TITLE 18
Insurance Code
Miscellaneous
CHAPTER 80. Risk Retention Act
The purpose of this chapter is to regulate the formation and/or operation of risk retention groups and purchasing groups in this State formed pursuant to the provisions of the federal Liability Risk Retention Act of 1986 (“RRA 1986”) [15 U.S.C. § 3901 et seq.], to the extent permitted by such law.
68 Del. Laws, c. 57, § 1;As used in this chapter:
(1) “Commissioner” means the Insurance Commissioner of Delaware or the commissioner, director or superintendent of insurance in any other state;
(2) “Completed operations liability” means liability arising out of the installation, maintenance or repair of any product at a site which is not owned or controlled by:
a. Any person who performs that work; or
b. Any person who hires an independent contractor to perform that work; but shall include liability for activities which are completed or abandoned before the date of the occurrence giving rise to the liability;
(3) “Domicile,” for purposes of determining the state in which a purchasing group is domiciled, means:
a. For a corporation, the state in which the purchasing group is incorporated; and
b. For an unincorporated entity, the state of its principal place of business;
(4) “Hazardous financial condition” means that, based on its present or reasonably anticipated financial condition, a risk retention group, although not yet financially impaired or insolvent, is unlikely to be able:
a. To meet obligations to policy holders with respect to known claims and reasonably anticipated claims; or
b. To pay other obligations in the normal course of business;
(5) “Insurance” means primary insurance, excess insurance, reinsurance, surplus lines insurance and any other arrangement for shifting and distributing risk which is determined to be insurance under the laws of this State;
(6) “Liability”:
a. Means legal liability for damages (including costs of defense, legal costs and fees and other claims expenses) because of injuries to other persons, damage to their property or other damage or loss to such other persons resulting from or arising out of:
1. Any business (whether profit or nonprofit), trade, product, services (including professional services), premises or operations; or
2. Any activity of any state or local government, or any agency or political subdivision thereof; and
b. Does not include personal risk liability and an employer’s liability with respect to its employees other than legal liability under the federal Employers’ Liability Act (45 U.S.C. § 51 et seq.);
(7) “Personal risk liability” means liability for damages because of injury to any person, damage to property, or other loss or damage resulting from personal, familial or household responsibilities or activities, rather than from responsibilities or activities referred to in paragraph (6) of this section;
(8) “Plan of operation or a feasibility study” means an analysis which presents the expected activities and results of a risk retention group including, at a minimum:
a. Information sufficient to verify that its members are engaged in businesses or activities similar or related with respect to the liability to which such members are exposed by virtue of any related, similar or common business, trade, product, services, premises or operations;
b. For each state in which it intends to operate, the coverages, deductibles, coverage limits, rates and rating classification systems for each line of insurance the group intends to offer;
c. Historical and expected loss experience of the proposed members and national experience of similar exposures to the extent that this experience is reasonably available;
d. Pro forma financial statements and projections;
e. Appropriate opinions by a qualified, independent casualty actuary, including a determination of minimum premium or participation levels required to commence operations and to prevent a hazardous financial condition;
f. Identification of management, underwriting and claims procedures, marketing methods, managerial oversight methods, investment policies and reinsurance agreements;
g. Identification of each state in which the risk retention group has obtained, or sought to obtain, a charter and license, and a description of its status in each such state; and
h. Such other matters as may be prescribed by the commissioner of the state in which the risk retention group is chartered for liability insurance companies authorized by the insurance laws of that state;
(9) “Product liability” means liability for damages because of any personal injury, death, emotional harm, consequential economic damage or property damage (including damages resulting from the loss of use of property) arising out of the manufacture, design, importation, distribution, packaging, labeling, lease or sale of a product, but does not include the liability of any person for those damages if the product involved was in the possession of such a person when the incident giving rise to the claim occurred;
(10) “Purchasing group” means any group which:
a. Has as one of its purposes the purchase of liability insurance on a group basis;
b. Purchases such insurance only for its group members and only to cover their similar or related liability exposure, as described in paragraph (10)c. of this section;
c. Is composed of members whose businesses or activities are similar or related with respect to the liability to which members are exposed by virtue of any related, similar or common business, trade, product, services, premises or operations; and
d. Is domiciled in any state;
(11) “Risk retention group” means any corporation or other limited liability association:
a. Whose primary activity consists of assuming and spreading all, or any portion, of the liability exposure of its group members;
b. Which is organized for the primary purpose of conducting the activity described under paragraph (11)a. of this section;
c. Which:
1. Is chartered and licensed as a liability insurance company and authorized to engage in the business of insurance under the laws of any state; or
2. Before January 1, 1985, was chartered or licensed and authorized to engage in the business of insurance under the laws of Bermuda or the Cayman Islands and, before such date, had certified to the insurance commissioner of at least 1 state that it satisfied the capitalization requirements of such state, except that any such group shall be considered to be a risk retention group only if it has been engaged in business continuously since such date and only for the purpose of continuing to provide insurance to cover product liability or completed operations liability (as such terms were defined in the Product Liability Risk Retention Act of 1981 [15 U.S.C. § 3901 et seq.] before the date of the enactment of the Liability Risk Retention Act of 1986 [15 U.S.C. § 3901 et seq.]);
d. Which does not exclude any person from membership in the group solely to provide for members of such a group a competitive advantage over such a person;
e. Which:
1. Has as its owners only persons who comprise the membership of the risk retention group and who are provided insurance by such group; or
2. Has as its sole owner an organization which has as:
(I) Its members only persons who comprise the membership of the risk retention group; and
(II) Its owners only persons who comprise the membership of the risk retention group and who are provided insurance by such group;
f. Whose members are engaged in businesses or activities similar or related with respect to the liability of which such members are exposed by virtue of any related, similar or common business trade, product, services, premises or operations;
g. Whose activities do not include the provision of insurance other than:
1. Liability insurance for assuming and spreading all or any portion of the liability of its group members; and
2. Reinsurance with respect to the liability of any other risk retention group (or any members of such other group) which is engaged in businesses or activities so that such group or member meets the requirement described in paragraph (11)f. of this section from membership in the risk retention group which provides such reinsurance; and
h. The name of which includes the phrase “risk retention group”;
(12) “State” means any state of the United States or the District of Columbia.
68 Del. Laws, c. 57, § 1; 68 Del. Laws, c. 335, §§ 1, 2;(a) A risk retention group shall, pursuant to this chapter, be chartered and licensed to write only liability insurance pursuant to this chapter and, except as provided elsewhere in this chapter, must comply with all of the laws, rules, regulations and requirements applicable to such insurers chartered and licensed in this State and with § 8004 of this title to the extent such requirements are not a limitation on laws, rules, regulations or requirements of this State.
(b) Before it may offer insurance in any state, each risk retention group shall also submit for approval to the Insurance Commissioner of this State a plan of operation or feasibility study. The risk retention group shall submit an appropriate revision in the event of any subsequent material change in any item of the plan of operation or feasibility study, within 10 days of any such change. The group shall not offer any additional kinds of liability insurance, in this State or in any other state, until a revision of such plan or study is approved by the Commissioner.
(c) At the time of filing its application for charter, the risk retention group shall provide to the Commissioner in summary form the following information: The identity of the initial members of the group, the identity of those individuals who organized the group or who will provide administrative services or otherwise influence or control the activities of the group, the amount and nature of initial capitalization, the coverages to be afforded and the states in which the group intends to operate. Upon receipt of this information, the Commissioner shall forward such information to the National Association of Insurance Commissioners. Providing notification to the National Association of Insurance Commissioners is in addition to and shall not be sufficient to satisfy the requirements of § 8004 of this title or any other sections of this chapter.
(d) Governance standards for risk retention groups. —
By January 1, 2018, existing risk retention groups shall be in compliance with the following governance standards. New risk retention groups shall be in compliance with the standards at the time of licensure.
(1) Board of directors. —
As used in this section, the “board of directors” or “board” means the governing body of the risk retention group elected by the shareholders or members to establish policy, elect or appoint officers and committees, and make other governing decisions, and “director” means a natural person designated in the articles of the risk retention group, or designated, elected, or appointed by any other manner, name or title to as a director.
a. 1. Independent directors. —
The board of directors of the risk retention group shall have a majority of independent directors. If the risk retention group is a reciprocal, then the attorney-in-fact would be required to adhere to the same standards regarding independence of operation and governance as imposed on the risk retention group’s board of directors/subscribers advisory committee under these standards; and, to the extent permissible under state law, service providers of a reciprocal risk retention group should contract with the risk retention group and not the attorney-in-fact.
2. No director qualifies as “independent” unless the board of directors affirmatively determines that the director has no “material relationship” with the risk retention group. Each risk retention group shall disclose these determinations to its domestic regulator, at least annually. For this purpose, any person that is a direct or indirect owner of or subscriber in the risk retention group (or is an officer, director or employee of such an owner and insured, unless some other position of such officers, director or employee constitutes a “material relationship”), as contemplated by § 3901(a)(4)(E)(ii) of the Liability Risk Retention Act [15 U.S.C. § 3901(a)(4)(E)(ii)], is considered to be “independent.”
b. “Material relationship” of a person with the risk retention group includes any of the following:
1. The receipt in any 1 12-month period of compensation or payment of any other item of value by such person, a member of such person’s immediate family or any business with which such person is affiliated from the risk retention group or a consultant or service provider to the risk retention group or a consultant or service provider to the risk retention group is greater than or equal to 5% of the risk retention group’s gross written premium for such 12-month period or 2% of its surplus, whichever is greater, as measured at the end of any fiscal quarter falling in such a 12-month period. Such person or immediate family member of such person is not independent until 1 year after his or her compensation from the risk retention group falls below the threshold.
2. A relationship with an auditor as follows: a director or an immediate family member of a director who is affiliated with or employed in a professional capacity by a present or former internal or external auditor of the risk retention group is not independent until 1 year after the end of the affiliation, employment or auditing relationship.
3. A relationship with a related entity as follows: a director or immediate family member of a director who is employed as an executive officer of another company where any of the risk retention group’s present executives serve on that other company’s board of directors is not independent until 1 year after the end of such service or the employment relationship.
(2) Service provider contracts. —
The term of any material service provider contract with the risk retention group shall not exceed 5 years. Any such contract, or its renewal, shall require the approval of the majority of the risk retention group’s independent directors. The risk retention group’s board of directors shall have the right to terminate any service provider, audit or actuarial contracts at any time for cause after providing adequate notice as defined in the contract. The service provider contract is deemed material if the amount to be paid for such contract is greater than or equal to 5% of the risk retention group’s annual gross written premium or 2% of the its surplus, whichever is greater.
a. For purposes of this subsection, “service providers” shall include: captive managers; auditors; accountants; actuaries; investment advisors; lawyers; managing general underwriters or other party responsible for underwriting, determination of rates, collection of premium, adjusting and settling claims and/or the preparation of financial statements. Any reference to “lawyers” in the prior sentence does not include defense counsel retained by the risk retention group to defend claims, unless the amount of fees paid to such lawyers is “material” as referenced in paragraph (d)(1)b. of this section.
b. No service provider contract meeting the definition of “material relationship” contained in paragraph (d)(1)b. of this section shall be entered into unless the risk retention group has notified the Commissioner in writing of its intention to enter into such transaction at least 30 days prior thereto and the Commissioner has not disapproved it within such period.
(3) Written policy. —
The risk retention group’s board of directors shall adopt a written policy in the plan of operation as approved by the board that requires the board to:
a. Assure that all owners and insurers of the risk retention group receive evidence of ownership interest;
b. Develop a set of governance standards applicable to the risk retention group;
c. Oversee the evaluation of the risk retention group’s management including but not limited to the performance of the captive manager, managing general underwriter, or other party or parties responsibility for underwriting, determination of rates, collection of premium, adjusting or settling claims or the preparation of financial statements;
d. Review and approve the amount to be paid for all material service providers; and
e. Review and approve, at least annually:
1. Risk retention group’s goals and objectives relevant to the compensation of officers and service providers;
2. The officersʼ and service providersʼ performance in light of those goals and objectives; and
3. The continued engagement of the officers and material service providers.
(4) Audit committee. —
The risk retention group shall have an audit committee composed of at least 3 independent board members as defined in paragraph (d)(1) of this section. A nonindependent board members may participate in the activities of the audit committee, if invited by the members, but cannot be a member of such committee.
a. The audit committee shall have a written charter that defines the committee’s purpose, which, at a minimum must be to:
1. Assist board oversight of:
A. The integrity of the financial statements;
B. The compliance with legal and regulatory requirements; and
C. The qualifications, independence and performance of the independent auditor and actuary;
2. Discuss the annual audited financial statements and quarterly financial statements with management;
3. Discuss the annual audited financial statements with its independent auditor and, if advisable, discuss its quarterly financial statements with its independent auditor;
4. Discuss policies with respect to risk assessment and risk management;
5. Meet separately and periodically, either directly or through a designated representative of the committee, with management and intendent auditors;
6. Review with the independent auditor any audit problems or difficulties and management’s response;
7. Set clear hiring policies of the risk retention group as to the hiring of employees or former employees of the independent auditor;
8. Require the external auditor to rotate the lead, or coordinating, audit partner having primary responsibility for the risk retention group’s audit as well as the audit partner responsible for reviewing that audit so that neither individual performs audit services for more than 5 consecutive fiscal years; and
9. Report regulatory to the board of directors.
b. The domestic regulator may waive the requirement to establish an audit committee composed of independent board members if the risk retention group is able to demonstrate to the domestic regulator that it is impracticable to do so and the risk retention group’s board of directors itself is otherwise able to accomplish the purposes of an audit committee, as described in paragraph (d)(4)a. of this section.
(5) Governance standards. —
The board of directors shall adopt and disclose governance standards, where “disclose” means making such information available through electronic (e.g., posting such information on the risk retention group’s website) or other means, and providing such information to members or insureds upon request, which shall include:
a. A process by which the directors are elected by the owner/insureds;
b. Director qualification standards;
c. Director responsibilities;
d. Director access to management and, as necessary and appropriate, independent advisors;
e. Director compensation;
f. Director orientation and continuing education;
g. The policies and procedures that are followed for management succession; and
h. The policies and procedures that are followed for annual performance evaluation of the board.
(6) Business conduct and ethics. —
The board of directors shall adopt and disclose a code of business conduct and ethic for directors, officers, and employees and promptly disclose to the board of directors any waivers of the code for directors or executive officers, which shall include all of the following topics:
a. Conflicts of interest;
b. Matters covered under the corporate opportunities doctrine under the state of domicile;
c. Confidentiality;
d. Fair dealing;
e. Protection and proper use of risk retention group assets;
f. Compliance with all applicable laws, rules and regulations;
g. Requiring the reporting of any illegal or unethical behavior which affects the operation of the risk retention group.
(7) Reporting noncompliance. —
The captive manager, president, or chief executive officer of the risk retention group shall promptly notify the domestic regulator in writing if that captive manager, president, or chief executive becomes aware of any material non-compliance with any of these governance standards.
68 Del. Laws, c. 57, § 1; 70 Del. Laws, c. 186, § 1; 80 Del. Laws, c. 284, § 1;Risk retention groups chartered and licensed in states other than this State and seeking to do business as a risk retention group in this State shall comply with the laws of this State as follows:
(1) Notice of operations and designation of Commissioner as agent. — a. Before offering insurance in this State, a risk retention group shall submit to the Commissioner:
1. A statement identifying the state or states in which the risk retention group is chartered and licensed as a liability insurance company, charter date, its principal place of business and such other information, including formation on its membership, as the Commissioner of this State may require to verify that the risk retention group is qualified under § 8002(11) of this title;
2. A copy of its plan of operations or feasibility study and revisions of such plan or study submitted to the state in which the risk retention group is chartered and licensed; provided, however, that the provision relating to the submission of a plan of operation or feasibility study shall not apply with respect to any line or classification of liability insurance which:
(I) Was defined in the Product Liability Risk Retention Act of 1981 [15 U.S.C. § 3901 et seq.] before October 27, 1986; and
(II) Was offered before such date by any risk retention group which had been chartered and operating for not less than 3 years before such date.
b. The risk retention group shall submit a copy of any revision to its plan of operation or feasibility study required by § 8003(b) of this title at the same time that such revision is submitted to the commissioner of its chartering state.
c. The risk retention group shall submit a statement of registration, for which a filing fee shall be determined by the Commissioner, which designates the Commissioner as its agent for the purpose of receiving service of legal documents or process.
(2) Financial condition. — Any risk retention group doing business in this State shall submit to the Commissioner:
a. A copy of the group’s financial statement submitted to the state in which the risk retention group is chartered and licensed which shall be certified by an independent public accountant and contain a statement of opinion on loss and loss adjustment expense reserves made by a member of the American Academy of Actuaries or a qualified loss reserve specialist (under criteria established by the National Association of Insurance Commissioners);
b. A copy of each examination of the risk retention group as certified by the Commissioner or public official conducting the examination;
c. Upon request by the Commissioner, a copy of any information or document pertaining to any outside audit performed with respect to the risk retention group; and
d. Such information as may be required to verify its continuing qualification as a risk retention group under § 8002(11).
(3) Taxation. — a. Each risk retention group shall be liable for the payment of premium taxes and taxes on premiums of direct business for risks resident or located within this State, and shall report to the Commissioner the net premiums written for risks resident or located within this State. Such risk retention group shall be subject to taxation, and any applicable fines and penalties related thereto, on the same basis as a foreign admitted insurer.
b. To the extent licensed agents or brokers are utilized pursuant to § 8012 of this title, they shall report to the Commissioner the premiums for direct business for risks resident or located within this State which such licensees have placed with or on behalf of a risk retention group not chartered in this State.
c. To the extent that insurance agents or brokers are utilized pursuant to § 8012 of this title, such agent or broker shall keep a complete and separate record of all policies procured from each such risk retention group, which record shall be open to examination by the Commissioner, as otherwise provided in this title. These records shall, for each policy and each kind of insurance provided thereunder, include the following:
1. The limit of liability;
2. The time period covered;
3. The effective date;
4. The name of the risk retention group which issued the policy;
5. The gross premium charged; and
6. The amount of return premiums, if any.
(4) Compliance with Unfair Claims Settlement Practices Act. — Any risk retention group, its agents and representatives shall comply with the Unfair Claims Settlement Practices Act of this State, § 2301 et seq. of this title.
(5) Deceptive, false or fraudulent practices. — Any risk retention group shall comply with the laws of this State regarding deceptive, false or fraudulent acts or practices. However, if the Commissioner seeks an injunction regarding such conduct, the injunction must be obtained from a court of competent jurisdiction.
(6) Examination regarding financial condition. — Any risk retention group must submit to an examination by the Commissioner to determine its financial condition if the commissioner of the jurisdiction in which the group is chartered and licensed has not initiated an examination or does not initiate an examination within 60 days after a request by the Commissioner of this State. Any such examination shall be coordinated to avoid unjustified repetition and conducted in an expeditious manner and in accordance with NAIC’s Examiner Handbook.
(7) Notice to purchasers. — Every application form for insurance from a risk retention group, and every policy (on its front and declaration pages) issued by a risk retention group, shall contain in 10-point type the following notice:
NOTICE
This policy is issued by your risk retention group. Your risk retention group may not be subject to all of the insurance laws and regulations of your state. State insurance insolvency guaranty funds are not available for your risk retention group.
(8) Prohibited acts regarding solicitation or sale. — The following acts by a risk retention group are hereby prohibited:
a. The solicitation or sale of insurance by a risk retention group to any person who is not eligible for membership in such group; and
b. The solicitation or sale of insurance by, or operation of, a risk retention group that is in hazardous financial condition or financially impaired.
(9) Prohibition on ownership by an insurance company. — No risk retention group shall be allowed to do business in this State if an insurance company is directly or indirectly a member or owner of such risk retention group, other than in the case of a risk retention group all of whose members are insurance companies.
(10) Prohibited coverage. — The terms of any insurance policy issued by any risk retention group shall not provide, or be construed to provide, coverage prohibited generally by statute of this State or declared unlawful by the highest court of this State whose law applies to such policy.
(11) Delinquency proceedings. — A risk retention group not chartered in this State and doing business in this State shall comply with a lawful order issued in a voluntary dissolution proceeding or in a delinquency proceeding commenced by a state insurance commissioner if there has been a finding of financial impairment after an examination under paragraph (6) of this section.
(12) Penalties. — A risk retention group that violates any provision of this chapter will be subject to fines and penalties including revocation of its right to do business in this State, applicable to licensed insurers generally.
(13) Operation prior to June 25, 1991. — In addition to complying with the requirements of this section, any risk retention group operating in this State prior to June 25, 1991, shall, within 30 days after June 25, 1991, comply with paragraph (1)a. of this section.
68 Del. Laws, c. 57, § 1; 68 Del. Laws, c. 335, § 3;(a) No risk retention group shall be required or permitted to join or contribute financially to any insurance insolvency guaranty fund, or similar mechanism, in this State, nor shall any risk retention group, or its insureds or claimants against its insureds, receive any benefit from any such fund for claims arising under the insurance policies issued by such risk retention group.
(b) When a purchasing group obtains insurance covering its members’ risks from an insurer not authorized in this State or a risk retention group, no such risks, wherever resident or located, shall be covered by any insurance guaranty fund or similar mechanism in this State.
(c) When a purchasing group obtains insurance covering its members’ risks from an authorized insurer, only risks resident or located in this State shall be covered by the State Guaranty Fund subject to Chapter 42 of this title.
68 Del. Laws, c. 57, § 1; 68 Del. Laws, c. 335, § 4;A policy of insurance issued to a risk retention group or any member of that group shall not be required to be countersigned as otherwise provided in Chapter 17 of this title.
68 Del. Laws, c. 57, § 1;A purchasing group and its insurer or insurers shall be subject to all applicable laws of this State, except that a purchasing group and its insurer or insurers shall be exempt, in regard to liability insurance for the purchasing group, from any law that would:
(1) Prohibit the establishment of a purchasing group;
(2) Make it unlawful for an insurer to provide or offer to provide insurance on a basis providing, to a purchasing group or its members, advantages based on their loss and expense experience not afforded to other persons with respect to rates, policy forms, coverages or other matters;
(3) Prohibit a purchasing group or its members from purchasing insurance on a group basis described in paragraph (2) of this section;
(4) Prohibit a purchasing group from obtaining insurance on a group basis because the group has not been in existence for a minimum period of time or because any member has not belonged to the group for a minimum period of time;
(5) Require that a purchasing group must have a minimum number of members, common ownership or affiliation, or certain legal form;
(6) Require that a certain percentage of a purchasing group must obtain insurance on a group basis;
(7) Otherwise discriminate against a purchasing group or any of its members; or
(8) Require that any insurance policy issued to a purchasing group or any of its members be countersigned by an insurance agent or broker residing in this State.
68 Del. Laws, c. 57, § 1;(a) A purchasing group which intends to do business in this State shall, prior to doing business, furnish notice to the Commissioner which shall:
(1) Identify the state in which the group is domiciled;
(2) Identify all other states in which the group intends to do business;
(3) Specify the lines and classifications of liability insurance which the purchasing group intends to purchase;
(4) Identify the insurance company or companies from which the group intends to purchase its insurance and the domicile of such company;
(5) Specify the method by which, and the person or persons, if any, through whom insurance will be offered to its members whose risks are resident or located in this State;
(6) Identify the principal place of business of the group; and
(7) Provide such other information as may be required by the Commissioner to verify that the purchasing group is qualified under § 8002(10) of this title.
(b) A purchasing group shall, within 10 days, notify the Commissioner of any changes in any of the items set forth in subsection (a) of this section.
(c) The purchasing group shall register with and designate the Commissioner as its agent solely for the purpose of receiving service of legal documents or process, for which a filing fee shall be determined by the Commissioner, except that such requirements shall not apply in the case of a purchasing group which only purchases insurance that was authorized under the federal Product Liability Risk Retention Act of 1981 [15 U.S.C. § 3901 et seq.], and:
(1) Which in any state of the United States:
a. Was domiciled before April 1, 1986; and
b. Is domiciled on and after October 27, 1986;
(2) Which:
a. Before October 27, 1986, purchased insurance from an insurance carrier licensed in any state; and
b. Since October 27, 1986, purchased its insurance from an insurance carrier licensed in any state; or
(3) Which was a purchasing group under the requirements of the federal Product Liability Risk Retention Act of 1981 [15 U.S.C. § 3901 et seq.] before October 27, 1986.
(d) Each purchasing group that is required to give notice pursuant to subsection (a) of this section shall also furnish such information as may be required by the Commissioner to:
(1) Verify that the entity qualifies as a purchasing group;
(2) Determine where the purchasing group is located; and
(3) Determine appropriate tax treatment.
(e) Any purchasing group which was doing business in this State prior to June 25, 1991, shall, within 30 days after June 25, 1991, furnish notice to the Commissioner pursuant to subsection (a) of this section and furnish such information as may be required pursuant to subsections (b) and (c) of this section.
68 Del. Laws, c. 57, § 1;(a) A purchasing group may not purchase insurance from a risk retention group that is not chartered in a state or from an insurer not admitted in the state in which the purchasing group is located, unless the purchase is effected through a licensed agent or broker acting pursuant to the surplus lines laws and regulations of such state.
(b) A purchasing group which obtains liability insurance from an insurer not admitted in this State or a risk retention group shall inform each of the members of such group which have a risk resident or located in this State that such risk is not protected by an insurance insolvency guaranty fund in this State, and that such risk retention group or such insurer may not be subject to all insurance laws and regulations of this State.
(c) No purchasing group may purchase insurance providing for a deductible or self-insured retention applicable to the group as a whole; however, coverage may provide for a deductible or self-insured retention applicable to individual members.
(d) Purchases of insurance by purchasing groups are subject to the same standards regarding aggregate limits which are applicable to all purchases of group insurance.
68 Del. Laws, c. 57, § 1;Premium taxes and taxes on premiums paid for coverage of risks resident or located in this State by a purchasing group or any members of the purchasing groups shall be:
(1) Imposed at the same rate and subject to the same interest, fines and penalties as that applicable to premium taxes and taxes on premiums paid for similar coverage from a similar insurance source by other insureds; and
(2) Paid first by such insurance source, and if not by such source by the agent or broker for the purchasing group, and if not by such agent or broker then by the purchasing group, and if not by such purchasing group then by each of its members.
68 Del. Laws, c. 57, § 1;The Commissioner is authorized to make use of any of the powers established under the Insurance Code of this State to enforce the laws of this State not specifically preempted by the Risk Retention Act of 1986 [15 U.S.C. § 3901 et seq.] including the Commissioner’s administrative authority to investigate, issue subpoenas, conduct depositions and hearings, issue orders, impose penalties and seek injunctive relief. With regard to any investigation, administrative proceedings or litigation, the Commissioner can rely on the procedural laws of this State. The injunctive authority of the Commissioner, in regard to risk retention groups, is restricted by the requirement that any injunction be issued by a court of competent jurisdiction.
68 Del. Laws, c. 57, § 1;(a) No person, firm, association or corporation shall act or aid in any manner in soliciting, negotiating or procuring liability insurance in this State from a risk retention group unless such person, firm, association or corporation is licensed as an insurance agent or broker in accordance with Chapter 17 of this title.
(b) Purchasing groups. — (1) No person, firm, association or corporation shall act or aid in any manner in soliciting, negotiating or procuring liability insurance in this State for a purchasing group from an authorized insurer or a risk retention group chartered in a state unless such person, firm, association or corporation is licensed as an insurance agent or broker in accordance with Chapter 17 of this title.
(2) No person, firm, association or corporation shall act or aid in any manner in soliciting, negotiating or procuring liability insurance coverage in this State for any member of a purchasing group under a purchasing group’s policy unless such person, firm, association or corporation is licensed as an insurance agent or broker in accordance with Chapter 17 of this title.
(3) No person, firm, association or corporation shall act or aid in any manner in soliciting, negotiating or procuring liability insurance from an insurer not authorized to do business in this State on behalf of a purchasing group located in this State unless such person, firm, association or corporation is licensed as a surplus lines agent or excess line broker in accordance with Chapter 17 of this title.
(c) For purposes of acting as an agent or broker for a risk retention group or purchasing group pursuant to subsections (a) and (b) of this section, the requirement of residence in this State shall not apply.
(d) Every person, firm, association or corporation licensed pursuant to Chapter 17 of this title, on business placed with risk retention groups or written through a purchasing group, shall inform each prospective insured of the provisions of the notice required by § 8004(7) of this title in the case of a risk retention group and § 8009(c) of this title in the case of a purchasing group.
68 Del. Laws, c. 57, § 1;An order issued by any District Court of the United States enjoining a risk retention group from soliciting or selling insurance, or operating in any state (or in all states or in any territory or possession of the United States) upon a finding that such a group is in hazardous financial or financially impaired condition shall be enforceable in the courts of the State.
68 Del. Laws, c. 57, § 1;The Commissioner may establish and from time to time amend such rules relating to risk retention groups as may be necessary or desirable to carry out the provisions of this chapter.
68 Del. Laws, c. 57, § 1;