SENATE BILL REPORT

SHB 2010

This analysis was prepared by non-partisan legislative staff for the use of legislative members in their deliberations. This analysis is not a part of the legislation nor does it constitute a statement of legislative intent.

As Reported by Senate Committee On:

Financial Institutions, Housing & Insurance, February 21, 2012

Title: An act relating to title insurance rate filings.

Brief Description: Addressing title insurance rate filings.

Sponsors: House Committee on Business & Financial Services (originally sponsored by Representatives Kirby and Bailey).

Brief History: Passed House: 2/10/12, 76-20.

Committee Activity: Financial Institutions, Housing & Insurance: 2/21/12 [DP].

SENATE COMMITTEE ON FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS, HOUSING & INSURANCE

Majority Report: Do pass.

Signed by Senators Hobbs, Chair; Prentice, Vice Chair; Benton, Ranking Minority Member; Fain, Haugen and Keiser.

Staff: Edward Redmond (786-7471)

Background: Title insurance offers protection against the risk that the title to the specified property may be encumbered. Before issuing a policy, title insurers (insurers) conduct a title search in order to determine possible encumbrances. Insurers are licensed and regulated by the Office of the Insurance Commissioner (OIC). A title insurance agent (agent) is defined as a licensed business entity that is appointed by an authorized title insurance company to sell, solicit, or negotiate insurance on behalf of the title insurance company. Agents are licensed and regulated by OIC.

In 2008 an omnibus bill regarding real estate settlement services was passed that made numerous changes related to title insurance. The bill required the Insurance Commissioner (Commissioner) to set a date by which insurers must file title insurance rates under new standards. This date could not be prior to January 1, 2010. On July 20, 2010, the Commissioner adopted rules regarding title insurance rate filings.

New Rate Standards. Every insurer must file title insurance rates with the Commissioner. Every filing must include sufficient information to permit the Commissioner to determine whether the rates are excessive, inadequate, or unfairly discriminatory. A rate is not excessive, inadequate, or unfairly discriminatory if it is an actuarially sound estimate of the expected value of all future costs associated with an individual risk transfer. The Commissioner may disapprove a filing. The Commissioner must notify the insurer if the filing has been disapproved and inform the insurer where the filing fails to meet the statutory requirements. The Commissioner must hold a hearing within 30 days if:

In any hearing regarding title insurance rates, the burden is on the insurer to prove that the rates are not excessive, inadequate, or unfairly discriminatory. After a hearing, the Commissioner may issue an order that confirms, modifies, or rescinds any previous action.

Office of the Insurance Commissioner Rules. Only title rates filed under the new rate standards may be used after January 1, 2012. Insurers must file rates by September 1, 2011, to ensure that the rates will be reviewed and can be effective by January 1, 2012.

All rates filed must include all costs related to the title insurance transaction. An insurer must provide specific information in support of the expense component of the rates. An insurer's rate filing must include data that supports the expense component that applies to its agents.

If a title agency splits premiums between the insurer and an agent, the insurer must file premium rate schedules using supporting data and information that are consistent with that contractual premium split. Each agent must report premium, policy count, and expense data annually to each insurer for which it produces business in the state by April 1 of each year. Each report must include:

If an insurer does not receive a report required under this section by April 1 of each year, the insurer must notify the Commissioner by April 15. This notice must include the name of the agent that did not send the report on time.

Public Disclosure of Rate Information. The Insurance Code has provisions exempting certain information supporting rate filings from public inspection. Other provisions of the Insurance Code provide an exception of information for title insurance rate filings from the exemption from public inspection.

Summary of Bill: The Commissioner must designate one statistical reporting agent to gather information on title insurance. All title insurance companies and title insurance agents must annually file a report with the statistical reporting agent of their policies, business income, expenses, and loss experience in this state. The report must be filed with the statistical reporting agent in a manner and form prescribed by the Commissioner by rule.

Within 120 days of receiving information, the statistical reporting agent must review the information for completeness, accuracy, and quality. All title insurance companies and title insurance agents must cooperate with the statistical reporting agent to verify the completeness, accuracy, and quality of the data that they submitted.

Within 30 days after completing its review of the information for quality and accuracy, the statistical reporting agent must file information regarding the title insurance company and the title insurance agent with the Commissioner.

The Commissioner may adopt rules regarding the statistical reporting agent.

The costs and expenses of the statistical reporting agent, including the cost of an examination by the Commissioner, must be borne by the title insurance companies and title insurance agents in this state. The Commissioner may adopt rules regarding the costs and how those costs are apportioned.

Title insurance rate information filed with the Commissioner must be kept confidential and is not subject to public disclosure, unless the Commissioner finds, after notice and hearing with the affected parties, that it is in the public interest to disclose the information. The Commissioner may share the information with the National Association of Insurance Commissioners, regulatory and law enforcement officials of other states and nations, the federal government, and international authorities, provided that the recipient agrees to maintain the confidentiality and privileged status of the information.

Appropriation: None.

Fiscal Note: Not requested.

[OFM requested ten-year cost projection pursuant to I-960.]

Committee/Commission/Task Force Created: No.

Effective Date: The bill takes effect 90 days after adjournment of the session in which the bill is passed, except for section 6 which takes effect July 1, 2012.

Staff Summary of Public Testimony: PRO: In 2008 an omnibus bill was passed that made numerous changes in real estate settlement services. Those changes have inadvertently led to programs concerning the sharing of proprietary information. This is an agreed upon bill. As a result of the 2008 legislation, OIC passed rate filing rules that have been unworkable. We have been working with OIC to revise those rules. The bill is a partial solution requiring the appointment of a statistical reporting agent to collect data from title insurance agents instead of requiring title insurance agents to submit this information directly to their underwriters who they may compete with directly. OIC worked with stakeholders on this bill to arrive at a better solution, which entails the appointment of a statistical reporting agent that will gather the data and in turn, provide the protections to independent agents. The bill also authorizes the use of the National Association of Insurance Commissioners guidelines on the type of data that should be gathered which OIC will utilize.

Persons Testifying: PRO: Representative Kirby, prime sponsor; Carrie Tellefson, Fidelity National Title Group; Dwight A. Brickel, WA Land Title Assn.; Drew Bouton, OIC.