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  1       the United States has been declared insolvent or placed in receivership,
  2       conservatorship, rehabilitation or any similar status wherein the business
  3       of the insurer is formally supervised by an insurance supervisory authority
  4       pursuant to an order by any court of competent jurisdiction; or (e) the
  5       insurer has failed to effectuate reasonably prompt, fair and equitable pay-
  6       ment of just losses and claims in this state; or (f) the insurer encourages,
  7       promotes or rewards an agent to violate the provisions of K.S.A. 40-246b
  8       and amendments thereto. There shall be no liability on the part of and
  9       no cause of action of any nature shall arise against the commissioner, the
10       commissioner's employees, or the state of Kansas as a result of any in-
11       surer's name appearing or not appearing on the list required by this sec-
12       tion if such list is constructed and maintained in good faith and without
13       malice.
14           The commissioner may establish an export list. An ``export list'' means
15       a list of the types or lines of insurance the commissioner determines are
16       not readily available in Kansas from admitted insurers. Licensed surplus
17       line producers are not required to first survey the admitted market in
18       lines or types of insurance on the export list before placing insurance with
19       a surplus lines insurer.
20           Sec. 6. K.S.A. 40-282 is hereby amended to read as follows: 40-282.
21       (a) Any insurance agent producer, as defined in K.S.A. 40-239 and amend-
22       ments thereto new section 40, may extend credit to policyholders in con-
23       nection with the issuance or servicing of policies procured or negotiated
24       by such agent but any such credit so extended shall satisfy one of the
25       following conditions, unless otherwise authorized by law:
26           (1) If credit is extended to policyholders for a period of not more
27       than 30 days from the date the premium is due, and such credit is not
28       evidenced by a written instrument, there shall be no interest charged for
29       such credit; or
30           (2) if credit is extended to policyholders for a period of more than 30
31       days from the date the premium is due, and such credit is not evidenced
32       by a written instrument, interest may be charged for credit extended after
33       30 days at a rate not exceeding 11/2% per month on the unpaid balance;
34       or
35           (3) if the extension of credit to a policyholder is evidenced by a writ-
36       ten instrument setting forth the terms, and signed by the policyholder,
37       any interest charged for such credit shall be clearly stated in the instru-
38       ment but it shall not exceed the legal rate of interest authorized in K.S.A.
39       16-207 and amendments thereto.
40           (b) Any insurance agent producer extending credit to policyholders
41       as provided in subsection (a)(1) or (2) of this section may request the
42       company to cancel such insurance according to the terms of the policies
43       for nonpayment of the policyholders' accounts, except as provided in

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  1       K.S.A. 40-277 and amendments thereto, and except for policies paid by
  2       an escrow agent, or paid direct by an insured to an insurance company,
  3       or where the insured specified that payment apply to a specific policy and
  4       all premiums due on that policy have been paid, or where the unearned
  5       premium is collateral for a loan under K.S.A. 40-2601 et seq., and amend-
  6       ments thereto.
  7           The insurance agent producer shall notify the policyholder of the re-
  8       quested cancellation in writing at the time the request is made to the
  9       insurance company.
10           Such insurance agent producer shall have a lien on any return premium
11       for all policies of the same policyholder to the extent of amounts owed
12       by the policyholder.
13           Sec. 7. K.S.A. 40-299 is hereby amended to read as follows: 40-299.
14       Whenever any dealer, or any agent, officer or employee of such dealer,
15       who also is an insurance agent producer, as defined by K.S.A. 40-239 new
16       section 41, shall provide only for automobile physical damage insurance
17       in connection with the sale and financing of an automobile, such dealer,
18       agent, officer or employee also must obtain a written acknowledgment by
19       the purchaser of the automobile that the insurance coverage so provided
20       for such automobile does not include automobile liability insurance suf-
21       ficient to fulfill the requirements of the Kansas automobile injury repa-
22       rations act. Such acknowledgment shall be made in the manner and form
23       prescribed by the commissioner of insurance, and a copy thereof shall be
24       furnished the purchaser. The insurance agent's producer's license of any
25       such dealer, agent, officer or employee who fails to obtain the acknow-
26       ledgment required herein shall be subject to suspension or revocation by
27       the commissioner pursuant to the provisions of K.S.A. 40-242 new section
28       39.
29           Sec. 8. K.S.A. 1997 Supp. 40-2,118 is hereby amended to read as
30       follows: 40-2,118. (a) For purposes of this act a ``fraudulent insurance act''
31       means an act committed by any person who, knowingly and with intent
32       to defraud, presents, causes to be presented or prepares with knowledge
33       or belief that it will be presented to or by an insurer, purported insurer,
34       broker or any agent or producer thereof, any written statement as part
35       of, or in support of, an application for the issuance of, or the rating of an
36       insurance policy for personal or commercial insurance, or a claim for
37       payment or other benefit pursuant to an insurance policy for commercial
38       or personal insurance which such person knows to contain materially false
39       information concerning any fact material thereto; or conceals, for the
40       purpose of misleading, information concerning any fact material thereto.
41           (b) Except as otherwise specifically provided in K.S.A. 21-3718 and
42       amendments thereto and K.S.A. 44-5,125 and amendments thereto, a
43       fraudulent insurance act shall constitute a severity level 6, nonperson

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  1       felony if the amount involved is $25,000 or more; a severity level 7, non-
  2       person felony if the amount is at least $5,000 but less than $25,000; a
  3       severity level 8, nonperson felony if the amount is at least $1,000 but less
  4       than $5,000; a severity level 9, nonperson felony if the amount is at least
  5       $500 but less than $1,000; and a class C nonperson misdemeanor if the
  6       amount is less than $500.
  7           (c) In addition to any other penalty, a person who violates this statute
  8       shall be ordered to make restitution to the insurer or any other person
  9       or entity for any financial loss sustained as a result of such violation. An
10       insurer shall not be required to provide coverage or pay any claim in-
11       volving a fraudulent insurance act.
12           (d) This act shall apply to all insurance applications, ratings, claims
13       and other benefits made pursuant to any insurance policy.
14           Sec. 9. K.S.A. 40-2,106 is hereby amended to read as follows: 40-
15       2,106. For the purposes of this act: (1) (a) ``Independent insurance agent
16       producer'' means any licensed agent producer representing an insurance
17       company on an independent contractor basis and not as an employee.
18       This term shall include only those agents not obligated by contract to
19       place insurance accounts with any insurance company or group of com-
20       panies.
21           (2) (b) ``Insurance company'' means any property or casualty insur-
22       ance company admitted to the state of Kansas, except the term shall not
23       include any company which requires membership in the company, as
24       contained in the articles of incorporation or bylaws of such company, as
25       a prerequisite to insuring that member.
26           (3) (c) ``Commissioner'' means the commissioner of insurance.
27           (d) ``Exclusive insurance producer'' means any licensed producer ob-
28       ligated by contract to produce insurance business exclusively for one in-
29       surance company or group of companies.
30           Sec. 10. K.S.A. 40-2,107 is hereby amended to read as follows: 40-
31       2,107. (a) Insurance companies may contract with independent insurance
32       agents producers or exclusive insurance producers as to binding authority,
33       policy services, adjusting services, commissions and other subjects of in-
34       terest between agent producer and company. Such contracts which have
35       been effective for more than one year shall not be terminated or amended
36       by the company except by mutual agreement or unless 180 days' prior
37       notice has been tendered to the agent producers, except that this shall
38       not apply to terminations for fraud, material misrepresentation or failure
39       to pay such agent's producer's account less the agent's producer's com-
40       mission and any disputed items within 10 days after written demand by
41       the company. During such notice period all contractual conditions exist-
42       ing prior to such notice shall continue.
43           (b) Any independent insurance agent producer or exclusive insurance

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  1       producer whose contract with an insurance company has been terminated
  2       under the provisions of subsection (a) shall have until the policy renewal
  3       date, but not more than one year, to place the business written under
  4       such terminated contract with another insurance company.
  5           (c) After an agency contractual relationship has been in effect for a
  6       period of three years, an insurance company writing property and casu-
  7       alty loss insurance in this state may not terminate the agency contractual
  8       relationship with any producer unless the company has attempted to re-
  9       habilitate the producer as provided in subsection (i). The insurer shall
10       provide written notice of intent to rehabilitate.
11           (d) If the producer and company are not able to reach a mutually
12       acceptable plan of rehabilitation, the company may terminate the agency
13       contractual relationship after providing written notice of termination to
14       the producer at least 90 days in advance.
15           (e) The notice of termination must include the reasons for termination
16       and a copy of the notice of intent to rehabilitate.
17           (f) An insurance company may not terminate an agency contract
18       based upon any of the following:
19           (1) An adverse loss experience for a single year;
20           (2) the geographic location of the producer's auto and homeowners
21       insurance business; or
22           (3) the performance of obligations required of an insurer or producer
23       under Kansas statutes.
24           (g) The company shall at the request of the producer renew any in-
25       surance contract written by the producer for the company for not more
26       than one year for property and casualty loss insurance during a period
27       of nine months after the effective date of the termination, but in the event
28       any risk does not meet current underwriting standards of the company,
29       the company may decline its renewal, provided that the company shall
30       give the producer not less than 60 days notice of its intention not to renew
31       the contract of insurance.
32           (h) No new insurance or bond contract shall be written by the pro-
33       ducer for the company after the effective date of the termination without
34       the written approval of the company. The producer may increase liability
35       on renewal for not more than one year for the insured after the effective
36       date of the termination if the increased liability meets the current under-
37       writing standards of the company.
38           (i) Before notice of termination of the agency contract, the company
39       shall negotiate in good faith in an effort to reach mutual agreement with
40       the producer on a written plan for rehabilitation. The rehabilitation plan
41       must be in writing and must contain the following elements:
42           (1) Identification by the company of the problem areas which need
43       rehabilitation;

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  1           (2) what the producer must do to avoid termination;
  2           (3) how the company intends to assist the producer to avoid termi-
  3       nation;
  4           (4) the mutually agreed upon corrective action to be undertaken by
  5       the producer and the specific target dates for accomplishment;
  6           (5) periodic meeting dates at which the status of rehabilitation will
  7       be reviewed; and
  8           (6) the term of the written plan which must extend for at least one
  9       year.
10           (j) All agency contracts in existence on July 1, 1998, are subject to the
11       rehabilitation requirement under subsection (i). The rehabilitation plan
12       need not be incorporated into the agency contract.
13           (k) Nothing contained in this section prohibits the earlier termination
14       of an amendment or addendum subsequent to the inception date of the
15       original agency agreement provided the subsequent amendment or ad-
16       dendum provides for termination on shorter notice and the producer
17       agrees in writing to the earlier termination.
18           (l) During the term of the contract the company shall not refuse to
19       renew such business from the producer as would be in accordance with
20       the company's current underwriting standards.
21           (m) The provisions of this section do not apply to the termination of
22       a producer's contract for insolvency, abandonment, gross and willful mis-
23       conduct or failure to pay over to the company money due to the company
24       after receipt by the producer of a written demand therefor, or after rev-
25       ocation of the producer's license by the commissioner.
26           (n) All future and presently existing agency contractual relationships
27       between a producer and a company writing property and casualty loss
28       insurance in this state are subject to the provisions of this section.
29           (o) If it is found, after notice and an opportunity to be heard as de-
30       termined by the commissioner, that an insurance company has violated
31       this section, the insurance company shall be subject to a civil action by
32       the producer for actual damages suffered because of the premature ter-
33       mination of the contract by the company. The commissioner shall employ
34       the department's investigative and enforcement authority if the commis-
35       sioner has a reason to believe that an insurer has violated this section. An
36       insurer found in violation of this section is subject to a civil penalty im-
37       posed by the commissioner not to exceed $10,000 per violation.
38           (p) In the event that a company's compliance with this section is dem-
39       onstrated to the satisfaction of the commissioner to represent a hazard or
40       potential hazard to the financial integrity of the company, the commis-
41       sioner may, after a hearing, issue an order relieving the company from
42       its obligation to provide the renewal policies otherwise required by this
43       section.

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  1           (q) Upon termination of an agency, a company is prohibited from
  2       soliciting business in the notice of nonrenewal required by K.S.A. 40-276a,
  3       40-277, 40-2,112, 40-2,121, and 40-2,122 and amendments thereto.
  4           (r) For purposes of this section, a cancellation or termination of a
  5       producer's contract is considered to have occurred if the company cancels
  6       a line of insurance business or a volume of insurance business that equals
  7       or exceeds 75% of the insurance business placed by that producer with
  8       the company.
  9           Sec. 11. K.S.A. 1997 Supp. 40-2,125 is hereby amended to read as
10       follows: 40-2,125. (a) If the commissioner determines after notice and
11       opportunity for a hearing that any person has engaged or is engaging in
12       any act or practice constituting a violation of any provision of Kansas
13       insurance statutes or any rule and regulation or order thereunder, the
14       commissioner may in the exercise of discretion, order any one or more
15       of the following:
16           (1) Payment of a monetary penalty of not more than $1,000 for each
17       and every act or violation, unless the person knew or reasonably should
18       have known such person was in violation of the Kansas insurance statutes
19       or any rule and regulation or order thereunder, in which case the penalty
20       shall be not more than $2,000 for each and every act or violation;
21           (2) suspension or revocation of the person's license or certificate if
22       such person knew or reasonably should have known that such person was
23       in violation of the Kansas insurance statutes or any rule and regulation or
24       order thereunder; or
25           (3) that such person cease and desist from the unlawful act or practice
26       and take such affirmative action as in the judgment of the commissioner
27       will carry out the purposes of the violated or potentially violated provision.
28           (b) If any person fails to file any report or other information with the
29       commissioner as required by statute or fails to respond to any proper
30       inquiry of the commissioner, the commissioner, after notice and oppor-
31       tunity for hearing, may impose a penalty of up to $500 for each violation
32       or act, along with an additional penalty of up to $100 for each week
33       thereafter that such report or other information is not provided to the
34       commissioner.
35           (c) If the commissioner makes written findings of fact that there is a
36       situation involving an immediate danger to the public health, safety or
37       welfare or the public interest will be irreparably harmed by delay in is-
38       suing an order under subsection (a)(3), the commissioner may issue an
39       emergency temporary cease and desist order. Such order, even when not
40       an order within the meaning of K.S.A. 77-502 and amendments thereto,
41       shall be subject to the same procedures as an emergency order issued
42       under K.S.A. 77-536 and amendments thereto. Upon the entry of such
43       an order, the commissioner shall promptly notify the person subject to

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  1       the order that: (1) It has been entered, (2) the reasons therefor and (3)
  2       that upon written request within 15 days after service of the order the
  3       matter will be set for a hearing which shall be conducted in accordance
  4       with the provisions of the Kansas administrative procedure act. If no hear-
  5       ing is requested and none is ordered by the commissioner, the order will
  6       remain in effect until it is modified or vacated by the commissioner. If a
  7       hearing is requested or ordered, the commissioner, after notice of and
  8       opportunity for hearing to the person subject to the order, shall by written
  9       findings of fact and conclusions of law vacate, modify or make permanent
10       the order.
11           (d) For purposes of this section:
12           (1) ``Person'' means any individual, corporation, association, partner-
13       ship, reciprocal exchange, inter-insurer, Lloyd's insurer, fraternal benefit
14       society and any other legal entity engaged in the business of insurance,
15       or any person purchasing an interest in a life insurance policy which is
16       licensed pursuant to K.S.A. 40-2,141 and amendments thereto, rating
17       organization, third party administrator, nonprofit dental service corpo-
18       ration, nonprofit medical and hospital service corporation, automobile
19       club, premium financing company, health maintenance organization, in-
20       surance holding company, mortgage guaranty insurance company, risk
21       retention or purchasing group, prepaid legal and dental service plan, cap-
22       tive insurance company, automobile self-insurer or reinsurance inter-
23       mediary. The term ``person'' shall not include insurance agents producers
24       licensed pursuant to K.S.A. 40-241 or 40-246, and amendments thereto,
25       insurance brokers licensed pursuant to K.S.A. 40-3701 et seq., and
26       amendments thereto, new section 44 or employees of licensed agents or
27       brokers insurance producers.
28           (2) ``Commissioner'' means the commissioner of insurance of this
29       state.
30           Sec. 12. K.S.A. 40-2,131 is hereby amended to read as follows: 40-
31       2,131. (a) No person, firm, association or corporation shall act in the
32       capacity of an MGA with respect to risks located in this state for an insurer
33       licensed in this state unless such person is a licensed agent or broker in
34       this state.
35           (b) No person, firm, association or corporation shall act in the capac-
36       ity of an MGA representing an insurer domiciled in this state with respect
37       to risks located outside this state unless such person is licensed as an
38       agent or broker a producer in this state pursuant to the provisions of
39       K.S.A. 40-240 or 40-3701 et seq., and amendments thereto this act.
40           (c) The commissioner may require a bond in an amount acceptable
41       to the commissioner for the protection of the insurer.
42           (d) The commissioner may require the MGA to maintain an errors
43       and omissions policy.

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  1           Sec. 13. K.S.A. 40-2,132 is hereby amended to read as follows: 40-
  2       2,132. No person, firm, association or corporation acting in the capacity
  3       of an MGA shall place business with an insurer unless there is in force a
  4       written contract between the parties which sets forth the responsibilities
  5       of each party, specifies the division of responsibilities where both parties
  6       have responsibility for a particular function, and contains the following
  7       minimum provisions:
  8           (a) The insurer may terminate the contract for cause upon written
  9       notice to the MGA. The insurer may suspend the underwriting authority
10       of the MGA during the pendency of any dispute regarding the cause for
11       termination.
12           (b) The MGA will render accounts to the insurer detailing all trans-
13       actions and remit all funds due under the contract to the insurer on not
14       less than a monthly basis.
15           (c) All funds collected for the account of an insurer will be held by
16       the MGA in a fiduciary capacity in a bank which is a member of the
17       federal reserve system. This account shall be used for all payments on
18       behalf of the insurer. The MGA may retain no more than three months
19       estimated claim payments and allocated loss adjustment expenses.
20           (d) Separate records of business written by the MGA will be main-
21       tained. The insurer shall have access and right to copy all accounts and
22       records related to its business in a form usable by the insurer, and the
23       commissioner shall have access to all books, bank accounts and records
24       of the MGA in a form usable to the commissioner. Such records shall be
25       retained until the insurer and business to which they pertain has been
26       the subject of an examination pursuant to the provisions of K.S.A. 40-222
27       and amendments thereto.
28           (e) The contract may not be assigned in whole or part by the MGA.
29           (f) Appropriate underwriting guidelines including:
30           (1) The maximum annual premium volume;
31           (2) the basis of the rates to be charged;
32           (3) the types of risks which may be written;
33           (4) maximum limits of liability;
34           (5) applicable exclusions;
35           (6) territorial limitations;
36           (7) policy cancellation provisions; and
37           (8) the maximum policy period.
38           The insurer shall have the right to cancel or non-renew any policy of
39       insurance subject to the applicable laws and regulations relating to the
40       cancellation and non-renewal of insurance policies.
41           (g) If the contract permits the MGA to settle claims on behalf of the
42       insurer:
43           (1) All claims must be reported to the company in a timely manner.

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  1           (2) A copy of the claim file will be sent to the insurer at its request
  2       or as soon as it becomes known that the claim:
  3           (A) Has the potential to exceed an amount determined by the com-
  4       missioner or exceeds the limit set by the company, whichever is less;
  5           (B) involves a coverage dispute;
  6           (C) may exceed the MGA's claims settlement authority;
  7           (D) is open for more than six months; or
  8           (E) is closed by payment of an amount set by the commissioner or
  9       an amount set by the company, whichever is less.
10           (3) All claim files will be the joint property of the insurer and MGA.
11       However, upon an order of liquidation of the insurer such files shall
12       become the sole property of the insurer or its estate, but the MGA shall
13       have reasonable access to and the right to copy the files on a timely basis.
14           (4) Any settlement authority granted to the MGA may be terminated
15       for cause upon the insurer's written notice to the MGA or upon the
16       termination of the contract. The insurer may suspend the settlement au-
17       thority during the pendency of any dispute regarding the cause for ter-
18       mination.
19           (h) Where electronic claims files are in existence, the contract shall
20       address the timely transmission of the data.
21           (i) If the contract provides for a sharing of interim profits by the MGA
22       and the MGA has the authority to determine the amount of the interim
23       profits by establishing loss reserves or controlling claim payments or by
24       any other manner, interim profits will not be paid to the MGA until one
25       year after they are earned for property insurance business and five years
26       after they are earned on casualty business and not until the profits have
27       been verified pursuant to K.S.A. 40-2,133.
28           (j) The MGA shall not:
29           (1) Bind reinsurance or retrocessions on behalf of the insurer, except
30       that the MGA may bind facultative reinsurance contracts pursuant to
31       obligatory facultative agreements if the contract with the insurer contains
32       reinsurance underwriting guidelines including, for both reinsurance as-
33       sumed and ceded, a list of reinsurers with which such automatic agree-
34       ments are in effect, the coverages and amounts or percentages that may
35       be reinsured and commission schedules;
36           (2) commit the insurer to participate in insurance or reinsurance syn-
37       dicates;
38           (3) appoint any agent or broker producer without assuring that the
39       agent or broker producer is lawfully licensed to transact the type of in-
40       surance for which such agent or broker producer is appointed;
41           (4) without prior approval of the insurer, pay or commit the insurer
42       to pay a claim over a specified amount, net of reinsurance, which shall
43       not exceed 1% of the insurer's policyholder's surplus as of December 31

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  1       of the last completed calendar year;
  2           (5) collect any payment from a reinsurer or commit the insurer to
  3       any claim settlement with a reinsurer without prior approval of the in-
  4       surer. If prior approval is given, a report shall be promptly forwarded to
  5       the insurer;
  6           (6) permit its subagent or broker producer to serve on its board of
  7       directors;
  8           (7) jointly employ an individual who is employed with the insurer; or
  9           (8) appoint a sub-MGA.
10           Sec. 14. K.S.A. 40-2,133 is hereby amended to read as follows: 40-
11       2,133. (a) No insurer may utilize or continue to utilize the services of an
12       MGA on and after the effective date of this act unless such utilization is
13       in compliance with this act.
14           (b) The insurer shall have on file an independent financial examina-
15       tion in a form acceptable to the commissioner of each MGA with which
16       it has done business.
17           (c) If an MGA establishes loss reserves, the insurer shall annually
18       obtain the opinion of an actuary attesting to the adequacy of loss reserves
19       established for losses incurred and outstanding on business produced by
20       the MGA. Such requirement shall be in addition to any other required
21       loss reserve certification.
22           (d) The insurer shall periodically, but not less frequently than semi-
23       annually, conduct an on-site review of the underwriting and claims proc-
24       essing operations of the MGA.
25           (e) Binding authority for all reinsurance contracts or participation in
26       insurance or reinsurance syndicates shall rest with an officer of the insurer
27       who shall not be affiliated with the MGA.
28           (f) Within 30 days of entering into or termination of a contract with
29       an MGA, the insurer shall provide written notification of such appoint-
30       ment or termination to the commissioner. Notices of appointment of an
31       MGA shall include (1) a statement of duties which the applicant is ex-
32       pected to perform on behalf of the insurer, (2) the lines of insurance for
33       which the applicant is to be authorized to act, (3) a notification fee in the
34       amount of $100, (4) and any other information the commissioner may
35       request.
36           (g) An insurer shall each quarter review its books and records to de-
37       termine if any agent or broker producer has become, by operation of
38       subsection (d) of K.S.A. 40-2,130 and amendments thereto, an MGA as
39       defined in that subsection. If the insurer determines that an agent or
40       broker a producer has become an MGA pursuant to the above, the insurer
41       shall promptly notify the agent or broker producer and the commissioner
42       of such determination, and the insurer and agent or broker producer shall
43       fully comply with the provisions of this act within 30 days.

HB 2741

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  1           (h) An insurer shall not appoint to its board of directors an officer,
  2       director, employee or controlling shareholder of its MGAs. This subsec-
  3       tion shall not apply to relationships governed by the applicable provisions
  4       of article 33 of chapter 40 of the Kansas Statutes Annotated.
  5           Sec. 15. K.S.A. 1997 Supp. 40-2,135 is hereby amended to read as
  6       follows: 40-2,135. (a) If the commissioner finds after a hearing conducted
  7       in accordance with the Kansas administrative procedure act that any per-
  8       son has violated any provision of this act, the commissioner may order
  9       each of the following, any combination thereof or all of the following:
10           (1) For each separate violation, a penalty in an amount of $5,000;
11           (2) revocation or suspension of the agent's or broker's producer's li-
12       cense;
13           (3) the MGA to reimburse the insurer, the rehabilitator or liquidator
14       of the insurer for any losses incurred by the insurer caused by a violation
15       of this act committed by the MGA.
16           (b) Nothing contained in this act is intended to or shall in any manner
17       limit or restrict the rights of policyholders, claimants and auditors.
18           Sec. 16. K.S.A. 1997 Supp. 40-2c21 is hereby amended to read as
19       follows: 40-2c21. The comparison of an insurer's total adjusted capital to
20       any of its RBC levels is a regulatory tool, and shall not be used to rank
21       insurers generally. Therefore, except as otherwise required under the
22       provisions of this act, the making, publishing, disseminating, circulating
23       or placing before the public, or causing, directly or indirectly to be made,
24       published, disseminated, circulated or placed before the public, in a news-
25       paper, magazine or other publication, or in the form of a notice, circular,
26       pamphlet, letter or poster, or over any radio or television station, or in
27       any other way, an advertisement, announcement or statement containing
28       an assertion, representation or statement with regard to the RBC levels
29       of any insurer, or of any component derived in the calculation, by any
30       insurer, agent, broker producer or other person engaged in any manner
31       in the insurance business is prohibited. Notwithstanding the foregoing, if
32       any materially false statement with respect to the comparison regarding
33       an insurer's total adjusted capital to any of its RBC levels or an inappro-
34       priate comparison of any other amount to the insurer's RBC levels is
35       published in any written publication and the insurer is able to demon-
36       strate to the commissioner with substantial proof the falsity or misrep-
37       resentative nature of such statement, the insurer may publish a rebuttal
38       if the sole purpose of such publication is to rebut the materially false or
39       improper statement.
40           Sec. 17. K.S.A. 40-741 is hereby amended to read as follows: 40-741.
41       As used in this act:
42           (a) ``Agent'' means an individual as defined in K.S.A. 40-239, and
43       amendments thereto.

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  1           (b) (a) ``Benefit contract'' means the agreement for provision of ben-
  2       efits authorized by subsection (a) of K.S.A. 40-742, as that agreement is
  3       described in K.S.A. 40-749.
  4           (c) (b) ``Benefit member'' means an adult member who is designated
  5       by the laws or rules of the society to be a benefit member under a benefit
  6       contract.
  7           (d) (c) ``Certificate'' means the document issued as written evidence
  8       of the benefit contract.
  9           (e) (d) ``Commissioner'' means the commissioner of insurance of this
10       state.
11           (f) (e) ``Premiums'' means premiums, rates, dues or other required
12       contributions by whatever name known, which are payable under the
13       certificate.
14           (g) (f) ``Laws'' means the society's articles of incorporation, consti-
15       tution and bylaws, however designated.
16           (h) (g) ``Rules'' means all rules, regulations or resolutions adopted by
17       the supreme governing body or board of directors which are intended to
18       have general application to the members of the society.
19           (i) (h) ``Society'' means fraternal benefit society, unless otherwise in-
20       dicated.
21           (j) (i) ``Lodge'' means subordinate member units of the society,
22       known as camps, courts, councils, branches or by any other designation.
23           Sec. 18. K.S.A. 40-1612 is hereby amended to read as follows: 40-
24       1612. In addition to the laws hereinbefore referred to in this article, the
25       requirements and provisions set out in the following sections of articles
26       2 and 20 of the Kansas Statutes Annotated, or any amendments thereto,
27       which govern insurance companies shall apply to reciprocal or interin-
28       surance exchanges: Sections 40-208, 40-214, 40-215, 40-218, 40-220,
29       40-221, 40-222, 40-223, 40-224, 40-225, 40-226, 40-227, 40-228, 40-229,
30       40-231, 40-233, 40-235, 40-236, 40-237, 40-238, 40-239, 40-240, 40-241,
31       40-242, 40-243, 40-244, 40-245, 40-246 except as to contracts written
32       through traveling salaried representatives to whom no commissions are
33       paid, 40-246a, 40-247, 40-248, 40-249, 40-250, 40-251, 40-253, 40-254,
34       40-2001, 40-2002, 40-2003, 40-2004, 40-2005 and 40-2006. All of the
35       requirements, provisions and regulations set out in the foregoing sections
36       of articles 2 and 20 and which apply to insurance companies are hereby
37       made to apply to reciprocal or interinsurance exchanges and such recip-
38       rocal or interinsurance exchanges shall comply with and be governed and
39       regulated by the provisions of such foregoing sections.
40           Sec. 19. K.S.A. 40-1613 is hereby amended to read as follows: 40-
41       1613. Reciprocal or interinsurance exchanges may, pursuant to authority
42       given by the commissioner of insurance, engage in the business of writing
43       fidelity and surety bonds but only upon the condition that such reciprocal

HB 2741

18

  1       or interinsurance exchange have and maintain a surplus equal to capital
  2       and surplus required of domestic stock insurance companies transacting
  3       the same kind of business and any such reciprocal or interinsurance
  4       exchange shall be deemed a stock insurance company for the purposes
  5       of sections 40-214, 40-239 to 40-247, both sections inclusive, 40-252,
  6       40-1107 and 40-1108 of the Kansas Statutes Annotated or any amend-
  7       ments thereto. No fidelity or surety bond shall be issued by any such
  8       reciprocal or interinsurance exchange until form thereof shall have been
  9       submitted to and accepted by commissioner of insurance. Any fidelity or
10       surety bonds executed pursuant to this act shall be received and accepted
11       as company, corporation or corporate bonds.
12           Sec. 20. K.S.A. 1997 Supp. 40-1909 is hereby amended to read as
13       follows: 40-1909. (a) Such corporations shall be subject to the provisions
14       of the Kansas general corporation code, articles 60 to 74, inclusive, of
15       chapter 17 of the Kansas Statutes Annotated, applicable to nonprofit cor-
16       porations, to the provisions of K.S.A. 40-214, 40-215, 40-216, 40-218, 40-
17       219, 40-222, 40-223, 40-224, 40-225, 40-226, 40-229, 40-230, 40-231, 40-
18       235, 40-236, 40-237, 40-247, 40-248, 40-249, 40-250, 40-251, 40-252,
19       40-254, 40-2,100, 40-2,101, 40-2,102, 40-2,103, 40-2,104, 40-2,105, 40-
20       2,114, 40-2,116, 40-2,117, 40-2a01 to 40-2a19, inclusive, 40-2216 to 40-
21       2221, inclusive, 40-2229, 40-2230, 40-2250, 40-2251, 40-2253, 40-2254,
22       40-2401 to 40-2421, inclusive, 40-3301 to 40-3313, inclusive, K.S.A. 1997
23       Supp. 40-2,153, 40-2,154, 40-2,160 and 40-2,161, and amendments
24       thereto, except as the context otherwise requires, and shall not be subject
25       to any other provisions of the insurance code except as expressly provided
26       in this act.
27           (b) No policy, agreement, contract or certificate issued by a corpo-
28       ration to which this section applies shall contain a provision which ex-
29       cludes, limits or otherwise restricts coverage because medicaid benefits
30       as permitted by title XIX of the social security act of 1965 are or may be
31       available for the same accident or illness.
32           (c) Violation of subsection (b) shall be subject to the penalties pre-
33       scribed by K.S.A. 40-2407 and 40-2411, and amendments thereto.
34           Sec. 21. K.S.A. 1997 Supp. 40-19a10 is hereby amended to read as
35       follows: 40-19a10. (a) Such corporations shall be subject to the provisions
36       of K.S.A. 40-214, 40-215, 40-216, 40-218, 40-219, 40-222, 40-223, 40-
37       224, 40-225, 40-226, 40-229, 40-230, 40-231, 40-235, 40-236, 40-237, 40-
38       247, 40-248, 40-249, 40-250, 40-251, 40-252, 40-254, 40-2,102, 40-2a01
39       et seq., 40-2215 to 40-2220, inclusive, 40-2253, 40-2401 to 40-2421, in-
40       clusive, 40-3301 to 40-3313, inclusive, K.S.A. 1997 Supp. 40-2,154 and
41       40-2,161, and amendments thereto, except as the context otherwise re-
42       quires, and shall not be subject to any other provisions of the insurance
43       code except as expressly provided in this act.

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  1           (b) No policy, agreement, contract or certificate issued by a corpo-
  2       ration to which this section applies shall contain a provision which ex-
  3       cludes, limits or otherwise restricts coverage because medicaid benefits
  4       as permitted by title XIX of the social security act of 1965 are or may be
  5       available for the same accident or illness.
  6           (c) Violation of subsection (b) shall be subject to the penalties pre-
  7       scribed by K.S.A. 40-2407 and 40-2411, and amendments thereto.
  8           Sec. 22. K.S.A. 1997 Supp. 40-19c09 is hereby amended to read as
  9       follows: 40-19c09. (a) Corporations organized under the nonprofit med-
10       ical and hospital service corporation act shall be subject to the provisions
11       of the Kansas general corporation code, articles 60 to 74, inclusive, of
12       chapter 17 of the Kansas Statutes Annotated, applicable to nonprofit cor-
13       porations, to the provisions of K.S.A. 40-214, 40-215, 40-216, 40-218, 40-
14       219, 40-222, 40-223, 40-224, 40-225, 40-226, 40-229, 40-230, 40-231, 40-
15       235, 40-236, 40-237, 40-247, 40-248, 40-249, 40-250, 40-251, 40-252,
16       40-254, 40-2,100, 40-2,101, 40-2,102, 40-2,103, 40-2,104, 40-2,105, 40-
17       2,116, 40-2,117, 40-2a01 et seq., 40-2111 to 40-2116, inclusive, 40-2215
18       to 40-2220, inclusive, 40-2221a, 40-2221b, 40-2229, 40-2230, 40-2250,
19       40-2251, 40-2253, 40-2254, 40-2401 to 40-2421, inclusive, and 40-3301
20       to 40-3313, inclusive, K.S.A. 1997 Supp. 40-2,153, 40-2,154, 40-2,160 and
21       40-2,161, and amendments thereto, except as the context otherwise re-
22       quires, and shall not be subject to any other provisions of the insurance
23       code except as expressly provided in this act.
24           (b) No policy, agreement, contract or certificate issued by a corpo-
25       ration to which this section applies shall contain a provision which ex-
26       cludes, limits or otherwise restricts coverage because medicaid benefits
27       as permitted by title XIX of the social security act of 1965 are or may be
28       available for the same accident or illness.
29           (c) Violation of subsection (b) shall be subject to the penalties pre-
30       scribed by K.S.A. 40-2407 and 40-2411, and amendments thereto.
31           Sec. 23. K.S.A. 40-2209l is hereby amended to read as follows: 40-
32       2209l. (a) There is established a nonprofit entity to be known as the
33       ``Kansas small employer health reinsurance program.'' All carriers issuing
34       or maintaining health benefit plans in this state on or after the effective
35       date of this act shall be members of the program.
36           (b) Within 60 days following the effective date of this act, the com-
37       missioner shall give notice to all members of the time and place for the
38       initial organizational meeting, which shall take place within 120 days fol-
39       lowing the effective date of this act. The members shall select the initial
40       board subject to approval by the commissioner. The board shall consist
41       of 11 members who shall serve staggered terms as determined by the
42       program's plan of operation. At least 2/3 of the members of the board shall
43       be small employer carriers. In the event there are not sufficient small

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  1       employer carriers to serve on the board, the remaining seats shall be filled
  2       by any insurer, health maintenance organization, group-funded pool or
  3       nonprofit medical and hospital service plan offering health benefit plans
  4       in this state. The board shall include:
  5           (1) The carrier writing the largest market share of group health in-
  6       surance written premiums during the last 12 full calendar months im-
  7       mediately preceding selection;
  8           (2) a carrier whose principal health insurance business is in the small
  9       employer market;
10           (3) a carrier whose principal health insurance business is in the large
11       employer market;
12           (4) nonprofit medical and hospital service corporation;
13           (5) a health maintenance organization;
14           (6) a licensed resident agent producer actively involved in the solic-
15       itation and sale of health benefit plans for small employers; and
16           (7) a representative of small employers.
17           Following the first full year of operation, a majority of the board shall,
18       to the extent possible, be reinsuring carriers. No person or entity shall fill
19       more than one of the described positions on the board.
20           The commissioner shall be an ex-officio member of the board. In ap-
21       proving the selection of the board, the commissioner shall assure that all
22       members of the program are fairly represented. The membership of all
23       boards subsequent to the initial board shall, to the extent possible, reflect
24       the same distribution described above.
25           (c) If the initial board is not elected at the organizational meeting,
26       the commissioner shall appoint the initial board within 30 days of the
27       organizational meeting.
28           (d) Within 180 days after the appointment of the initial board, the
29       board shall submit to the commissioner a plan of operation, and thereafter
30       any amendments thereto necessary or suitable, to assure the fair, reason-
31       able and equitable administration of the program. The commissioner
32       shall, after notice and hearing, approve the plan of operation provided
33       the commissioner determines it to be suitable to assure the fair, reason-
34       able and equitable administration of the program and provides for the
35       sharing of program gains or losses on an equitable and proportionate basis
36       in accordance with the provisions of subsection (k). The plan of operation
37       shall become effective upon approval in writing by the commissioner con-
38       sistent with the date on which the coverage under this section shall be
39       made available. Any plan of operation, or amendments thereto, submitted
40       to the commissioner by the board pursuant to this subsection shall be
41       deemed approved by the commissioner if not expressly disapproved in
42       writing by the commissioner within 90 days of its receipt by the commis-
43       sioner.

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  1           (e) If the board fails to submit a suitable plan of operation within 180
  2       days after its appointment, the commissioner shall, after notice and hear-
  3       ing, adopt and promulgate a temporary plan of operation. The commis-
  4       sioner shall amend or rescind any plan adopted by the commissioner
  5       under this subsection at the time a plan of operation is submitted by the
  6       board and approved by the commissioner.
  7           (f) The plan of operation shall establish rules, conditions, and pro-
  8       cedures for:
  9           (1) The handling and accounting of assets and moneys of the program
10       and for an annual fiscal reporting to the commissioner;
11           (2) filling vacancies on the board, subject to the approval of the com-
12       missioner;
13           (3) selecting an administering insurer which shall be a carrier as de-
14       fined in subsection (f) of K.S.A. 40-2209d and setting forth the powers
15       and duties of the administering insurer;
16           (4) reinsuring risks in accordance with the provisions of this section;
17           (5) collecting assessments subject to subsection (k) from all members
18       to provide for claims reinsured by the program and for administrative
19       expenses incurred or estimated to be incurred during the period for which
20       the assessment is made;
21           (6) providing protection for carriers from the financial risk associated
22       with small employers that present poor credit risks;
23           (7) establishing standards for the coverage of small employers that
24       have high turnover employees;
25           (8) establishing an appeals process for carriers to seek relief when a
26       carrier has experienced an unfair share of administrative and credit risks;
27           (9) determining the adjusted average market premium prices for
28       SEHC plans sold in this state;
29           (10) establishing participation standards at issue and renewal for re-
30       insured cases;
31           (11) establishing standards for those conditions under which a carrier
32       would not be required to write business received from a particular agent
33       or broker producer;
34           (12) establishing reporting requirements for carriers, agents, brokers
35       producers and third-party administrators that will reasonably measure the
36       distribution of individuals and groups covered by a health benefit plan
37       developed by the board and risks reinsured by the program; and
38           (13) any additional matters at the discretion of the board.
39           (g) The program shall have the general powers and authority granted
40       under the laws of the state to insurance companies licensed to transact
41       health insurance except the power to issue insurance. In addition the
42       board shall have the specific authority to:
43           (1) Enter into contracts as are necessary or proper to carry out the

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  1       provisions and purposes of this section, including the authority, with the
  2       approval of the commissioner, to enter into contracts with similar pro-
  3       grams of other states for the joint performance of common functions, or
  4       with persons or other organizations for the performance of administrative
  5       functions;
  6           (2) sue or be sued, including taking any legal actions necessary or
  7       proper for recovery of any assessments for, on behalf of, or against any
  8       program or board member;
  9           (3) take such legal action as necessary to avoid the payment of im-
10       proper claims against the program;
11           (4) design the basic and standard small employer health care plans
12       for which reinsurance will be provided and issue reinsurance policies in
13       accordance with the requirements of this act;
14           (5) establish rules, conditions and procedures pertaining to the re-
15       insurance of members' risks by the program including such variations as
16       may be necessary to be compatible with the operation of health mainte-
17       nance organizations;
18           (6) establish adequate and appropriate rates, rate schedules, rate ad-
19       justments, rate classifications and any other actuarial functions appropri-
20       ate to the operation of the program;
21           (7) assess members in accordance with the provisions of subsection
22       (k), and to make such advance interim assessments as may be reasonable
23       and necessary for organizational and interim operating expenses. Any
24       such interim assessments shall be credited as offsets against any regular
25       assessments due following the close of the fiscal year;
26           (8) appoint from among members appropriate legal, actuarial and
27       other committees as are necessary to provide technical assistance in the
28       operation of the program, policy and other contract design, and any other
29       function within the authority of the program; and
30           (9) borrow money to affect the purposes of the program. Any notices
31       or other evidence of indebtedness of the program not in default shall be
32       legal investments for carriers and may be carried as admitted assets.
33           (h) Any member may reinsure coverage of any small employer group
34       with the program provided:
35           (1) With respect to an SEHC plan, the program shall reinsure the
36       level of coverage provided;
37           (2) with respect to other plans delivered, or issued to small employers
38       on and after the date the program becomes operational, the program shall
39       reinsure the level of coverage provided up to, but not exceeding, the level
40       of coverage provided in a SEHC plan;
41           (3) with respect to the coverage provided to small employers issued
42       after the effective date of this act, the carrier shall be required to use
43       high-cost case management, hospital precertification techniques, and

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  1       other cost containment techniques as established by the program;
  2           (4) with respect to eligible employees and their dependents, a carrier
  3       may reinsure the entire employer group within 60 days of the commence-
  4       ment of the group's coverage under the plan;
  5           (5) if, following the first 12 calendar months of operation, the board
  6       determines that permitting carriers to reinsure individual employees or
  7       dependents is in the best interests of small employers, carriers or covered
  8       participants as a whole, the board may, with the approval of the commis-
  9       sioner, authorize the offering or issuance of reinsurance on individual
10       employees and dependents. Such authorization shall incorporate provi-
11       sions necessary to implement the authorization including but not limited
12       to the commencement of the reinsurance coverage with respect to eligible
13       employees and dependents who:
14           (A) Are covered by a SEHC plan that is not reinsured by the program
15       at the time the authorization becomes effective;
16           (B) are hired subsequent to the commencement of an employer's
17       SEHC coverage;
18           (C) are employed by a small employer as of the date the employer's
19       SEHC plan coverage commences; or
20           (D) are late enrollees. The authority to reinsure individual employees
21       or dependents shall become effective on all policies issued, renewed or
22       continued on and after 45 calendar days following the commissioner's
23       approval and shall remain in effect unless removed by the board with the
24       commissioner's approval;
25           (6) if an employer group is covered under a plan other than an SEHC
26       plan and the carrier chooses to reinsure the group subsequent to the
27       effective date of this act the carrier cannot force the employer to change
28       to a small employer health care benefit plan. The carrier must allow the
29       employer to maintain the same benefit plan and reinsure only the portion
30       of the plan consistent with an SEHC plan.
31           (i) Premium rates charged for coverage reinsured by the program
32       shall be established by the board created pursuant to subsection (b).
33           (j) The reinsurance program shall not reimburse a participating car-
34       rier with respect to the claims of a reinsured employee or dependent until
35       the carrier has paid a deductible of or delivered services equal to $10,000
36       in a calendar year for benefits covered by the program. In addition, the
37       participating carrier shall retain 10% of the next $50,000 of benefit pay-
38       ments or services per reinsured employee or dependent during a calendar
39       year and the program shall reinsure the remainder. A participating car-
40       rier's liability under this paragraph shall not exceed, in any one calendar
41       year, a maximum amount equal to 20% of the total health benefit plan
42       premiums earned in this state from health benefit plans covering small
43       employers during the immediately preceding calendar year. Subject to

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  1       the approval of the commissioner, the board may adjust the deductible,
  2       retention percentage, or maximum limit to achieve better operating re-
  3       sults under the program.
  4           (k) (1) Following the close of each fiscal year, the administering in-
  5       surer shall determine the net premiums, the program expenses for ad-
  6       ministration and the incurred losses, if any, for the year, taking into ac-
  7       count investment income and other appropriate gains and losses. Health
  8       benefit plan premiums and benefits paid by a member that are less than
  9       an amount determined by the board to justify the cost of collection shall
10       not be considered for purposes of determining assessments. For purposes
11       of this subsection, ``net premiums'' means health benefit plan premiums,
12       less administrative expense allowances.
13           (2) Any net loss for the year shall be recouped first by assessments
14       of members to the extent provided below:
15           (A) Assessments shall first be apportioned by the board among all
16       carriers utilizing the program in proportion to their respective shares of
17       the total health benefit plan premiums earned in this state from health
18       benefit plans covering small employers during the calendar year coincid-
19       ing with or ending during the fiscal year of the program, or on any other
20       equitable basis reflecting coverage of small employers as may be provided
21       in the plan of operation. An assessment shall be made pursuant to this
22       subsection against a health maintenance organization including those ap-
23       proved by the secretary of health and human services as a federally qual-
24       ified health maintenance organization pursuant to 42 U.S.C. 300 et seq.
25       in accordance with an assessment formula adopted by the board and ap-
26       proved by the commissioner for health maintenance organizations. Such
27       assessment formula shall recognize the restrictions imposed on health
28       maintenance organizations by federal law and shall be adopted by the
29       board and approved by the commissioner prior to the first anniversary of
30       the program's operation.
31           (B) To the extent any such net loss is not recouped from the assess-
32       ments levied under subsection (k)(2)(A) an assessment shall be appor-
33       tioned by the board among all insurers, health maintenance organizations,
34       municipal group funded pools and nonprofit medical and hospital service
35       corporations in proportion to their respective shares of total health in-
36       surance premiums received in this state for hospital or medical expense
37       policies, certificates, subscriber agreements or other contracts exclusive
38       of those not included in the definition of health benefit plan pursuant to
39       subsection (n) of K.S.A. 40-2209d and the premium earned by any small
40       employer carrier in this state from health benefit plans covering small
41       employers during the calendar year coinciding with or ending during the
42       fiscal year of this program.
43           (C) Assessments under subsection (k)(2)(A) shall not exceed an

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  1       amount equal to 5% of such premium for health benefit plans covering
  2       small employers. Assessments under subsection (k)(2)(B) shall not exceed
  3       an amount equal to 1% of the total premium upon which the assessment
  4       is based.
  5           (3) If assessments exceed actual losses and administrative expenses
  6       of the program, the excess shall be held at interest and used by the board
  7       to offset future losses or to reduce program premiums. As used in this
  8       subsection, ``future losses'' includes reserves for incurred but not reported
  9       claims.
10           (4) Each member's proportion of participation in the program shall
11       be determined annually by the board based on annual statements and
12       other reports deemed necessary by the board and filed by the member
13       with the board.
14           (5) Provision shall be made in the plan of operation for the imposition
15       of an interest penalty for late payment of assessments.
16           (6) A member may seek from the commissioner a deferment, in
17       whole or in part, from any assessment issued by the board. The commis-
18       sioner may defer, in whole or in part, the assessment of a member if, in
19       the opinion of the commissioner, payment of the assessment would en-
20       danger the member's ability to fulfill its contractual obligations.
21           (7) In the event an assessment against a member is deferred in whole
22       or in part, the amount by which such assessment is deferred may be
23       assessed against the other members in a manner consistent with the basis
24       for assessments set forth in this subsection. The member receiving such
25       deferment shall remain liable to the program for the amount deferred.
26       The commissioner may attach appropriate conditions to any such defer-
27       ment.
28           (l) Neither the participation as members of the program or as board
29       members, the establishment of rates, forms, or procedures for coverage
30       issued by the program, nor any other joint or collective action required
31       by this act, shall be the basis of any legal action, criminal or civil liability
32       or penalty against the program, the board, or any of its members either
33       jointly or separately.
34           (m) The Kansas small employer reinsurance program shall be exempt
35       from any and all premium taxes.
36           Sec. 24. K.S.A. 40-2209m is hereby amended to read as follows:
37       40-2209m. (a) Each small employer carrier shall actively market health
38       benefit plan coverage, including the basic and standard health benefit
39       plans, to eligible small employers in the state. If a small employer carrier
40       denies coverage not subject to this act to a small employer on the basis
41       of the health status or claims experience of the small employer or its
42       employees or dependents, the small employer carrier shall offer the small
43       employer the opportunity to purchase a basic health benefit plan and a

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  1       standard health benefit plan.
  2           (b) (1) Except as provided in paragraph (2), no small employer car-
  3       rier, agent or broker producer shall, directly or indirectly, engage in the
  4       following activities:
  5           (A) Encouraging or directing small employers to refrain from filing
  6       an application for coverage with the small employer carrier because of
  7       the health status, claims experience, industry, occupation or geographic
  8       location of the small employer;
  9           (B) encouraging or directing small employers to seek coverage from
10       another carrier because of the health status, claims experience, industry,
11       occupation or geographic location of the small employer.
12           (2) The provisions of paragraph (1) shall not apply with respect to
13       information provided by a small employer carrier or producer to a small
14       employer regarding the established geographic service area or a restricted
15       network provision of a small employer carrier.
16           (c) (1) Except as provided in paragraph (2), no small employer car-
17       rier shall, directly or indirectly, enter into any contract, agreement or
18       arrangement with an agent or broker a producer that provides for or
19       results in the compensation paid to such person for the sale of a health
20       benefit plan to be varied because of the health status, claims experience,
21       industry, occupation or geographic location of the small employer.
22           (2) Paragraph (1) shall not apply with respect to a compensation ar-
23       rangement that provides compensation to an agent or broker a producer
24       on the basis of percentage of premium, provided that the percentage shall
25       not vary because of the health status, claims experience, industry, occu-
26       pation or geographic area of the small employer.
27           (d) A small employer carrier shall provide reasonable compensation
28       to licensed agents and brokers producers, if any, as provided under the
29       plan of operation of the program for the sale of a basic or standard health
30       benefit plan.
31           (e) No small employer carrier shall terminate, fail to renew or limit
32       its contract or agreement of representation with an agent or broker for
33       any reason related to the health status, claims experience, occupation, or
34       geographic location of the small employers placed by the agent or broker
35       producer with the small employer carrier.
36           (f) No small employer carrier, agent or broker producer shall induce
37       or otherwise encourage a small employer to separate or otherwise exclude
38       an employee from health coverage or benefits provided in connection
39       with the employee's employment.
40           (g) Denial by a small employer carrier of an application for coverage
41       from a small employer shall be in writing and shall state the reason or
42       reasons for the denial.
43           (h) The commissioner may adopt rules and regulations setting forth

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  1       additional standards to provide for the fair marketing and broad availa-
  2       bility of health benefit plans to small employers in this state.
  3           (i) If a small employer carrier enters into a contract, agreement or
  4       other arrangement with a third-party administrator to provide adminis-
  5       trative, marketing or other services related to the offering of health ben-
  6       efit plans to small employers in this state, the third-party administrator
  7       shall be subject to this section as if it were a small employer carrier.
  8           (j) The board shall make available a broadly publicized toll free tel-
  9       ephone number for access by small employers to information concerning
10       this act and the health benefit plans developed pursuant to K.S.A. 40-
11       2209k.
12           (k) Except as provided in paragraph (l), for the purposes of this act,
13       carriers that are affiliated companies or that are eligible to file a consol-
14       idated tax return shall be treated as one carrier and any restrictions or
15       limitations imposed by this act shall apply as if all health benefit plans
16       issued to small employers in this state by such affiliated carriers were
17       issued by one carrier.
18           (l) An affiliated carrier that is a health maintenance organization hav-
19       ing a certificate of authority under K.S.A. 40-3201 et seq. and amend-
20       ments thereto, may be considered to be a separate carrier for the purpose
21       of this act.
22           Sec. 25. K.S.A. 1997 Supp. 40-2404 is hereby amended to read as
23       follows: 40-2404. The following are hereby defined as unfair methods of
24       competition and unfair or deceptive acts or practices in the business of
25       insurance:
26           (1) (a) Misrepresentations and false advertising of insurance policies.
27       Making, issuing, circulating or causing to be made, issued or circulated,
28       any estimate, illustration, circular, statement, sales presentation, omission
29       or comparison which:
30           (a) (1) Misrepresents the benefits, advantages, conditions or terms of
31       any insurance policy;
32           (b) (2) misrepresents the dividends or share of the surplus to be re-
33       ceived on any insurance policy;
34           (c) (3) makes any false or misleading statements as to the dividends
35       or share of surplus previously paid on any insurance policy;
36           (d) (4) is misleading or is a misrepresentation as to the financial con-
37       dition of any person, or as to the legal reserve system upon which any life
38       insurer operates;
39           (e) (5) uses any name or title of any insurance policy or class of in-
40       surance policies misrepresenting the true nature thereof;
41           (f) (6) is a misrepresentation for the purpose of inducing or tending
42       to induce the lapse, forfeiture, exchange, conversion or surrender of any
43       insurance policy;

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28

  1           (g) (7) is a misrepresentation for the purpose of effecting a pledge or
  2       assignment of or effecting a loan against any insurance policy; or
  3           (h) (8) misrepresents any insurance policy as being shares of stock.
  4           (2) (b) False information and advertising generally. Making, publish-
  5       ing, disseminating, circulating or placing before the public, or causing,
  6       directly or indirectly, to be made, published, disseminated, circulated or
  7       placed before the public, in a newspaper, magazine or other publication,
  8       or in the form of a notice, circular, pamphlet, letter or poster, or over any
  9       radio or television station, or in any other way, an advertisement, an-
10       nouncement or statement containing any assertion, misrepresentation or
11       statement with respect to the business of insurance or with respect to any
12       person in the conduct of such person's insurance business, which is un-
13       true, deceptive or misleading.
14           (3) (c) Defamation. Making, publishing, disseminating or circulating,
15       directly or indirectly, or aiding, abetting or encouraging the making, pub-
16       lishing, disseminating or circulating of any oral or written statement or
17       any pamphlet, circular, article or literature which is false, or maliciously
18       critical of or derogatory to the financial condition of any person, and which
19       is calculated to injure such person.
20           (4) (d) Boycott, coercion and intimidation. Entering into any agree-
21       ment to commit, or by any concerted action committing, any act of boy-
22       cott, coercion or intimidation resulting in or tending to result in unrea-
23       sonable restraint of the business of insurance, or by any act of boycott,
24       coercion or intimidation monopolizing or attempting to monopolize any
25       part of the business of insurance.
26           (5) (e) False statements and entries. (a) (1) Knowingly filing with any
27       supervisory or other public official, or knowingly making, publishing, dis-
28       seminating, circulating or delivering to any person, or placing before the
29       public, or knowingly causing directly or indirectly, to be made, published,
30       disseminated, circulated, delivered to any person, or placed before the
31       public, any false material statement of fact as to the financial condition
32       of a person.
33           (b) (2) Knowingly making any false entry of a material fact in any
34       book, report or statement of any person or knowingly omitting to make
35       a true entry of any material fact pertaining to the business of such person
36       in any book, report or statement of such person.
37           (6) (f) Stock operations and advisory board contracts. Issuing or de-
38       livering or permitting agents, officers or employees to issue or deliver,
39       agency company stock or other capital stock, or benefit certificates or
40       shares in any common-law corporation, or securities or any special or
41       advisory board contracts or other contracts of any kind promising returns
42       and profits as an inducement to insurance. Nothing herein shall prohibit
43       the acts permitted by K.S.A. 40-232, and amendments thereto.

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  1           (7) (g) Unfair discrimination. (a) (1) Making or permitting any unfair
  2       discrimination between individuals of the same class and equal expecta-
  3       tion of life in the rates charged for any contract of life insurance or life
  4       annuity or in the dividends or other benefits payable thereon, or in any
  5       other of the terms and conditions of such contract.
  6           (b) (2) Making or permitting any unfair discrimination between in-
  7       dividuals of the same class and of essentially the same hazard in the
  8       amount of premium, policy fees or rates charged for any policy or contract
  9       of accident or health insurance or in the benefits payable thereunder, or
10       in any of the terms or conditions of such contract, or in any other manner
11       whatever.
12           (c) (3) Refusing to insure, or refusing to continue to insure, or limiting
13       the amount, extent or kind of coverage available to an individual, or charg-
14       ing an individual a different rate for the same coverage solely because of
15       blindness or partial blindness. With respect to all other conditions, in-
16       cluding the underlying cause of the blindness or partial blindness, persons
17       who are blind or partially blind shall be subject to the same standards of
18       sound actuarial principles or actual or reasonably anticipated experience
19       as are sighted persons. Refusal to insure includes denial by an insurer of
20       disability insurance coverage on the grounds that the policy defines ``dis-
21       ability'' as being presumed in the event that the insured loses such per-
22       son's eyesight. However, an insurer may exclude from coverage disabili-
23       ties consisting solely of blindness or partial blindness when such condition
24       existed at the time the policy was issued.
25           (d) (4) Refusing to insure, or refusing to continue to insure, or limit-
26       ing the amount, extent or kind of coverage available for accident and
27       health and life insurance to an applicant who is the proposed insured or
28       charge a different rate for the same coverage or excluding or limiting
29       coverage for losses or denying a claim incurred by an insured as a result
30       of abuse based on the fact that the applicant who is the proposed insured
31       is, has been, or may be the subject of domestic abuse, except as provided
32       in subpart (v) subparagraph (E). ``Abuse'' as used in this subsection (7)(d)
33       means one or more acts defined in subsection (a) or (b) of K.S.A. 60-3102
34       and amendments thereto between family members, current or former
35       household members, or current or former intimate partners.
36           (i) (A) An insurer may not ask an applicant for life or accident and
37       health insurance who is the proposed insured if the individual is, has been
38       or may be the subject of domestic abuse or seeks, has sought or had reason
39       to seek medical or psychological treatment or counseling specifically for
40       abuse, protection from abuse or shelter from abuse.
41           (ii) (B) Nothing in this section shall be construed to prohibit a person
42       from declining to issue an insurance policy insuring the life of an individ-
43       ual who is, has been or has the potential to be the subject of abuse if the

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  1       perpetrator of the abuse is the applicant or would be the owner of the
  2       insurance policy.
  3           (iii) (C) No insurer that issues a life or accident and health policy to
  4       an individual who is, has been or may be the subject of domestic abuse
  5       shall be subject to civil or criminal liability for the death or any injuries
  6       suffered by that individual as a result of domestic abuse.
  7           (iv) (D) No person shall refuse to insure, refuse to continue to insure,
  8       limit the amount, extent or kind of coverage available to an individual or
  9       charge a different rate for the same coverage solely because of physical
10       or mental condition, except where the refusal, limitation or rate differ-
11       ential is based on sound actuarial principles.
12           (v) (E) Nothing in this section shall be construed to prohibit a person
13       from underwriting or rating a risk on the basis of a preexisting physical
14       or mental condition, even if such condition has been caused by abuse,
15       provided that:
16           (A) (i) The person routinely underwrites or rates such condition in
17       the same manner with respect to an insured or an applicant who is not a
18       victim of abuse;
19           (B) (ii) the fact that an individual is, has been or may be the subject
20       of abuse may not be considered a physical or mental condition; and
21           (C) (iii) such underwriting or rating is not used to evade the intent
22       of this section or any other provision of the Kansas insurance code.
23           (vi) (F) Any person who underwrites or rates a risk on the basis of
24       preexisting physical or mental condition as set forth in subsection (7)(d)(v)
25       (g)(4)(E), shall treat such underwriting or rating as an adverse under-
26       writing decision pursuant to K.S.A. 40-2,112, and amendments thereto.
27           (vii) (G) The provisions of subsection (d) (4) shall apply to all policies
28       of life and accident and health insurance issued in this state after the
29       effective date of this act and all existing contracts which are renewed on
30       or after the effective date of this act.
31           (8) (h) Rebates. (a) (1) Except as otherwise expressly provided by law,
32       knowingly permitting, offering to make or making any contract of life
33       insurance, life annuity or accident and health insurance, or agreement as
34       to such contract other than as plainly expressed in the insurance contract
35       issued thereon; paying, allowing, giving or offering to pay, allow or give,
36       directly or indirectly, as inducement to such insurance, or annuity, any
37       rebate of premiums payable on the contract, any special favor or advan-
38       tage in the dividends or other benefits thereon, or any valuable consid-
39       eration or inducement whatever not specified in the contract; or giving,
40       selling, purchasing or offering to give, sell or purchase as inducement to
41       such insurance contract or annuity or in connection therewith, any stocks,
42       bonds or other securities of any insurance company or other corporation,
43       association or partnership, or any dividends or profits accrued thereon,

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  1       or anything of value whatsoever not specified in the contract.
  2           ``Valuable consideration or inducement'' shall not include marketing or
  3       promotional items of nominal value. Items with a market value of $25 or
  4       less shall be presumed to be nominal in value.
  5           (b) (2) Nothing in subsection (7) (g) or (8) (h)(a)(1) shall be construed
  6       as including within the definition of discrimination or rebates any of the
  7       following practices:
  8           (i) (A) In the case of any contract of life insurance or life annuity,
  9       paying bonuses to policyholders or otherwise abating their premiums in
10       whole or in part out of surplus accumulated from nonparticipating insur-
11       ance. Any such bonuses or abatement of premiums shall be fair and eq-
12       uitable to policyholders and for the best interests of the company and its
13       policyholders;
14           (ii) (B) in the case of life insurance policies issued on the industrial
15       debit plan, making allowance to policyholders who have continuously for
16       a specified period made premium payments directly to an office of the
17       insurer in an amount which fairly represents the saving in collection ex-
18       penses; or
19           (iii) (C) readjustment of the rate of premium for a group insurance
20       policy based on the loss or expense experience thereunder, at the end of
21       the first or any subsequent policy year of insurance thereunder, which
22       may be made retroactive only for such policy year.
23           (9) (i) Unfair claim settlement practices. It is an unfair claim settle-
24       ment practice if any of the following or any rules and regulations pertain-
25       ing thereto are: (A) Committed committed flagrantly and in conscious
26       disregard of such provisions, or (B) committed with such frequency as to
27       indicate a general business practice.
28           (a) (1) Misrepresenting pertinent facts or insurance policy provisions
29       relating to coverages at issue;
30           (b) (2) failing to acknowledge and act reasonably promptly upon com-
31       munications with respect to claims arising under insurance policies;
32           (c) (3) failing to adopt and implement reasonable standards for the
33       prompt investigation of claims arising under insurance policies;
34           (d) (4) refusing to pay claims without conducting a reasonable inves-
35       tigation based upon all available information;
36           (e) (5) failing to affirm or deny coverage of claims within a reasonable
37       time after proof of loss statements have been completed;
38           (f) (6) not attempting in good faith to effectuate prompt, fair and
39       equitable settlements of claims in which liability has become reasonably
40       clear;
41           (g) (7) compelling insureds to institute litigation to recover amounts
42       due under an insurance policy by offering substantially less than the
43       amounts ultimately recovered in actions brought by such insureds;

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  1           (h) (8) attempting to settle a claim for less than the amount to which
  2       a reasonable person would have believed that such person was entitled
  3       by reference to written or printed advertising material accompanying or
  4       made part of an application;
  5           (i) (9) attempting to settle claims on the basis of an application which
  6       was altered without notice to, or knowledge or consent of the insured;
  7           (j) (10) making claims payments to insureds or beneficiaries not ac-
  8       companied by a statement setting forth the coverage under which pay-
  9       ments are being made;
10           (k) (11) making known to insureds or claimants a policy of appealing
11       from arbitration awards in favor of insureds or claimants for the purpose
12       of compelling them to accept settlements or compromises less than the
13       amount awarded in arbitration;
14           (l) (12) delaying the investigation or payment of claims by requiring
15       an insured, claimant or the physician of either to submit a preliminary
16       claim report and then requiring the subsequent submission of formal
17       proof of loss forms, both of which submissions contain substantially the
18       same information;
19           (m) (13) failing to promptly settle claims, where liability has become
20       reasonably clear, under one portion of the insurance policy coverage in
21       order to influence settlements under other portions of the insurance pol-
22       icy coverage; or
23           (n) (14) failing to promptly provide a reasonable explanation of the
24       basis in the insurance policy in relation to the facts or applicable law for
25       denial of a claim or for the offer of a compromise settlement.
26           (10) (j) Failure to maintain complaint handling procedures. Failure
27       of any person, who is an insurer on an insurance policy, to maintain a
28       complete record of all the complaints which it has received since the date
29       of its last examination under K.S.A. 40-222, and amendments thereto; but
30       no such records shall be required for complaints received prior to the
31       effective date of this act. The record shall indicate the total number of
32       complaints, their classification by line of insurance, the nature of each
33       complaint, the disposition of the complaints, the date each complaint was
34       originally received by the insurer and the date of final disposition of each
35       complaint. For purposes of this subsection, ``complaint'' means any writ-
36       ten communication primarily expressing a grievance related to the acts
37       and practices set out in this section.
38           (11) (k) Misrepresentation in insurance applications. Making false or
39       fraudulent statements or representations on or relative to an application
40       for an insurance policy, for the purpose of obtaining a fee, commission,
41       money or other benefit from any insurer, agent, broker or individual.
42           (12) (l) Statutory violations. Any violation of any of the provisions of
43       K.S.A. 40-276a, 40-1515, and amendments thereto, or K.S.A. 1997 Supp.

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  1       40-2,155 and amendments thereto.
  2           (13) (m) Disclosure of information relating to adverse underwriting
  3       decisions and refund of premiums. Failing to comply with the provisions
  4       of K.S.A. 40-2,112, and amendments thereto, within the time prescribed
  5       in such section.
  6           (14) (n) Rebates and other inducements in title insurance. (a) (1) No
  7       title insurance company or title insurance agent, or any officer, employee,
  8       attorney, agent or solicitor thereof, may pay, allow or give, or offer to pay,
  9       allow or give, directly or indirectly, as an inducement to obtaining any
10       title insurance business, any rebate, reduction or abatement of any rate
11       or charge made incident to the issuance of such insurance, any special
12       favor or advantage not generally available to others of the same classifi-
13       cation, or any money, thing of value or other consideration or material
14       inducement. The words ``charge made incident to the issuance of such
15       insurance'' includes, without limitations, escrow, settlement and closing
16       charges.
17           (b) (2) No insured named in a title insurance policy or contract nor
18       any other person directly or indirectly connected with the transaction
19       involving the issuance of the policy or contract, including, but not limited
20       to, mortgage lender, real estate broker, builder, attorney or any officer,
21       employee, agent representative or solicitor thereof, or any other person
22       may knowingly receive or accept, directly or indirectly, any rebate, re-
23       duction or abatement of any charge, or any special favor or advantage or
24       any monetary consideration or inducement referred to in (14)(a) (n)(1).
25           (c) (3) Nothing in this section shall be construed as prohibiting:
26           (i) (A) The payment of reasonable fees for services actually rendered
27       to a title insurance agent in connection with a title insurance transaction;
28           (ii) (B) the payment of an earned commission to a duly appointed
29       title insurance agent for services actually performed in the issuance of the
30       policy of title insurance; or
31           (iii) (C) the payment of reasonable entertainment and advertising ex-
32       penses.
33           (d) (4) Nothing in this section prohibits the division of rates and
34       charges between or among a title insurance company and its agent, or
35       one or more title insurance companies and one or more title insurance
36       agents, if such division of rates and charges does not constitute an unlaw-
37       ful rebate under the provisions of this section and is not in payment of a
38       forwarding fee or a finder's fee.
39           (e) (5) No title insurer or title agent may accept any order for, issue
40       a title insurance policy to, or provide services to, an applicant if it knows
41       or has reason to believe that the applicant was referred to it by any pro-
42       ducer of title business or by any associate of such producer, where the
43       producer, the associate, or both, have a financial interest in the title in-

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  1       surer or title agent to which business is referred unless the producer has
  2       disclosed to the buyer, seller and lender the financial interest of the pro-
  3       ducer of title business or associate referring the title insurance business.
  4           (f) (6) No title insurer or title agent may accept an order for title
  5       insurance business, issue a title insurance policy, or receive or retain any
  6       premium, or charge in connection with any transaction if: (i) (A) The title
  7       insurer or title agent knows or has reason to believe that the transaction
  8       will constitute controlled business for that title insurer or title agent, and
  9       (ii) (B) 20% twenty percent or more of the gross operating revenue of
10       that title insurer or title agent during the six full calendar months im-
11       mediately preceding the month in which the transaction takes place is
12       derived from controlled business. The prohibitions contained in this sub-
13       paragraph shall not apply to transactions involving real estate located in
14       a county that has a population, as shown by the last preceding decennial
15       census, of 10,000 or less.
16           (g) (7) The commissioner shall adopt any regulations necessary to
17       carry out the provisions of this act.
18           Sec. 26. K.S.A. 40-2406 is hereby amended to read as follows: 40-
19       2406. (a) Whenever the commissioner has reason to believe that any such
20       person has been engaged or is engaging in this state in any unfair method
21       of competition or any unfair or deceptive act or practice, whether or not
22       defined in K.S.A. 40-2404 and amendments thereto, and that a proceed-
23       ing by the commissioner in respect thereto would be in the interest of
24       the public, the commissioner shall issue and serve upon such person a
25       statement of the charges in that respect and conduct a hearing thereon
26       in accordance with the provisions of the Kansas administrative procedure
27       act.
28           (b) If, after such hearing, the commissioner determines that the per-
29       son charged has engaged in any unfair method of competition or any
30       unfair or deceptive act or practice, any costs incurred as a result of con-
31       ducting any administrative hearing authorized under the provisions of this
32       section shall be assessed against such person or the company or compa-
33       nies represented by such person as an agent, broker a producer or ad-
34       juster who is a participating party to the matters giving rise to the hearing.
35       As used in this subsection, ``costs'' shall include witness fees, mileage
36       allowances, any costs associated with reproduction of documents which
37       become a part of the hearing record and the expense of making a record
38       of the hearing.
39           Sec. 27. K.S.A. 40-2508 is hereby amended to read as follows: 40-
40       2508. (a) Each and every automobile club operating in this state pursuant
41       to a certificate of authority issued hereunder shall file with the commis-
42       sioner a notice of appointment of a club agent by an automobile club to
43       sell memberships in the automobile club to the public.

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  1           (b) Any person desiring to engage in automobile club services, as an
  2       agent, shall first apply to the insurance commissioner in the manner
  3       herein prescribed, for an automobile club agent registration, to authorize
  4       such person to engage in and transact business as an automobile services
  5       club agent. Such applicant shall be vouched for by an official or repre-
  6       sentative of an authorized automobile club for whom such person pro-
  7       poses to negotiate contracts of automobile club memberships. The notice
  8       of appointment as club agent shall be upon such form as the commissioner
  9       may prescribe and shall contain the name, address, age, sex and social
10       security number of such club agent, and also contain proof satisfactory to
11       the commissioner that such applicant is of good reputation and that such
12       applicant has received training from the club or is otherwise qualified in
13       the field of automobile club service contracts and the laws of this state
14       pertaining thereto. Upon termination of any club agent's employment by
15       an automobile club, such automobile club shall within 30 days notify the
16       commissioner of such termination.
17           (c) The application fee for registration of club agents shall be $15 and
18       the registration for such club agents shall be renewable on a biennial basis
19       upon the payment of a fee of $15. Such registration shall expire on May
20       1 of the second year of the registration period unless sooner revoked or
21       suspended.
22           (d) Such registration may, upon notice and hearing, be suspended or
23       revoked by the commissioner if any registered club agent violates any of
24       the provisions or requirements of this act.
25           (e) The procedure used at the hearing will be the same as that pro-
26       vided for in K.S.A. 40-242, and amendments thereto, subject to the pro-
27       visions contained in K.S.A. 40-243, and amendments thereto section 56
28       subject to the provisions of section 57.
29           Sec. 28. K.S.A. 40-2612 is hereby amended to read as follows: 40-
30       2612. (a) When a premium finance agreement contains a power of attor-
31       ney enabling the premium finance company to cancel any insurance con-
32       tract or contracts listed in the agreement, the insurance contract or
33       contracts shall not be canceled by the premium finance company unless
34       such cancellation is effectuated in accordance with this section.
35           (b) In the event the insured fails to make the payments at the time
36       and in the amount provided in the premium finance agreement, the pre-
37       mium finance company shall mail to the insured a written notice of the
38       intent of the premium finance company to cancel the insurance contract
39       because of the default in payments by the insured unless the default in
40       payments is cured within a time certain stated in the notice, which time
41       shall not be less than 10 days. A copy of such notice shall also be sent to
42       the insurance agent or insurance broker indicated on the premium fi-
43       nance agreements.

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  1           (c) After expiration of such 10 day period, the premium finance com-
  2       pany may thereafter request in the name of the insured, cancellation of
  3       such insurance contract or contracts by mailing to the insurer a notice of
  4       cancellation, and the insurance contract shall be canceled as if such notice
  5       of cancellation had been submitted by the insured, but without requiring
  6       the return of the insurance contract or contracts. The premium finance
  7       company shall also mail a notice of cancellation to the insured at the
  8       insured's last known address and to the insurance agent or insurance
  9       broker producer indicated on the premium finance agreement.
10           (d) All statutory, regulatory, and contractual restrictions providing
11       that the insurance contract may not be canceled unless notice is given to
12       a governmental agency, mortgagee, or other third party shall apply where
13       cancellation is effected under the provisions of this section. The insurer
14       shall give the prescribed notice in behalf of itself or the insured to any
15       governmental agency, mortgagee, or other third party on or before the
16       second business day after the day it receives the notice of cancellation
17       from the premium finance company and shall determine the effective
18       date of cancellation taking into consideration the number of days notice
19       required to complete the cancellation.
20           (e) Whenever a financed insurance contract is canceled, the insurer
21       shall, within 20 days of the effective date of cancellation, return whatever
22       gross unearned premiums are due under the insurance contract to the
23       premium finance company, either directly or via the agent or agency
24       writing the insurance, where an assignment of such funds is included in
25       the premium finance agreement for the account of the insured or in-
26       sureds.
27           (f) In the event that the crediting of return premiums to the account
28       of the insured results in a surplus over the amount due from the insured,
29       the premium finance company shall refund such excess to the insured via
30       the insured's insurance agent or agency, but no such refund shall be
31       required if it amounts to less than $1.
32           Sec. 29. K.S.A. 40-3608 is hereby amended to read as follows: 40-
33       3608. (a) No delinquency proceeding shall be commenced under this
34       section by anyone other than the commissioner and no court shall have
35       jurisdiction to entertain, hear or determine any such proceeding com-
36       menced by any other person.
37           (b) No court shall have jurisdiction to entertain, hear or determine
38       any complaint praying for the dissolution, liquidation, rehabilitation, se-
39       questration, conservation or receivership of any insurer; or praying for an
40       injunction or restraining order or other relief preliminary to, incidental
41       to or relating to such proceedings other than in accordance with this act.
42           (c) In addition to other grounds for jurisdiction provided by law, a
43       court having jurisdiction of the subject matter has jurisdiction over a per-

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  1       son served pursuant to K.S.A. 60-101 et seq. and amendments thereto,
  2       Kansas rules of civil procedure, or other applicable provisions of law in
  3       an action brought by the receiver of a domestic insurer or an alien insurer
  4       domiciled in this state:
  5           (1) If the person served is an agent, broker a producer or other person
  6       who has at any time written policies of insurance for or has acted in any
  7       manner whatsoever on behalf of an insurer against which a delinquency
  8       proceeding has been instituted, in any action resulting from or incident
  9       to such a relationship with the insurer;
10           (2) if the person served is a reinsurer who has at any time entered
11       into a contract of reinsurance with an insurer against which a delinquency
12       proceeding has been instituted, or is an agent or broker a producer of or
13       for the reinsurer, in any action on or incident to the reinsurance contract;
14           (3) if the person served is or has been an officer, director, manager,
15       trustee, organizer, promoter or other person in a position of comparable
16       authority or influence over an insurer against which a delinquency pro-
17       ceeding has been instituted, in any action resulting from or incident to
18       such a relationship with the insurer;
19           (4) if the person served is or was at the time of the institution of the
20       delinquency proceeding against the insurer holding assets in which the
21       receiver claims an interest on behalf of the insurer, in any action con-
22       cerning the assets; or
23           (5) if the person served is obligated to the insurer in any way what-
24       soever, in any action on or incident to the obligation.
25           (d) If the court on motion of any party finds that any action should
26       as a matter of substantial justice be tried in a forum outside this state,
27       the court may enter an appropriate order to stay further proceedings on
28       the action in this state.
29           (e) All actions herein authorized shall be brought in the district court
30       of Shawnee county, Kansas.
31           Sec. 30. K.S.A. 40-3618 is hereby amended to read as follows: 40-
32       3618. (a) The commissioner as rehabilitator may appoint one or more
33       special deputies, who shall have all the powers and responsibilities of the
34       rehabilitator granted under this section, and the commissioner may em-
35       ploy such counsel, clerks and assistants as deemed necessary. The com-
36       pensation of the special deputy, counsel, clerks and assistants and all ex-
37       penses of taking possession of the insurer and of conducting the
38       proceedings shall be fixed by the commissioner, with the approval of the
39       court and shall be paid out of the funds or assets of the insurer. The
40       persons appointed under this section shall serve at the pleasure of the
41       commissioner.
42           (b) The commissioner, as rehabilitator, may appoint an advisory com-
43       mittee of policyholders or other creditors including guaranty associations

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  1       should such a committee be deemed necessary. Such committees shall
  2       serve at the pleasure of the commissioner and shall serve without com-
  3       pensation other than reimbursement for reasonable travel and per diem
  4       living expenses. No other committee of any nature shall be appointed by
  5       the commissioner or the court in rehabilitation proceedings conducted
  6       under this act.
  7           (c) The rehabilitator may take such action as necessary or appropriate
  8       to reform and revitalize the insurer. The rehabilitator shall have all the
  9       powers of the directors, officers and managers, whose authority shall be
10       suspended, except as they are redelegated by the rehabilitator. The re-
11       habilitator shall have full power to direct and manage, to hire and dis-
12       charge employees subject to any contract rights they may have, and to
13       deal with the property and business of the insurer.
14           (d) If it appears to the rehabilitator that there has been criminal or
15       tortious conduct, or breach of any contractual or fiduciary obligation det-
16       rimental to the insurer by any officer, manager, agent, broker, producer,
17       employee or other person, the rehabilitator may pursue all appropriate
18       legal remedies on behalf of the insurer.
19           (e) If the rehabilitator determines that reorganization, consolidation,
20       conversion, reinsurance, merger or other transformation of the insurer is
21       appropriate, the rehabilitator shall prepare a plan to effect such changes.
22       Upon application of the rehabilitator for approval of the plan, and after
23       such notice and hearings as the court may prescribe, the court may either
24       approve or disapprove the plan proposed, or may modify the plan and
25       approve it as modified. Any plan approved under this section shall be, in
26       the judgment of the court, fair and equitable to all parties concerned. If
27       the plan is approved, the rehabilitator shall carry out the plan. In the case
28       of a life insurer, the plan proposed may include the imposition of liens
29       upon the policies of the company, if all rights of shareholders are first
30       relinquished. A plan for a life insurer may also propose imposition of a
31       moratorium upon loan and cash surrender rights under policies, for such
32       period and to such an extent as may be necessary.
33           (f) The rehabilitator shall have the power under K.S.A. 40-3629 and
34       40-3630 to avoid fraudulent transfers.
35           Sec. 31. K.S.A. 40-37a01 is hereby amended to read as follows: 40-
36       37a01. This act may be cited as the business transacted with broker pro-
37       ducer controlled insurer act.
38           Sec. 32. K.S.A. 40-37a02 is hereby amended to read as follows: 40-
39       37a02. As used in this act:
40           (a) ``Accredited state'' means a state in which the insurance depart-
41       ment or regulatory agency has qualified as meeting the minimum financial
42       regulatory standards promulgated and established by the national asso-
43       ciation of insurance commissioners.

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  1           (b) ``Control'' or ``controlled'' has the meaning ascribed in subsection
  2       (c) of K.S.A. 40-3302 and amendments thereto.
  3           (c) ``Controlled insurer'' means a licensed insurer which is controlled,
  4       directly or indirectly by a broker producer.
  5           (d) ``Controlling broker producer'' means a broker producer who, di-
  6       rectly or indirectly, controls an insurer.
  7           (e) ``Licensed insurer'' or ``insurer'' means any person, firm, associa-
  8       tion or corporation duly licensed to transact a property or casualty insur-
  9       ance business in this state. The following, inter alia, are not licensed in-
10       surers for the purposes of this act:
11           (1) All risk retention groups as defined in the superfund amendments
12       reauthorization act of 1986, P. L. No. 99-499, 100 Stat. 1613 (1986); the
13       risk retention act, 15 U.S.C. §3901 et seq. (1982 & Supp. 1986); and
14       K.S.A. 40-4101 et seq. and amendments thereto; and
15           (2) all residual market pools and joint underwriting authorities or as-
16       sociations.
17           (f) ``Broker'' means an insurance broker or brokers as defined in sub-
18       section (a) of K.S.A. 40-3702 and amendments thereto, or any other per-
19       son, firm, association or corporation, when, for any compensation, com-
20       mission or other thing of value, such person, firm, association or
21       corporation acts or aids in any manner in soliciting, negotiating or pro-
22       curing the making of any insurance contract on behalf of an insured other
23       than the person, firm, association or corporation. ``Broker'' does not mean
24       an insurance agent as defined in K.S.A. 40-239 and amendments thereto.
25           Sec. 33. K.S.A. 40-37a04 is hereby amended to read as follows: 40-
26       37a04. (a) (1) The provisions of K.S.A. 40-37a04 shall apply if, in any
27       calendar year, the aggregate amount of gross written premium on busi-
28       ness placed with a controlled insurer by a controlling broker is equal to
29       or greater than five percent of the admitted assets of the controlled in-
30       surer, as reported in the controlled insurer's quarterly statement filed as
31       of September 30 of the prior year.
32           (2) Notwithstanding paragraph (1) of this subsection, the provisions
33       of this section shall not apply if:
34           (A) The controlling broker producer:
35           (i) Places insurance only with the controlled insurer, or only with the
36       controlled insurer and a member or members of the controlled insurer's
37       holding company system, or the controlled insurer's parent, affiliate or
38       subsidiary and receives no compensation based upon the amount of pre-
39       miums written in connection with such insurance; and
40           (ii) accepts insurance placements only from nonaffiliated subprodu-
41       cers, and not directly from insureds; and
42           (B) the controlled insurer, except for insurance business written
43       through a residual market facility established pursuant to Kansas statutes

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  1       or administrative regulations, accepts insurance business only from a con-
  2       trolling broker, a broker producer controlled by the controlled insurer,
  3       or a broker producer that is a subsidiary of the controlled insurer.
  4           (b) A controlled insurer shall not accept business from a controlling
  5       broker producer and a controlling broker shall not place business with a
  6       controlled insurer unless there is a written contract between the con-
  7       trolling broker producer and the insurer specifying the responsibilities of
  8       each party, which contract has been approved by the board of directors
  9       of the insurer and contains the following minimum provisions:
10           (1) The controlled insurer may terminate the contract for cause, upon
11       written notice to the controlling broker producer. The controlled insurer
12       shall suspend the authority of the controlling broker to write business
13       during the pendency of any dispute regarding the cause for the termi-
14       nation;
15           (2) the controlling broker producer shall render accounts to the con-
16       trolled insurer detailing all material transactions, including information
17       necessary to support all commissions, charges and other fees received by,
18       or owing to, the controlling broker producer;
19           (3) the controlling broker producer shall remit all funds due under
20       the terms of the contract to the controlled insurer on at least a monthly
21       basis. The due date shall be fixed so that premiums or installments thereof
22       collected shall be remitted no later than 90 days after the effective date
23       of any policy placed with the controlled insurer under this contract;
24           (4) all funds collected for the controlled insurer's account shall be
25       held by the controlling broker in a fiduciary capacity, in one or more
26       appropriately identified bank accounts in banks that are members of the
27       federal reserve system, in accordance with the provisions of the insurance
28       law as applicable. Notwithstanding the foregoing, funds of a controlling
29       broker producer not required to be licensed in this state shall be main-
30       tained in compliance with the requirements of the controlling broker's
31       producer's state of domicile;
32           (5) the controlling broker producer shall maintain separately identi-
33       fiable records of business written for the controlled insurer;
34           (6) the contract shall not be assigned in whole or in part by the con-
35       trolling broker producer;
36           (7) the controlled insurer shall provide the controlling broker pro-
37       ducer with its underwriting standards, rules and procedures, manuals set-
38       ting forth the rates to be charged, and the conditions for the acceptance
39       or rejection of risks. The controlling broker producer shall adhere to the
40       standards, rules, procedures, rates and conditions. The standards, rules,
41       procedures, rates and conditions shall be the same as those applicable to
42       comparable business placed with the controlled insurer by a broker pro-
43       ducer other than the controlling broker producer;

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  1           (8) the rates and terms of the controlling broker's commissions,
  2       charges or other fees and the purposes for those charges or fees. The
  3       rates of the commissions, charges and other fees shall be no greater than
  4       those applicable to comparable business placed with the controlled in-
  5       surer by brokers producers other than controlling brokers. For purposes
  6       of this paragraph and paragraph (7) of this subsection, examples of ``com-
  7       parable business'' includes the same lines of insurance, same kinds of
  8       insurance, same kinds of risks, similar policy limits, and similar quality of
  9       business;
10           (9) if the contract provides that the controlling broker producer, on
11       insurance business placed with the insurer, is to be compensated contin-
12       gent upon the insurer's profits on that business, then such compensation
13       shall not be determined and paid until at least five years after the pre-
14       miums on liability insurance are earned and at least one year after the
15       premiums are earned on any other insurance. In no event shall the com-
16       mission be paid until the adequacy of the controlled insurer's reserves on
17       remaining claims has been independently verified pursuant to subsection
18       (c) of this section;
19           (10) a limit on the controlling broker's producer's writings in relation
20       to the controlled insurer's surplus and total writings. The insurer may
21       establish a different limit for each line or subline of business. The con-
22       trolled insurer shall notify the controlling broker producer when the ap-
23       plicable limit is approached and shall not accept business from the con-
24       trolling broker producer if the limit is reached. The controlling broker
25       producer shall not place business with the controlled insurer if it has been
26       notified by the controlled insurer that the limit has been reached; and
27           (11) the controlling broker producer may negotiate but shall not bind
28       reinsurance on behalf of the controlled insurer on business the controlling
29       broker places with the controlled insurer, except that the controlling bro-
30       ker producer may bind faculative reinsurance contracts pursuant to oblig-
31       atory faculative agreements if the contract with the controlled insurer
32       contains underwriting guidelines including, for both reinsurance assumed
33       and ceded, a list of reinsurers with which such automatic agreements are
34       in effect, the coverages and amounts or percentages that may be reinsured
35       and commission schedules.
36           (c) Every controlled insurer shall have an audit committee of the
37       board of directors composed of independent directors. The audit com-
38       mittee shall annually meet the management, the insurer's independent
39       certified public accountants, and an independent casualty actuary or other
40       independent loss reserve specialist acceptable to the commissioner to
41       review the adequacy of the insurer's loss reserves.
42           (d) (1) In addition to any other required loss reserve certification,
43       the controlled insurer shall annually, on April 1 of each year, file with the

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  1       commissioner an opinion of an independent casualty actuary or other
  2       independent loss reserve specialist acceptable to the commissioner, re-
  3       porting loss ratios for each line of business written and attesting to the
  4       adequacy of loss reserves established for losses incurred and outstanding
  5       as of year-end, including incurred but not reported losses, on business
  6       placed by the broker producer; and
  7           (2) the controlled insurer shall annually report to the commissioner
  8       the amount of commissions paid to the broker producer, the percentage
  9       such amount represents of the net premiums written and comparable
10       amounts and percentage paid to noncontrolling brokers producers for
11       placements of the same kinds of insurance.
12           Sec. 34. K.S.A. 40-37a05 is hereby amended to read as follows: 40-
13       37a05. The broker producer, prior to the effective date of the policy, shall
14       deliver written notice to the prospective insured disclosing the relation-
15       ship between the broker producer and the controlled insurer; except that,
16       if the business is placed through a person who is not a controlling broker
17       producer, the controlling broker producer shall retain in records a signed
18       commitment from the person that such person is aware of the relationship
19       between the insurer and the broker producer and that the person has or
20       will notify the insured.
21           Sec. 35. K.S.A. 40-37a06 is hereby amended to read as follows: 40-
22       37a06. (a) (1) If the commissioner believes the controlling broker pro-
23       ducer or any other person has not complied with this act, or any regulation
24       or order promulgated hereunder, the commissioner may, after a hearing
25       conducted under the provisions of the Kansas administrative procedures
26       act, order the controlling broker to cease placing business with the con-
27       trolled insurer; and
28           (2) if it was found that because of such noncompliance, the controlled
29       insurer or any policyholder thereof has suffered any loss or damage, the
30       commissioner may maintain a civil action or intervene in an action
31       brought by or on behalf of the insurer or policyholder for recovery of
32       compensatory damages for the benefit of the insurer or policyholder or
33       other appropriate relief.
34           (b) If an order for liquidation or rehabilitation of the controlled in-
35       surer has been entered pursuant to K.S.A. 40-3605 et seq. and amend-
36       ments thereto, and the receiver appointed under that order believes that
37       the controlling broker producer or any other person has not materially
38       complied with this act, or any regulation or order promulgated hereunder,
39       and the insurer suffered any loss or damage therefrom, the receiver may
40       maintain a civil action for recovery of damages or other appropriate sanc-
41       tions for the benefit of the insurer.
42           (c) Nothing contained in this section shall affect the right of the com-
43       missioner to impose any other penalties provided for in chapter 40 of the

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43

  1       Kansas Statutes Annotated.
  2           (d) Nothing contained in this section is intended to or shall in any
  3       manner alter or affect the rights of policyholders, claimants, creditors or
  4       other third parties.
  5           Sec. 36. K.S.A. 40-4103 is hereby amended to read as follows: 40-
  6       4103. Risk retention groups chartered in states other than this state seek-
  7       ing to do business as a risk retention group in this state shall observe and
  8       abide by the laws of this state as follows:
  9           (a) Notice of operations and designation of commissioner as agent.
10       Before offering insurance in this state, a risk retention group shall submit
11       to the commissioner:
12           (1) A statement identifying the state or states in which the risk re-
13       tention group is chartered and licensed as a liability insurance company,
14       date of chartering, its principal place of business and such other infor-
15       mation including information on its membership, as the commissioner of
16       this state may require to verify that the risk retention group is qualified
17       under subsection (k) of K.S.A. 40-4101 and amendments thereto;
18           (2) a copy of its plan of operations or a feasibility study and revisions
19       of such plan or study submitted to its state of domicile; but the provision
20       relating to the submission of a plan of operation or a feasibility study shall
21       not apply with respect to any line or classification of liability insurance
22       which:
23           (A) Was defined in the product liability risk retention act of 1981
24       before October 27, 1986; and
25           (B) was offered before such date by any risk retention group which
26       had been chartered and operating for not less than three years before
27       such date;
28           (3) a statement of registration which designates the commissioner as
29       its agent for the purpose of receiving service of legal documents or pro-
30       cess; and
31           (4) a notification fee in the amount of $250.
32           (b) Financial condition. Any risk retention group doing business in
33       this state shall submit to the commissioner:
34           (1) A copy of the group's financial statement submitted to its state of
35       domicile, which shall be certified by an independent public accountant
36       and contain a statement of opinion on loss and loss adjustment expense
37       reserves made by a member of the American academy of actuaries or a
38       qualified loss reserve specialist (under criteria established by the national
39       association of insurance commissioners);
40           (2) a copy of each examination of the risk retention group as certified
41       by the commissioner or public official conducting the examination;
42           (3) upon request by the commissioner, a copy of any audit performed
43       with respect to the risk retention group; and

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  1           (4) such information as may be required to verify its continuing qual-
  2       ification as a risk retention group under subsection (k) of K.S.A. 40-4101
  3       and amendments thereto.
  4           (c) Taxation. (1) All premiums paid for coverages within this state to
  5       risk retention groups chartered outside this state shall be subject to tax-
  6       ation at the same rate and subject to the same interest, fines and penalties
  7       for nonpayment as that provided by K.S.A. 40-246c and amendments
  8       thereto. Risk retention groups chartered or licensed in this state shall be
  9       taxed in accordance with K.S.A. 40-252, and amendments thereto.
10           (2) To the extent agents or brokers producers are utilized, they shall
11       report and pay the taxes for the premiums for risks which they have placed
12       with or on behalf of a risk retention group not chartered in this state.
13           (3) To the extent agents or brokers producers are not utilized or fail
14       to pay the tax, each risk retention group shall pay the tax for risks insured
15       within the state. Further, each risk retention group shall report all pre-
16       miums paid to it for risks insured within the state.
17           (d) Compliance with unfair claims settlement practices law. Any risk
18       retention group, its agents and representatives, shall comply with subsec-
19       tion (9) (i) of K.S.A. 40-2404 and amendments thereto.
20           (e) Deceptive, false or fraudulent practices. Any risk retention group
21       shall comply with the laws of this state regarding deceptive, false or fraud-
22       ulent acts or practices. However, if the commissioner seeks an injunction
23       regarding such conduct, the injunction shall be obtained from a court of
24       competent jurisdiction.
25           (f) Examination regarding financial condition. Any risk retention
26       group shall submit to an examination in accordance with K.S.A. 40-222
27       and 40-223, and amendments thereto, by the commissioner to determine
28       its financial condition if the commissioner of the jurisdiction in which the
29       group is chartered has not initiated an examination or does not initiate
30       an examination within 60 days after a request by the commissioner of this
31       state.
32           (g) Notice to purchasers. Any policy issued by a risk retention group
33       shall contain in 10 point type on the front page and the declaration page,
34       the following notice:
35            
NOTICE
36              This policy is issued by your risk retention group. Your risk retention group may
37             not be subject to all of the insurance laws and regulations of your state. State insur-
38             ance insolvency guaranty funds are not available for your risk retention group.
39           (h) Prohibited acts regarding solicitation or sale. The following acts
40       by a risk retention group are hereby prohibited:
41           (1) The solicitation or sale of insurance by a risk retention group to
42       any person who is not eligible for membership in such group; and
43           (2) the solicitation or sale of insurance by, or operation of, a risk

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  1       retention group that is in a hazardous financial condition or is financially
  2       impaired.
  3           (i) Prohibition on ownership by an insurance company. No risk re-
  4       tention group shall be allowed to do business in this state if an insurance
  5       company is directly or indirectly a retention group all of whose members
  6       are insurance companies.
  7           (j) Prohibited coverage. No risk retention group may offer insurance
  8       policy coverage prohibited by the laws of this state or declared unlawful
  9       by the supreme court of the state of Kansas.
10           (k) Delinquency proceedings. A risk retention group not chartered in
11       this state and doing business in this state must comply with a lawful order
12       issued in a voluntary dissolution proceeding or in a delinquency proceed-
13       ing commenced by a state insurance commissioner if there has been a
14       finding of financial impairment after an examination under subsection (f)
15       of this section.
16           Sec. 37. K.S.A. 40-4117 is hereby amended to read as follows: 40-
17       4117. A purchasing group may not purchase insurance from a risk reten-
18       tion group that is not chartered in a state or from an insurer not admitted
19       in the state in which the purchasing group is located, unless the purchase
20       is effected through a licensed agent or broker producer acting pursuant
21       to the surplus lines laws and regulations of such state.
22           Sec. 38. K.S.A. 40-4119 is hereby amended to read as follows: 40-
23       4119. Any person acting, or offering to act, as an agent or broker a pro-
24       ducer for a risk retention group, which solicits members, sells insurance
25       coverage, purchases coverage for its members located within the state or
26       otherwise does business in this state shall, before commencing any such
27       activity, obtain a license from the commissioner.
28           Sec. 39. K.S.A. 44-592 is hereby amended to read as follows: 44-592.
29       Any person soliciting the business of workers compensation insurance for
30       a group-funded workers compensation pool must be licensed as provided
31       in K.S.A. 40-240 through 40-243 sections 26 through 33, and amendments
32       thereto, except that no such person shall be required to satisfy the cer-
33       tification requirements regarding insurance companies providing rein-
34       surance, secondary insurance, or excess coverage.
35           New Sec. 40. This act may be cited and shall be known as the Kansas
36       Uniform Insurance Producers License Law.
37           New Sec. 41. (a) ``Biennial due date'' means the date of birth of the
38       licensed insurance producer, limited insurance representative or insur-
39       ance consultant who renews such license or who is required to complete
40       continuing education credits at the end of the biennium following initial
41       licensure or license renewal. The biennial due date of a registered firm
42       shall be the end of the biennium following the date of initial registration
43       with the commissioner or renewal of that registration.

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46

  1           (b) ``Biennium'' means, for producers born in an odd-numbered year,
  2       the period starting with the producer's biennial due date in 1999 and
  3       each two-year period thereafter; for those producers born in an even-
  4       numbered year, the term shall mean the period starting with the pro-
  5       ducer's biennial due date in 2000 and each two-year period thereafter.
  6       The biennium for a registered firm shall be the two-year period following
  7       registration or renewal of that registration.
  8           (c) ``Continuing education credit'' or ``CEC'' equals at least 50
  9       minutes of each clock hour of instruction or the CEC value assigned by
10       the commissioner or commissioner's designee.
11           (d) ``Inactive insurance producer'' means a licensed producer who
12       presents evidence satisfactory to the commissioner which demonstrates
13       such producer will not do any act toward transacting the business of in-
14       surance for not less than two but not more than four years from the date
15       such evidence is received by the commissioner.
16           (e) ``Insurance'' means any of the classes of insurance found in Chap-
17       ter 40 of the Kansas Statutes Annotated.
18           (f) ``Insurance producer'' or ``producer'' means an individual who so-
19       licits, negotiates, effects, procures, renews, continues or binds policies of
20       insurance covering persons, property or risks located in Kansas, whether
21       the individual represents the insured or the insurance company. ``Insur-
22       ance producer'' and ``producer'' shall include surplus lines producer and
23       insurance consultant, unless stated otherwise in this act. Wherever the
24       term ``agent'' or ``broker'' appears in the insurance code it shall mean
25       ``insurance producer.''
26           (g) ``License'' means a document authorizing an individual to act as
27       an insurance producer, surplus lines producer, limited insurance repre-
28       sentative, temporary insurance producer or insurance consultant, as spec-
29       ified in such document.
30           (h) ``Limited insurance representative'' means an individual ap-
31       pointed by an insurance company or registered firm to represent that
32       company or firm regarding the types of insurance set forth in section 10.
33           (i) ``Registered firm'' means a corporation, sole proprietorship or
34       partnership which transacts the business of insurance as an insurance
35       agency.
36           (j) ``State'' shall include the District of Columbia, U.S. territories,
37       Canadian territories and states of foreign countries.
38           (k) ``Surplus lines producer'' means any producer licensed under
39       K.S.A. 40-246b et seq., and amendments thereto, to negotiate the con-
40       tracts of insurance specified under K.S.A. 40-246b, and amendments
41       thereto.
42           New Sec. 42. (a) No person shall act as or hold oneself out to be an
43       insurance producer unless duly licensed in accordance with this act for

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  1       the class or classes of insurance as to which the person acts as an insurance
  2       producer.
  3           (b) No person shall engage in the business of offering any advice,
  4       counsel, opinion or service with respect to the benefits, advantages or
  5       disadvantages under any policy of insurance that could be issued in Kan-
  6       sas, unless that person is:
  7           (1) A licensed insurance producer, limited insurance representative
  8       or temporary insurance producer offering advice concerning a class of
  9       insurance as to which the person is licensed to transact business;
10           (2) engaged or employed as an attorney licensed to practice law, ex-
11       cept when soliciting insurance business;
12           (3) a trust officer of a bank performing duties incidental to the po-
13       sition, except when soliciting insurance business;
14           (4) an actuary or a certified public accountant engaged or employed
15       in a consulting capacity, performing duties incidental to that position; or
16           (5) a licensed insurance consultant.
17           (c) In addition to any other penalty set forth in this act, any person
18       violating paragraph (a) or (b) is guilty of a class A nonperson misde-
19       meanor. Any person violating paragraph (a) or (b) and misappropriating
20       or converting any moneys collected in conjunction with such violation is
21       guilty of a severity level 8, nonperson felony.
22           New Sec. 43. All policies the solicitation of which involves an insur-
23       ance producer, limited insurance representative or registered firm shall
24       identify the name of such producer, representative or firm. All policy
25       applications, to include individual life or accident and health applications
26       and master policy applications for life or accident and health group cov-
27       erages, shall bear the printed or typed name and signature of the licensee
28       who solicited and wrote the application.
29           New Sec. 44. (a) Each application for an insurance producer license
30       shall be made on a form specified by the commissioner, and shall be
31       signed by the applicant declaring under penalty of refusal, suspension or
32       revocation of the license that the statements made in the application are
33       true, correct and complete to the best of the applicant's knowledge and
34       belief. Before approving the application, the commissioner shall be sat-
35       isfied that the applicant (1) is at least 18 years of age; (2) is competent,
36       trustworthy and of good business reputation; (3) has, pursuant to this act,
37       filed an E&O policy which is in force and effect or is exempt from the
38       requirement of filing such policy; and (4) has paid the fees required by
39       this act.
40           (b) Applicants for an insurance producer, limited insurance repre-
41       sentative, surplus lines and insurance consultant license shall pass a writ-
42       ten examination unless exempt pursuant to sections 46 and 48. The ex-
43       amination shall reasonably test the knowledge of the applicant concerning

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  1       the class or classes of insurance for which a license is applied, the duties
  2       and responsibilities of an insurance producer and the insurance laws and
  3       rules and regulations of the state of Kansas. The examinations provided
  4       for by this section shall be conducted under rules and regulations pre-
  5       scribed by the commissioner. The commissioner may make arrangements,
  6       including contracting with an outside testing service, for administering
  7       such examinations and collecting the nonrefundable testing fee provided
  8       for by this act.
  9           If an applicant fails to satisfactorily complete an examination, the ap-
10       plicant may retake the examination following a waiting period of not less
11       than seven days from the date of the last attempt. After a second unsuc-
12       cessful attempt to pass the examination, the applicant must wait until six
13       months from the date of the last attempt to retake the examination. After
14       the third unsuccessful attempt, the applicant must petition the commis-
15       sioner of insurance for permission to retake the examination, stating those
16       facts which would justify the conclusion any additional attempts to take
17       the exam would be successful.
18           Each applicant required to take an examination shall pay the exami-
19       nation fee required by the commissioner and shall separately submit the
20       application for license to the commissioner, together with the fees re-
21       quired by this act. An applicant who fails to appear for the examination
22       as scheduled, or appears but fails to pass, shall not be entitled to any
23       refund, and shall be required to submit a new request for examination
24       together with all of the requisite fees before being rescheduled for an-
25       other examination at a later date.
26           (c) Before each license renewal, an insurance producer shall satisfac-
27       torily complete at least 15 hours of continuing education in accordance
28       with rules and regulations prescribed by the commissioner. An insurance
29       producer holding only a crop insurance, title insurance, bail bond agent,
30       auto rental agent or prearranged funeral license shall satisfactorily com-
31       plete at least five hours of continuing education in accordance with rules
32       and regulations prescribed by the commissioner.
33           Licensees who hold both property or casualty and life or variable con-
34       tracts or accident and health licenses, or any combination thereof, and
35       who earn CECs from courses certified by the commissioner as qualifying
36       for credit in any class, may apply those CECs toward either the property
37       or casualty or life or accident and health or variable contracts continuing
38       education requirement. However, a CEC shall not be applied to satisfy
39       requirements for both property and casualty or life, accident and health
40       or variable contracts requirements or any combination of those require-
41       ments.
42           The commissioner may not approve a course of study unless the course
43       provides for classroom, seminar, or self-study instruction methods. Class-

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  1       room study shall include courses provided by teleconferencing approved
  2       by the commissioner. A course given in a combination instruction method
  3       of classroom or seminar and self-study shall be deemed to be a self-study
  4       course unless the classroom or seminar certified hours meets or exceed
  5       2/3 of total hours certified for the course. The self-study material used in
  6       the combination course must be directly related to and complement the
  7       classroom portion of the course in order to be considered for credit. An
  8       instruction method other than classroom or seminar shall be considered
  9       as self-study methodology. Self-study credit hours require the successful
10       completion of an examination covering the self-study material, which shall
11       not be self-evaluated. Provided, however, that if the self-study material
12       is completed through the use of a computerized interactive format ap-
13       proved by the commissioner, to include appropriate validation of suc-
14       cessful completion of the self-study material, no additional examination
15       shall be required.
16           (d) If the required report showing proof of continuing education
17       completion is not received by the commissioner by the biennial due date,
18       the individual producer's qualification and corresponding license or li-
19       censes shall be automatically suspended for a period of 90 calendar days
20       or until the producer satisfactorily demonstrates completion of the con-
21       tinuing education requirement, whichever is sooner, and the penalty re-
22       quired by new section 61 shall be assessed for each licensee suspended.
23       If such proof is not submitted within 90 calendar days of the biennial due
24       date, the individual producer's license or licenses shall automatically ex-
25       pire. An applicant for an individual producer's license who previously held
26       a license which was terminated for failure to complete continuing edu-
27       cation requirements and who seeks relicensing must complete all contin-
28       uing education requirements the applicant would have been required to
29       complete had the applicant's license not expired before an application for
30       relicensing will be accepted, and pay the reinstatement fee required by
31       section 61.
32           (e) The holder of any license shall inform the commissioner in writing
33       of a change in the licenseholder's residential or business address within
34       30 days of such change.
35           (f) Each provider of a continuing education course required by this
36       section shall pay an annual registration fee and course registration fees
37       for each course being registered as provided by this act.
38           (g) The commissioner shall accept compliance with continuing edu-
39       cation requirements of this section by nonresident producers if the pro-
40       ducers submit certification from the insurance supervisory authority in
41       the producer's home state affirming that the producer is in compliance
42       with the continuing education requirements of that jurisdiction.
43           (h) The commissioner, in cases of medical hardship, military service,

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  1       or circumstances outside the control of the licensee, may extend the time
  2       within which to fulfill the continuing education requirements of the li-
  3       censee for a period not to exceed 180 days.
  4           (i) This section shall not apply to inactive insurance producers during
  5       the period of inactivity. Upon return to active status or expiration of the
  6       maximum inactive period, the producer shall have 180 days to comply
  7       with continuing education requirements.
  8           New Sec. 45. (a) An individual who is at least 18 years of age and
  9       whom the commissioner considers to be competent, trustworthy and of
10       good business reputation may obtain a limited insurance representative
11       license, without obtaining an insurance producer license, for one or more
12       of the following classes:
13           (1) Crop insurance;
14           (2) burial or funeral pre-need contracts;
15           (3) title insurance;
16           (4) bail bond agents;
17           (5) auto rental agents; and
18           (6) travel insurance agents who act only as agents for transportation
19       tickets of common carriers.
20           (b) The application for a limited insurance representative license shall
21       be submitted on a form prescribed by the commissioner.
22           (c) A limited insurance representative may represent more than one
23       insurance company.
24           (d) An auto rental agency may offer or sell insurance only in connec-
25       tion with and incidental to the rental of motor vehicles, whether at the
26       rental office or by pre-selection of coverage in a master, corporate or
27       group rental agreement, in any of the following general categories: (1)
28       Personal accident insurance covering risks of travel, (2) motor vehicle
29       liability insurance, (3) personal effects insurance providing coverage to
30       renters and other occupants of the motor vehicle, (4) roadside assistance
31       and emergency sickness protection programs, and (5) any other travel or
32       auto-related coverage an auto rental company may offer in connection
33       with and incidental to rental of motor vehicles. No insurance may be
34       issued by a limited insurance representative unless the rental period of
35       the rental agreement does not exceed 90 consecutive days and brochures
36       and other written material clearly and correctly explaining insurance cov-
37       erages offered by the agency are available for prospective renters and
38       clear and complete disclosures are provided to prospective renters that
39       such coverage may be duplicative of other insurance owned by the renter,
40       that purchase of insurance coverage is not a condition for renting a motor
41       vehicle and describing the process for filing a claim.
42           Auto rental agencies employing limited insurance representatives shall
43       conduct a training program for each representative, providing instruction

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  1       on the kinds of insurance coverage offered by the agency.
  2           No auto rental agent or auto rental agency shall offer or solicit any
  3       insurance other than the coverages described in this section without an
  4       appropriate insurance producer license. No auto rental agent or auto
  5       rental agency shall advertise or otherwise hold themselves out as licensed
  6       insurers, insurance producers or insurance brokers.
  7           New Sec. 46. The commissioner may issue rules and regulations gov-
  8       erning issuance of the following licenses:
  9           (a) Insurance producer. (1) An applicant who has met the require-
10       ments of section 44 shall be issued a biennial insurance producer license.
11           (2) Each insurance producer license shall remain in effect until the
12       producer's next biennial due date. The biennial fee required by this act
13       shall not be required of a licensed insurance producer who enters the
14       military service of the United States. This waiver shall continue in effect
15       until such time as the insurance producer is discharged from military
16       service. Proof of compliance with continuing education requirements
17       shall be waived for the first 15 months of military service.
18           (3) An insurance producer who does not maintain an insurance pro-
19       ducer license in effect pursuant to this section may, within 24 months
20       from the due date of the unpaid biennial fee, make application for the
21       same license without the necessity of passing a written examination. Pay-
22       ment of the fee required by section 61 and proof an E&O liability policy
23       is in force must accompany the application. In addition, proof of compli-
24       ance with continuing education requirements must accompany the ap-
25       plication, where applicable.
26           (b) Limited insurance representative. (1) An applicant who has met
27       the requirements of section 10 shall be issued a limited insurance rep-
28       resentative license.
29           (2) Each limited insurance representative license shall remain in ef-
30       fect until the representative's next biennial due date. Failure to pay the
31       license fee or to submit the required documents shall cause immediate
32       termination of the limited insurance representative license. Limited in-
33       surance representatives shall report proof of continuing education com-
34       pliance in accordance with section 44.
35           (3) Each limited insurance representative license may be terminated
36       by the insurance company, agency or registered firm employing the rep-
37       resentative.
38           (c) License content. Each license shall contain the name, residential
39       address and personal identification number of the licensee, the date the
40       license was issued, general conditions relative to the license's expiration
41       or termination, the class or classes of insurance covered by the license,
42       and any other information the commissioner considers proper.
43           New Sec. 47. (a) A nonresident may apply for an insurance producer

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  1       license or limited insurance representative license, without testing, if the
  2       applicant holds a similar license from the state of residence, provided the
  3       public official having supervision of insurance in the applicant's state of
  4       residence certifies the applicant is qualified under that state's law to be
  5       licensed for the classes of insurance applied for. If the nonresident ap-
  6       plicant holds no such license, the applicant shall be required to complete
  7       the appropriate examinations required by section 44.
  8           (b) A nonresident applicant shall file with the commissioner an affi-
  9       davit appointing the commissioner and the commissioner's successor in
10       office as such applicant's agent upon whom all lawful process in any ac-
11       tion, suit or legal proceeding against the applicant may be served, and
12       shall agree that any such lawful process is of the same legal force and
13       validity as personal service of process upon such applicant. The commis-
14       sioner, within 10 days after receiving process, shall forward a copy of such
15       process by registered or certified mail to the individual for whom the
16       commissioner has received such process at the individual's address of
17       record.
18           New Sec. 48. (a) Any individual holding a valid license issued prior
19       to July 1, 1998, is exempt from the examination requirements regarding
20       the classes of insurance for which the individual's license is held.
21           (b) An applicant who becomes a resident of this state and who files
22       with the commissioner certification by the public official having super-
23       vision of insurance in the applicant's prior state of residence affirming the
24       applicant has an insurance license in good standing in that state during
25       the prior 12 months shall be required by the commissioner to take only
26       that portion of the examination pertaining to Kansas law and any classes
27       of insurance as to which the applicant has applied for a license, which
28       classes are not covered under the license the applicant held in the other
29       state.
30           New Sec. 49. (a) Any corporation, sole proprietorship or partnership
31       transacting insurance business as an insurance agency shall register with
32       the commissioner before transacting insurance business in this state. Such
33       registration shall remain in effect as long as the firm pays the biennial fee
34       required by section 43 by the due date, unless the registration is revoked
35       or suspended pursuant to this act.
36           (b) Each firm required to register before acting as a registered firm
37       pursuant to this act shall appoint one or more licensed insurance pro-
38       ducers who are owners, officers, directors or partners in the firm to be
39       responsible for the firm's compliance with the insurance laws of this state.
40       Such individual or individuals shall submit to the commissioner a regis-
41       tration form and the fees required by section 61. The commissioner shall
42       prescribe the registration form and may require any documents reason-
43       ably necessary to verify the information contained in the registration form.

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  1       Within 30 days of a change in officers, directors or partners who are
  2       appointed to be responsible for the firm's compliance with the insurance
  3       laws of this state, the firm shall report the change to the department.
  4           (c)  The registered firm shall inform the commissioner in writing of
  5       a change in its business address within 30 days of such change.
  6           (d) Each registered firm shall disclose its members, officers or direc-
  7       tors who are authorized to act as insurance producers, and report any
  8       changes in such personnel to the commissioner within 30 days of such
  9       changes.
10           (e) Failure to register or provide required information under this sec-
11       tion shall subject the registered firm or producer to a monetary penalty
12       of $10 per day for each working day the required information or regis-
13       tration is late, subject to a maximum of $50 per calendar year.
14           New Sec. 50. (a) The commissioner may grant a temporary insurance
15       producer license to an applicant, without requiring an examination, for a
16       period of 90 days, in the following cases: (1) To the executor or admin-
17       istrator of the estate of a licensed insurance producer, or the surviving
18       next of kin of such person, if no executor or administrator has been ap-
19       pointed; (2) to the designee of a licensed agent who shall enter upon
20       active service in the armed forces of the United States; or (3) to the
21       designee of a licensed agent who becomes disabled because of sickness
22       or injury. The commissioner in the commissioner's discretion may renew
23       such licenses for an additional term or terms of 90 days each, not ex-
24       ceeding 15 months in the aggregate.
25           (b) Before any temporary insurance producer license may be ap-
26       proved by the commissioner, there shall be filed with the commissioner
27       an application and the fee required by section 61.
28           New Sec. 51. A temporary insurance producer license issued under
29       section 50 authorizes the person named therein to renew any business of
30       the insurance producer or the registered firm whose business is being
31       conducted thereunder which would expire during the term of such li-
32       cense, to collect premiums due and payable to the estate, producer or
33       registered firm, and to perform such other acts of an insurance producer
34       as are incidental to the continuance of any insurance business of the
35       producer or registered firm.
36           No person so licensed, by virtue of such license, shall be authorized to
37       solicit, negotiate or procure new insurance, unless they also hold a valid
38       producer or limited insurance representative license for the solicited busi-
39       ness.
40           New Sec. 52. (a) Any insurance company or registered firm which
41       terminates an agency contract or agreement with an insurance producer
42       or limited insurance representative, if the cause for such termination is
43       any of the causes for revocation or suspension of a license listed in section

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  1       56, shall notify the commissioner of such termination within 30 days
  2       thereafter. The insurance company or registered firm shall provide the
  3       commissioner with information, documents, records or statements per-
  4       taining to the termination which may be used by the commissioner in any
  5       action taken pursuant to section 56. There shall be no liability on the part
  6       of, nor shall a cause of action of any nature arise against, the commis-
  7       sioner, the insurance company, registered firm or an authorized repre-
  8       sentative of them for any information, documents, records or statements
  9       provided pursuant to this section. The commissioner shall terminate
10       forthwith the license of a limited insurance representative whose termi-
11       nated appointment has been reported by the terminating insurance com-
12       pany or registered firm under this section.
13           (b) Failure of any insurance company or registered firm to comply
14       with the requirements of paragraph (a) results in a civil penalty of $1,000
15       for each violation, in addition to such other penalties as may be provided
16       by the insurance laws of Kansas.
17           New Sec. 53. Any individual who, while licensed as an insurance pro-
18       ducer, limited insurance representative or temporary insurance producer,
19       is convicted of a felony, shall report such conviction to the commissioner
20       within 30 days of the entry date of the judgment. Within that 30 day
21       period, the individual shall also provide the commissioner with a copy of
22       the judgment, the probation or commitment order and any other relevant
23       documents.
24           New Sec. 54. (a) Any person, partnership, association or corporation
25       licensed by the commissioner who due to employment with the depart-
26       ment is required to surrender such license pursuant to K.S.A. 40-110,
27       and amendments thereto, shall be allowed to reapply for a license upon
28       termination of service with the commissioner and the payment of appli-
29       cable fees. Such applicants shall not be required to take an examination,
30       except for any new class of insurance for which the applicant was not
31       previously licensed, or certify completion of continuing education
32       requirements for the period of such service.
33           (b) Any licensee may apply for inactive producer status. All requests
34       for inactive status shall be made in writing to the commissioner. After a
35       license has been inactive for four years or more, the licensee must meet
36       all the standards of a new applicant before the license may be restored
37       to active status. If requests for inactive status are not renewed as set forth
38       above, the license will be taken off the inactive status and the license will
39       lapse immediately.
40           New Sec. 55. An insurance producer may place insurance business
41       for which the insurance producer is licensed with any insurer for which
42       the insurance producer is not a producer, so long as a contract authorizing
43       that producer to place business with such insurer has been signed before

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  1       receipt of commission for that business.
  2           New Sec. 56. License suspension, revocation or denial. (a) Any li-
  3       cense issued under this act may be suspended or revoked, and any ap-
  4       plication for a license may be denied, if the commissioner finds the li-
  5       censee or applicant has:
  6           (1) Willfully violated any provision of the insurance laws of Kansas or
  7       any rule or regulation promulgated by the commissioner;
  8           (2) intentionally made a material misstatement in an application for
  9       a license;
10           (3) obtained or attempted to obtain a license through misrepresen-
11       tation or fraud;
12           (4) misappropriated or converted or improperly withheld money re-
13       quired to be held in a fiduciary capacity;
14           (5) intentionally misrepresented the terms of any actual or proposed
15       insurance policy;
16           (6) in the transaction of business under such license, used fraudulent,
17       coercive or dishonest practices, or has demonstrated incompetence, un-
18       trustworthiness or financial irresponsibility;
19           (7) been, within the past 3 years, convicted of a felony, unless the
20       individual demonstrates to the commissioner sufficient rehabilitation to
21       warrant the public trust;
22           (8) knowingly accepted insurance business from an individual who is
23       not licensed;
24           (9) failed to appear without reasonable cause or excuse in response
25       to a subpoena lawfully issued by the commissioner;
26           (10) had such license suspended or revoked or application denied in
27       any other state, district, territory or province on grounds similar to those
28       stated in this section;
29           (11) violated any of the provisions of this act;
30           (12) failed to report a felony conviction; or
31           (13) knowingly employed, contracted or engaged in any insurance
32       related capacity any person whose license as an insurance producer or
33       limited insurance representative or insurance consultant has been re-
34       voked within the previous three years or whose request for a license has
35       been refused or suspended pursuant to this section at the time of such
36       employment, engaging or contracting.
37           (b) Suspension or revocation of a license or the denial of an appli-
38       cation pursuant to this act shall be by written order sent to the licensee
39       or applicant by certified or registered mail at the address specified in the
40       records of the department. The licensee or applicant may in writing re-
41       quest a hearing within 30 days of the date of mailing. If no written request
42       is made, such order shall be final upon the expiration of the 30 days.
43           (c) If the licensee or applicant requests a hearing pursuant to this

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56

  1       section the commissioner shall issue a written notice of hearing sent to
  2       the licensee or applicant by certified or registered mail and the licensee's
  3       or applicant's address, as specified in the records of the department, stat-
  4       ing:
  5           (1) The grounds, charges or conduct which justifies suspension or
  6       revocation or denial;
  7           (2) a specific time for the hearing, which may not be less than 20 nor
  8       more than 30 days after mailing of notice of the hearing; and
  9           (3) a specific place for the hearing.
10           (d) Upon the suspension or revocation of a license, the licensee or
11       other person having possession or custody of such license shall promptly
12       deliver it to the department in person or by mail.
13           (e) Any individual whose license is revoked or whose application is
14       denied pursuant to this section shall be ineligible to apply for any license
15       for three years. No person whose license as an insurance producer or
16       limited representative has been revoked, suspended or denied shall be
17       employed, contracted or engaged in any insurance related capacity during
18       the time the revocation, suspension or denial is in effect.
19           (f) In addition to or instead of a denial, suspension or revocation or
20       a license pursuant to this section, the licensee may be subjected to a civil
21       penalty of up to $1,000 for each cause for denial, suspension or revoca-
22       tion.
23           New Sec. 57. (a) The commissioner may investigate any applicant
24       for or holder of an insurance producer license, limited insurance repre-
25       sentative license, temporary insurance producer license or any registered
26       firm.
27           (b) All persons being investigated, as well as their officers, directors,
28       insurance producers, limited insurance representatives and temporary in-
29       surance producers, shall provide to the commissioner convenient and free
30       access, at all reasonable hours at their offices, to all books, records, doc-
31       uments and other papers relating to such persons' insurance business
32       affairs. The officers, directors, insurance producers, limited insurance
33       representatives, temporary insurance producers and employees shall fa-
34       cilitate and aid the commissioner in such examinations as much as it is in
35       their power to do so.
36           (c) The commissioner may designate an investigator or investigators
37       to conduct any investigation pursuant to this section. The commissioner
38       or the commissioner's designee may administer oaths and examine under
39       oath any individual relative to the business of the person being investi-
40       gated.
41           (d) The investigators designated by the commissioner pursuant to this
42       section may make reports to the commissioner. Any report alleging sub-
43       stantive violations of law or rules and regulations of the commissioner

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  1       shall be in writing and be based on facts ascertained from the books,
  2       records, documents, papers, statements and other evidence obtained by
  3       the examiners. The report of an investigation shall be verified by the
  4       investigators.
  5           (e) If a report is made, the commissioner shall either deliver a du-
  6       plicate thereof to the person being investigated or send such duplicate
  7       by certified or registered mail to the person's address of record. The
  8       commissioner shall afford the person an opportunity to demand a hearing
  9       pursuant to the Kansas administrative procedures act with reference to
10       the facts and other evidence contained in the report.
11           (f) Any person who violates or aids and abets any violation of a written
12       order issued under this section shall be guilty of a class A nonperson
13       misdemeanor and such person's license may be revoked or suspended
14       pursuant to this act.
15           New Sec. 58. No insurance company, insurance producer, limited
16       insurance representative, insurance consultant or registered firm shall
17       pay, directly or indirectly, any commission, service fee, brokerage or other
18       valuable consideration to any person for services as an insurance pro-
19       ducer, temporary insurance producer or limited insurance representative,
20       or for such services by the person's members, officers, directors or em-
21       ployees, unless the person, and any member, officer, director or employee
22       performing such service held a valid license regarding the class of insur-
23       ance as to which such service was rendered, or unless the person was a
24       properly registered firm at the time such service was performed. No per-
25       son, other than a person properly licensed or registered in accordance
26       with this act at the time the person performs services as an insurance
27       producer, temporary insurance producer, insurance consultant or limited
28       insurance representative shall accept any commission, service fee, bro-
29       kerage or other valuable consideration for such services. This section shall
30       not prevent payment or receipt of renewal or other deferred commissions
31       to or by any person entitled thereto.
32           Except for commissions deductible from premiums on insurance pol-
33       icies or contracts for insurance, no insurance producer, limited insurance
34       representative, insurance consultant, or registered firm has any right to
35       compensation from any insured or prospective insured for or on account
36       of the transaction of insurance business, except for fees properly charged
37       by an insurance consultant pursuant to this act.
38           New Sec. 59. A producer who negotiates, renews or continues a con-
39       tract of insurance, including any type of annuity by an insurance company
40       lawfully doing business in this state, and who receives any money or sub-
41       stitute for money as a premium for such a contract from the insured,
42       whether the producer is entitled to any interest in the premium, shall be
43       deemed to hold such premium in trust for the company. If such producer

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  1       fails to pay the same to the company after written demand made upon
  2       such producer, less such producer's commission and any deductions per-
  3       mitted by contract with that company, such failure shall be prima facie
  4       evidence such producer has used or applied the premium for a purpose
  5       other than paying the same over to the company. A producer who violates
  6       this section shall be guilty of a: (a) severity level 7, nonperson felony if
  7       the value of the premium is $25,000 or more; (b) severity level 9, non-
  8       person felony if the value of the premium is at least $500 but less than
  9       $25,000; or (c) class A nonperson misdemeanor if the value of the pre-
10       mium is less than $500, except if the value of the premium is less than
11       $500 and such producer has been convicted of violating this section two
12       or more times within five years immediately preceding commission of the
13       crime, shall be guilty of a severity level 9, nonperson felony.
14           New Sec. 60. (a) Each licensed producer, surplus line producer, lim-
15       ited insurance representative, insurance consultant and registered firm
16       shall maintain in force, while licensed, an errors and omissions liability
17       policy covering the individual producer or registered firm in an amount
18       of not less than $100,000 total liability limit per occurrence, subject to
19       not less than $500,000 annual aggregate for all claims made during the
20       policy period or covering the individual or registered firm under blanket
21       liability policy or policies, which policy or policies can include other cov-
22       erage on an excess basis over $100,000 primary insuring other insurance
23       producers in an amount of not less than $100,000 total liability limit per
24       occurrence subject to not less than $500,000 annual aggregate for all
25       claims made during the policy period. Such policy shall be issued by an
26       admitted insurance company or authorized surplus lines insurer for errors
27       and omissions of the producer or registered firm. Self-retention shall be
28       permitted on liability policies covering a producer or registered firm. This
29       section shall not apply to limited insurance representatives, except that
30       registered firms or insurers may include such representatives as covered
31       persons in policies covering producers and others in the firm or company.
32           (b) Authorized insurance producers of a registered firm may meet
33       the requirements of this section with a policy in the name of the registered
34       firm.
35           (c) The policy required by this section shall not be required for pro-
36       ducers who are on inactive status or for temporary licensees.
37           New Sec. 61. (a) The fees required by this act are as follows:
38           (1) An initial license fee of $30 for filing an initial application for
39       producer, limited insurance representative, or temporary insurance pro-
40       ducer licensed together with the first biennial registration of $60;
41           (2) a biennial registration fee of $60 at the biennial due date of each
42       producer or limited insurance representative;
43           (3) a fee of $150 for the initial issuance of an insurance consultant

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  1       licensed
  2           (4) a biennial registration fee of $50 at the biennial due date of each
  3       insurance consultant;
  4           (5) an initial fee $60 for a business firm to register and a biennial
  5       registration fee of $60 at each biennial due date for the firm;
  6           (6) an annual registration fee of $100 for a continuing education pro-
  7       vider to register;
  8           (7) an annual registration fee of $50 for each continuing education
  9       course registered, or $250 per year for all courses, whichever is less; and
10           (8) a license reinstatement fee of $100 for reinstating a license which
11       lapsed because the applicant failed to comply with continuing education
12       certification or because the registered firm's biennial registration fee was
13       not received.
14           (b) Every domestic insurer, fraternal benefit society or health main-
15       tenance organization which contract with an insurance producer or lim-
16       ited insurance representative in this state shall be required to pay an
17       annual fee of $2 for every such producer or representative contracted
18       with in the state of Kansas in the year preceding their report of that
19       contract. Every foreign or alien insurer, fraternal benefit society or health
20       maintenance organization which contracts with an insurance producer or
21       limited insurance representative in this state shall be required to pay an
22       annual fee of $5 for every such producer or representative contracted
23       with in the state of Kansas in the year preceding their report.
24           (c) Foreign, domestic and alien insurers, fraternal benefit societies,
25       and health maintenance organizations shall report the number of pro-
26       ducers contracted with on the returns required by K.S.A. 40-252, and
27       amendments thereto.
28           New Sec. 62. Exemptions. The provisions of this act shall not apply
29       to:
30           (a) Any regularly salaried officer or employee of an insurance com-
31       pany who is engaged in the performance of usual and customary execu-
32       tive, administrative or clerical duties, other than the solicitation of insur-
33       ance;
34           (b) salaried employees of any property and casualty insurance pro-
35       ducer or registered firm, who devote their full time to clerical and ad-
36       ministrative services, including the soliciting of appointments with poten-
37       tial insureds for licensed producers, to include asking the potential
38       insured for the expiration dates of their current insurance, and receipt of
39       premiums in the office of their employer, as long as such employees do
40       not solicit insurance, provide insurance advice to insureds, receive any
41       commissions on such applications and their compensation is not varied
42       by the volume of applications or premium taken or received. Soliciting of
43       appointments on behalf of licensed insurance producers is not soliciting

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  1       insurance or transacting the business of insurance;
  2           (c) persons who secure and furnish information for the purpose of
  3       group life insurance, group annuities, group or blanket accident and
  4       health insurance, or for the purpose of enrolling individuals under such
  5       plans, issuing certificates under such plans or otherwise assisting in the
  6       administering such plans, where no commission is paid for such service;
  7           (d) officers or employees of advisory organizations, employee trust
  8       plans or insurance companies who are engaging in the inspection, rating
  9       or classification of risks, or in the supervision of the training of insurance
10       producers, limited insurance representatives or temporary insurance pro-
11       ducers, and who are not individually engaged in the solicitation or ne-
12       gotiation of policies or contracts for insurance.
13           New Sec. 63. A person who acts or holds oneself out as an insurance
14       producer, limited insurance representative, surplus lines producer, in-
15       surance consultant or temporary insurance producer without holding a
16       valid and current license under this act is engaged in the unauthorized
17       business of insurance. An action in injunction or quo warranto may be
18       brought by the commissioner in the name of the state of Kansas to enjoin
19       the person from performing any such unauthorized acts. The attorney
20       general of the state or the district or county attorney of any county, at
21       the request of the commissioner, shall render such assistance as may be
22       necessary in carrying out the provisions of this section.
23           The court, if satisfied by affidavit or otherwise that such person has
24       been engaged in the unauthorized business of insurance, may enter a
25       temporary restraining order without notice or bond, enjoining the defend-
26       ant from further engaging in such conduct. A copy of the verified com-
27       plaint shall be served on the defendant and the proceedings shall there-
28       after be conducted as in other civil cases. If it is established the defendant
29       has been or is engaged in any such unlawful business, the court may enter
30       an order of judgment perpetually enjoining the defendant from further
31       engaging in such conduct. The court, in its discretion, may apportion the
32       costs among the parties, including the commissioner's cost of investigat-
33       ing, the cost of filing the complaint, service of process, witness fees and
34       expenses, court reporter charges, and reasonable attorney fees. The in-
35       junctive relief available under this section is in addition to, and not in lieu
36       of, all other penalties and remedies provided in this act.
37           The authority conferred by this statute shall be in addition to, and not
38       in lieu of, authority to prosecute criminally any person unlawfully engaged
39       in the business of insurance.
40           It shall be a class A misdemeanor for any person to engage in the
41       unauthorized business of insurance. For purposes of this act, the person
42       shall be construed as being engaged in the unauthorized business insur-
43       ance if such person acts as or hold oneself out as an insurance producer,

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  1       limited insurance representative, surplus lines producer, insurance con-
  2       sultant, temporary insurance producer or titles of similar import, without
  3       a valid and current license to conduct the business of insurance issued by
  4       the department. The attorney general of the state or the district or county
  5       attorney of any county, at the request of the commissioner, shall initiate
  6       criminal proceedings in the county in which the prohibited acts occurred.
  7           New Sec. 64. (a) ``Insurance consultant'' means any person who, for
  8       a fee, engages in the business of offering to the public any advice, counsel,
  9       opinion or service with respect to insurable risks, or concerning the ben-
10       efits, coverages or provisions under any policy of insurance that could be
11       issued in this state, or involving the advantages or disadvantages of any
12       such policy of insurance, or any formal plan of managing pure risk or the
13       investigation and adjustment of property and casualty losses in this state.
14           (b) ``Risk manager'' means any person who is a full-time employee
15       who deals with matters of insurance within the scope of such employ-
16       ment, including the supervision of employee benefits.
17           (c) ``Person'' means any individual, corporation, partnership, limited
18       liability company or other entity.
19           (d) ``Pure risk'' means any risk that involves the chance of loss or no
20       loss only with no possibility of gain.
21           New Sec. 65. No person, in or on advertisements, cards, signs, cir-
22       culars, letterheads, or elsewhere or in any other manner by which public
23       announcements are made, shall use the title insurance consultant, risk
24       manager, adjuster or any similar title or any title, word, combination of
25       words or abbreviation indicating that such person gives or is engaged in
26       the business of offering to the public any advice, counsel, opinion, or
27       service with respect to insurable risks, concerning the benefits, coverages
28       or provisions under any policy of insurance that could be issued in this
29       state, or involving the advantages or disadvantages of any such policy of
30       insurance, or the investigation and adjustment of losses unless such per-
31       son holds a license as an insurance consultant under this act.
32           No person shall act as an insurance consultant until such person has
33       been licensed as provided by this act. Any person violating this section
34       shall be guilty of a class A misdemeanor.
35           A person shall not be deemed to be acting as an insurance consultant
36       under the following circumstances:
37           (a) A licensed insurance producer gives advice incidental to the nor-
38       mal course of the producer's insurance business and does not charge a
39       fee other than commissions received from insurance written;
40           (b) any attorney, actuary, certified public accountant, teacher of in-
41       surance or trust officer of a bank consults during the normal course of
42       such person's usual business, and only incidental to such business;
43           (c) any person adjusts a claim as a salaried employee of an insurance

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  1       company, third-party administrator or other entity licensed by the com-
  2       missioner or who exclusively contracts with insurance companies or other
  3       entities licensed by the commissioner; or
  4           (d) a person employed as a risk manager consults during the normal
  5       course of such person's full-time employment to the company by which
  6       such person is employed.
  7           New Sec. 66. Any person, sole proprietorship, corporation, partner-
  8       ship, or limited liability company engaged in the business of insurance
  9       consulting may become licensed as an insurance consultant. No license
10       shall be granted to a corporation, partnership or limited liability company
11       unless the corporation, partnership or limited liability company designates
12       a licensed consultant who shall have full responsibility for all insurance
13       consulting transactions of the corporation, partnership or limited liability
14       company within the state. Such designated consultant shall be an officer
15       of the corporation or a member of the partnership or limited liability
16       company and shall have a substantial interest in or be an active participant
17       in the management of the corporation, partnership or limited liability
18       company. If a corporation, partnership or limited liability company has
19       more than one office it shall designate a consultant for each office. In the
20       event a designated consultant of a licensed corporation, partnership or
21       limited liability company shall either leave the corporation, partnership
22       or limited liability company or have such consultant's license terminated,
23       the corporation, partnership or limited liability company shall have 60
24       days after such termination in which to designate another qualified li-
25       censed consultant or have its license terminated. Any individual associated
26       with a licensed corporation, partnership or limited liability company who
27       acts as an insurance consultant shall be a licensed consultant.
28           New Sec. 67. A nonresident applicant may qualify for a license under
29       this act as a nonresident consultant. A license shall be issued to a non-
30       resident insurance consultant without examination where the applicant's
31       resident supervisory insurance official certifies that the applicant is a li-
32       censed insurance consultant, or a license deemed substantially equivalent
33       by the commissioner, in good standing for at least 12 months. The com-
34       missioner shall accept compliance with continuing education require-
35       ments of this section by nonresident insurance consultants if the produc-
36       ers submit certification from the insurance supervisory authority in the
37       consultant's home state affirming that the nonresident insurance con-
38       sultant is in compliance the continuing education requirements of that
39       jurisdiction. Any nonresident applicant whose resident state does not li-
40       cense insurance consultants may qualify for a license as a nonresident
41       consultant in this state only upon examination, except as provided in this
42       act.
43           Obtaining a nonresident license shall constitute sufficient contact with

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  1       this state for the exercise of personal jurisdiction over such a person in
  2       any action, suit or proceeding instituted by or on behalf of any interested
  3       person arising out of the applicant's consulting business in this state.
  4           New Sec. 68. Every individual applicant for a license under this act
  5       shall have attained the age of 18, shall be competent, trustworthy, finan-
  6       cially responsible, and of good personal and business reputation, and shall
  7       have been licensed as an agent, broker, producer or consultant in this
  8       state or another state for the three years immediately preceding the date
  9       of application or have successfully completed a specific program of in-
10       surance study which has a broad national or regional recognition as de-
11       termined by the commissioner. Application shall be made to the com-
12       missioner on forms prescribed by the commissioner and shall be
13       accompanied by the license fee required by section 43. If the applicant
14       is an individual, the application shall include the applicant's social security
15       number. The commissioner may issue an insurance consultant's license
16       in the following areas: Property and casualty insurance; claims adjusting;
17       and life, health, and annuities. A person may become licensed in one or
18       more of such areas.
19           All individual applicants for licensure under this act shall be examined
20       by the commissioner in such manner and form as the commissioner pre-
21       scribes. The applicant shall pass the examination with a grade determined
22       by the commissioner to indicate satisfactory knowledge and understand-
23       ing of the area of insurance for which the applicant seeks qualification as
24       a consultant.
25           An applicant for a license under this act shall pay or cause to be paid
26       an examination fee as established by the commissioner in advance of such
27       examination. The fee shall cover all of the examinations given to the ap-
28       plicant at the same time and place. The fee shall not be refunded to the
29       applicant. Examination fees collected under this act shall be remitted to
30       the commissioner, unless the commissioner contracts with an independ-
31       ent testing organization, in which case the applicant shall pay the exam-
32       ination fee directly to such independent testing organization and the fee
33       shall be the amount charged by the testing organization.
34           The commissioner may require a consultant, after notice and hearing
35       and a finding that the consultant lacks competency, to submit to reex-
36       amination if the commissioner has reason to believe the consultant lacks
37       competence.
38           New Sec. 69. The commissioner may refuse to issue a consultant's
39       license to an applicant if such applicant has failed to comply with any
40       prerequisite for the issuance of such license, has made a material mis-
41       statement in the application for license, or has demonstrated untrust-
42       worthiness, financial irresponsibility or incompetency.
43           New Sec. 70. Every insurance consultant who is an individual shall

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  1       biennially complete a minimum of 10 continuing education credits in
  2       courses certified by the commissioner to contain educational material
  3       relevant to the business of an insurance consultant. CECs shall be in
  4       addition to any CECs the insurance consultant may be required to com-
  5       plete by virtue of an insurance producer license, except insurance con-
  6       sultant licensees who hold both insurance consultant and producer li-
  7       censes may apply up to five hours of CECs toward satisfying both
  8       producer and insurance consultant continuing education requirements.
  9       Such compliance shall be reported as required for producers' licenses
10       under this act and rules and regulations promulgated by the commis-
11       sioner.
12           New Sec. 71. The license shall state the name and resident address
13       of the licensee, date of issuance, whether the licensee is qualified to con-
14       sult in property and casualty, claims adjusting, life, health and annuities
15       and such other information as the commissioner considers proper. All
16       sole proprietor, corporate, partnership and limited liability company li-
17       censes shall expire two years after their issuance or renewal, and all in-
18       dividual licenses shall expire on the biennial due date of the applicant or
19       licensee. Such individual licenses may be reissued within the ninety-day
20       period before their expiration dates. The department shall establish pro-
21       cedures for the reissuance of licenses. Every licensed consultant shall
22       notify the department within thirty days of any change in such consultant's
23       residential or business address.
24           New Sec. 72. A person holding a license issued under this act shall
25       biennially pay to the department the required license fee as prescribed
26       by this act. The department shall not issue a license to any person who
27       fails to pay the required license fee when it becomes due.
28           New Sec. 73. A consultant is obligated, under license, to serve with
29       objectivity and complete loyalty the interests of the consultant's client and
30       to render the client such information, counsel, and service as within the
31       knowledge, understanding and opinion, in good faith of the licensee, best
32       serves the client's insurance needs and interest.
33           No contract or agreement with an insurance consultant shall be en-
34       forceable by such consultant unless it is in writing and executed in du-
35       plicate by the person to be charged or by the authorized representative
36       of such person. The agreement shall define the subject matter of the
37       consulting services, outline the nature of the work to be performed by
38       the consultant, and state the fee for the work. One copy of the executed
39       agreement shall be provided to the customer and the consultant shall
40       retain the other copy of the agreement for not less than five years after
41       completion of the services.
42           It shall be unlawful for any consultant, or any agency or sales organi-
43       zation with which the consultant is connected, to receive any part of any

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  1       commission or compensation paid by an insurer or agent of an insurer in
  2       connection with the sale or writing of any insurance which is within the
  3       subject matter of any consulting service performed prior to the sale of
  4       insurance and for which such consultant has contracted to receive a fee.
  5       For purposes of this section a renewal of insurance shall not be considered
  6       a sale of insurance.
  7           It shall be unlawful to charge a fee for consulting services for services
  8       that are already or shall be compensated for by an insurance commission
  9       or other compensation for procuring or servicing any insurance or annuity
10       contract.
11           It shall be unlawful for any consultant, or any agency or sales organi-
12       zation with which the consultant is connected, to charge a contingency
13       fee.
14           Any person may request the commissioner to review the provisions of
15       any insurance consultant agreement to determine whether it complies
16       with this act. The insurance consultant shall provide the commissioner
17       with a copy of that agreement and any other papers or records pertaining
18       to that agreement, if requested.
19           New Sec. 74. The commissioner may revoke, suspend, fine, or place
20       on probation, for such period as the commissioner may determine, the
21       license of any consultant if, after notice and hearing, the commissioner
22       determines the licensee has:
23           (a) Violated any of the provisions of this act, any insurance laws or
24       any lawful rule, regulation, or order of the commissioner or the laws of
25       another state or province;
26           (b) recommended the purchase of insurance, annuities or securities
27       from any authorized insurer in which the consultant or any member of
28       the consultant's immediate family holds an executive position or holds a
29       substantial interest;
30           (c) received compensation in any form from any agency or other in-
31       surance organization for recommending such agency or organization to
32       the consultant's client or entered into any contingency fee contract;
33           (d) knowingly and willfully misrepresented the terms of any actual or
34       proposed insurance contract;
35           (e) been found guilty of any unfair trade practice or of fraud;
36           (f) been convicted of any felony, or convicted of a class A or B mis-
37       demeanor evidencing such licensee is not worthy of the public trust;
38           (g) had a consultant's, producer's or agent's license suspended, re-
39       voked or placed on probation in any other state;
40           (h) failed to submit to a reexamination for competence or failed to
41       pass such examination;
42           (i) demonstrated incompetency, untrustworthiness or failure to com-
43       ply with the provisions of the insurance consultant's contract; or

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  1           (j) obtained the license through misrepresentation, fraud or any cause
  2       for which issuance could have been refused had it been known to the
  3       commissioner at the time of issuance.
  4           New Sec. 75. The commissioner is hereby authorized to adopt such
  5       rules and regulations as may be necessary to carry out the provisions of
  6       this act, to include outsourcing agent licensing examinations, continuing
  7       education requirements, licensing and administration of any of these
  8       functions.
  9           Sec. 76. K.S.A. 40-214, 40-240g, 40-241a, 40-241b, 40-241c, 40-
10       241e, 40-241f, 40-241g, 40-241h, 40-241j, 40-241k, 40-244, 40-245, 40-
11       246a, 40-246c, 40-246d, 40-246e, 40-246f, 40-282, 40-299, 40-2,106, 40-
12       2,107, 40-2,131, 40-2,132, 40-2,133, 40-741, 40-1612, 40-1613, 40-2209l,
13       40-2209m, 40-2406, 40-2508, 40-2612, 40-3608, 40-3618, 40-3701, 40-
14       3702, 40-3703, 40-3704, 40-3705, 40-3707, 40-3708, 40-3709, 40-3710,
15       40-3711, 40-3712, 40-3713, 40-3714, 40-37a01, 40-37a02, 40-37a04, 40-
16       37a05, 40-37a06, 40-4103, 40-4109, 40-4117, 40-4119 and 44-592 and
17       K.S.A. 1997 Supp. 40-239, 40-240, 40-240f, 40-241, 40-241i, 40-242,
18       40-246, 40-246b, 40-247, 40-2,118, 40-2,125, 40-2,135, 40-2c21, 40-1909,
19       40-19a10, 40-19c09, 40-2404 and 40-3706 are hereby repealed.
20           Sec. 77. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its
21       publication in the statute book.
22      
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