(215 ILCS 5/Art. XIII heading)
REHABILITATION, LIQUIDATION, CONSERVATION AND DISSOLUTION OF
(215 ILCS 5/187) (from Ch. 73, par. 799)
Sec. 187. Scope of Article.
(1) This Article shall apply to every corporation, association, society,
order, firm, company, partnership, individual, and aggregation of
individuals to which any Article of this Code is applicable, or which is
subject to examination, visitation or supervision by the Director under any
provision of this Code or under any law of this State, or which is engaging
in or proposing or attempting to engage in or is representing that it is
doing an insurance or surety business, or is undertaking or proposing or
attempting to undertake to provide or arrange for health care services as a
health care plan as defined in subsection (7) of Section 1-2 of the Health
Maintenance Organization Act, including the exchanging of reciprocal or
inter-insurance contracts between individuals, partnerships and corporations in
this State, or which is in the process of organization for the purpose of doing
or attempting or intending to do such business, anything as to any such
corporation, association, society, order, firm, company, partnership,
individual or aggregation of individuals provided in this Code or elsewhere in
the laws of this State to the contrary notwithstanding.
(2) The word “company” as used in this Article includes all of the
corporations, associations, societies, orders, firms, companies,
partnerships, and individuals specified in subsections
(1), (4), and (5) of this Section and
agents, managing general agents, brokers, premium finance companies,
insurance holding companies, and all other non-risk bearing entities or persons
engaged in any aspect of the business of insurance on behalf of an insurer
against which a receivership proceeding has been or is being filed under this
Article, including, but not limited to, entities or persons that provide
management, administrative, accounting, data processing, marketing,
underwriting, claims handling, or any other similar services to that insurer,
whether or not those entities are licensed to engage in the business of
insurance in Illinois, if the
entity or person is an affiliate of that insurer.
(3) The word “court” shall mean the court before which the
conservation, rehabilitation, or liquidation proceeding of the company is
pending, or the judge presiding in such proceedings.
(4) The word “affiliate” as used in this Article means a person that
directly, or indirectly through one or more intermediaries, controls, is
controlled by, or is under common control with, the person specified.
(5) The word “person” as used in this Article means an individual, an
aggregation
of individuals, a partnership, or a corporation.
(6) The word “assets” as used in this Article includes all deposits and
funds of a special or trust nature.
(7) The words “receivership proceedings” mean any conservation,
rehabilitation, liquidation, or ancillary receivership.
(8) “Netting agreement”, as used in this Article, means (a) a contract or agreement (including terms and conditions incorporated by reference therein), including a master agreement (which master agreement, together with all schedules, confirmations, definitions, and addenda thereto and transactions under any thereof, shall be treated as one netting agreement), that documents one or more transactions between the parties to the agreement for or involving one or more qualified financial contracts and that provides for the netting, liquidation, setoff, termination, acceleration, or close out under or in connection with one or more qualified financial contracts or present or future payment or delivery obligations or payment or delivery entitlements thereunder (including liquidation or close-out values relating to such obligations or entitlements) among the parties to the netting agreement; (b) any master agreement or bridge agreement for one or more master agreements described in paragraph (a) of this subsection (8); or (c) any security agreement or arrangement or other credit enhancement or guarantee or reimbursement obligation related to any contract or agreement described in paragraph (a) or (b) of this subsection (8); provided that any contract or agreement described in paragraphs (a) or (b) of this subsection (8) relating to agreements or transactions that are not qualified financial contracts shall be deemed to be a netting agreement only with respect to those agreements or transactions that are qualified financial contracts.
(9) “Qualified financial contract” means any commodity contract, forward contract, repurchase agreement, securities contract, swap agreement, or any similar agreement that the Director determines by regulation, resolution, or order to be a qualified financial contract for the purposes of this Act.
- (a) “Commodity contract” means:
- (1) a contract for the purchase or sale of a commodity for future delivery on, or subject to the rules of, a board of trade or contract market under the federal Commodity Exchange Act or a board of trade outside the United States;
- (2) an agreement that is subject to regulation under Section 19 of the federal Commodity Exchange Act and that is commonly known to the commodities trade as a margin account, margin contract, leverage account, or leverage contract;
- (3) an agreement or transaction that is subject to regulation under Section 4c(b) of the federal Commodity Exchange Act and that is commonly known to the commodities trade as a commodity option;
- (4) any combination of the agreements or transactions referred to in this paragraph (a); or
- (5) any option to enter into an agreement or transaction referred to in this paragraph (a).
- (b) “Forward contract”, “repurchase agreement”, “securities contract”, and “swap agreement” shall have the meanings set forth in the Federal Deposit Insurance Act, 12 U.S.C. § 1821(e)(8)(D), as amended from time to time. (Source: P.A. 96-1450, eff. 8-20-10.)
(215 ILCS 5/188) (from Ch. 73, par. 800)
Sec. 188.
Grounds for rehabilitation and liquidation of a domestic
company or an unauthorized foreign or alien company. Whenever any
domestic company or any unauthorized foreign or alien company:
- 1. is insolvent;
- 2. has failed or refused to submit its books, papers, accounts, records or affairs to the reasonable inspection or examination of the Director or his actuaries, supervisors, deputies, or examiners;
- 3. has concealed, removed, altered, destroyed or failed to establish and maintain books, records, documents, accounts, vouchers and other pertinent material adequate for the determination of its financial condition by examination under Sections 132 through 132.7 or has failed to properly administer claims and to maintain claims records which are adequate for the determination of its outstanding claims liability;
- 4. has failed or refused to observe an order of the Director to make good within the time prescribed by law any deficiency, whenever its capital and minimum required surplus, if a stock company, or its required surplus, if a company other than stock, has become impaired;
- 5. has, by articles of consolidation, contract of reinsurance or otherwise, transferred or attempted to transfer its entire property or business not in conformity with this Code, or entered into any transaction the effect of which is to merge substantially its entire property or business in any other company without having first obtained the written approval of the Director under this Code;
- 6. is found to be in such condition that its further transaction of business would be hazardous to its policyholders, or to its creditors, or to the public;
- 7. has violated its charter or any law of this State or has exceeded or is exceeding its corporate powers;
- 8. has an officer who has refused upon reasonable demand to be examined under oath touching its affairs;
- 9. is found to be in such condition that it could not meet the requirements for organization and authorization as required by law, except as to the amount of the original surplus required of a stock company in Section 13, and except as to the amount of the surplus required of a mutual company in excess of the minimum surplus required by this Code to be maintained, or either an authorized control level event or a mandatory control level event as set forth in Article IIA exists;
- 10. has ceased for the period of one year to transact insurance business;
- 11. has commenced, or has attempted to commence, any voluntary liquidation or dissolution proceeding, or any proceeding to procure the appointment of a receiver, liquidator, rehabilitator, sequestrator, or a similar officer for itself;
- 12. is a party, whether plaintiff or defendant in any proceeding in which an application is made for the appointment of a receiver, custodian, liquidator, rehabilitator, sequestrator, or similar officer for such company or its property, or a receiver, custodian, liquidator, rehabilitator, sequestrator or similar officer, for such company or its property is appointed by any court, or such appointment is imminent;
- 13. consents by a majority of its directors, stockholders or members;
- 14. has not organized and obtained a certificate authorizing it to commence the transaction of its business within the period of time prescribed by the sections of this Code under which it is or proposes to be organized; or
- 15. has failed or refused to pay any valid final judgment within 30 days after the rendition thereof, or whenever it appears to the Director that any person has committed a violation of Article VIII 1/2 with the result described in Section 131.26,
sufficient grounds shall be deemed to exist for the commencement of
rehabilitation or liquidation proceedings.
With respect to a domestic company, the Director must report, and with
respect to an unauthorized foreign or alien company, the Director may
report any such case to the Attorney General of this State whose duty it
shall be to apply forthwith by complaint on relation of the Director in the
name of the People of the State of Illinois, as plaintiff, to the Circuit
Court of Cook County, the Circuit Court of Sangamon County, or the circuit
court of the county in which such company has, or last had its principal
office, for an order to rehabilitate or liquidate the defendant company as
provided in this Article, and for such other relief as the nature of the
case and the interests of its policyholders, creditors, members,
stockholders or the public may require.
When, upon investigation, the Director finds that
a company is engaged in any aspect of the business of insurance on behalf
of or in association with any domestic insurance company, against which a
receivership proceeding has been or is being filed under this Article, in a manner that appears to be detrimental to
policyholders, creditors, members, shareholders, or the
public, the Director may report such case to the Attorney
General of this State, whose duty it is to apply forthwith by complaint
on relation of the Director in the name of the People of the State of
Illinois, as plaintiff, to the court in which the
receivership proceeding is pending
for an order to appoint the Director as receiver to assume control of the
assets and operation of the company pending a complete investigation and
determination of the rights of the policyholders, creditors, members,
shareholders, and the
general public.
(Source: P.A. 92-140, eff. 7-24-01.)
(215 ILCS 5/188.1) (from Ch. 73, par. 800.1)
Sec. 188.1.
Provisions for conservation of assets of a domestic,
foreign, or alien company.
(1) Upon the filing by the Director of a verified complaint alleging
(a) that with respect to a domestic, foreign, or alien company,
whether authorized or unauthorized, a condition exists that
would justify a court order for proceedings under Section 188, and
(b) that the interests of creditors, policyholders or the public will
probably be endangered by delay, then the circuit court of Sangamon or Cook
County or the circuit court of the county in which such company has or last
had its principal office shall enter forthwith without a hearing or
prior
notice an order
directing the director to take possession and control of the property,
business, books, records, and accounts of the company, and of the premises
occupied by it for the transaction of its business, or such part of each as
the complaint shall specify, and enjoining the company and its officers,
directors, agents, servants, and employees from disposition of its property
and from transaction of its business except with the concurrence of the
Director until the further order of the court.
Copies of the verified complaint and the seizure order shall be
served upon the company.
(2) The order shall continue in force and effect for such time as the
court deems necessary for the Director to ascertain the condition and
situation of the company. On motion of either party or on its own motion,
the court may from time to time hold such hearings as it deems desirable,
and may extend, shorten, or modify the terms of, the seizure order. So far
as the court deems it possible, the parties shall be given adequate notice
of such hearings. As soon as practicable, the court shall vacate the
seizure order or terminate the conservation proceedings of the company,
either when the Director has failed to institute proceedings
under Section 188 having a reasonable opportunity to do so, or upon an
order of the court pursuant to such proceedings.
(3) Entry of a seizure order under this section shall not constitute an
anticipatory breach of any contract of the company.
(4) The court may hold all hearings in conservation proceedings
privately in chambers, and shall do so on request of any officer of the
company proceeded against.
(5) In conservation proceedings and judicial reviews thereof, all
records of the company, other documents, and all insurance department files
and court records and papers, so far as they pertain to and are a part of
the record of the conservation proceedings, shall be and remain
confidential except as is necessary to obtain compliance therewith, unless
and until the court, after hearing arguments in chambers from the Director
and the company, shall decide otherwise, or unless the company requests
that the matter be made public.
(6) Any person having possession of and refusing to deliver any of the
property, business, books, records or accounts of a company against which a
seizure order has been issued shall be guilty of a Class A misdemeanor.
(Source: P.A. 89-206, eff. 7-21-95.)
(215 ILCS 5/188.2)
Sec. 188.2. Grounds for and provisions applicable to rehabilitation or liquidation
of a domestic company that is a covered financial company under the
federal Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act.
(a) The provisions of this Section apply in accordance with Title II of the federal Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act,
P.L. 111-203, with respect to an insurance company that is a covered financial company,
as that term is defined under 12 U.S.C. 5381.
(b) The Director may file a complaint for an order of rehabilitation or liquidation pursuant to
Section 188 of this Code on any of the following grounds:
- (1) upon a determination and notification given by the Secretary of the Treasury of the United States (in consultation with the President of the United States) that the insurance company is a financial company satisfying the requirements of 12 U.S.C. 5383(b), and the board of directors (or body performing similar functions) of the insurance company acquiesces or consents to the appointment of a receiver pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 5382(a)(1)(A)(i), with such consent to be considered as consent to an order of rehabilitation or liquidation;
- (2) upon an order of the United States District Court for the District of Columbia under 12 U.S.C. 5382(a)(1)(A)(iv)(I) granting the petition of the Secretary of the Treasury of the United States concerning the insurance company under 12 U.S.C. 5382(a)(1)(A)(i); or
- (3) a petition by the Secretary of the Treasury of the United States concerning the insurance company is granted by operation of law under 12 U.S.C. 5382(a)(1)(A)(v).
(c) Notwithstanding any other provision in this Article, this Code, or any other law, after notice to the
insurance company, the receivership court may grant an order on the complaint for
rehabilitation or liquidation within 24 hours after the filing of a complaint pursuant to this
Section.
(d) If the receivership court does not make a determination on a complaint for rehabilitation or liquidation
filed by the Director pursuant to this Section within 24 hours after its filing, then it shall be
deemed granted by operation of law upon the expiration of the 24-hour period. At the time
that an order is deemed granted under this Section, the provisions of Article XIII of this Code
shall be deemed to be in effect, and the Director shall be deemed to be affirmed as receiver and have all of the applicable powers provided by this Code, regardless of whether an order
has been entered. The receivership court shall expeditiously enter an order of rehabilitation
or liquidation that:
- (1) is effective as of the date that it is deemed granted by operation of law; and
- (2) conforms to the provisions for rehabilitation or liquidation contained in Article XIII of this Code, as applicable.
(e) Any order of rehabilitation or liquidation made pursuant to this Section shall not be subject to
any stay or injunction pending appeal.
(f) Nothing in this Section shall be construed to supersede or impair any other power or
authority of the Director or the court under this Article or Code.
(Source: P.A. 98-136, eff. 8-2-13.)
(215 ILCS 5/189) (from Ch. 73, par. 801)
Sec. 189. Injunction. The court shall have jurisdiction, upon, or at any time after the
filing
of the complaint to issue an injunction restraining such company and its
officers, agents, directors, employees and all other persons from
transacting any company business or disposing of its property until the
further order of the court. The court may also restrain all persons,
companies, and
entities from bringing or further prosecuting all actions and proceedings at
law or in equity or otherwise, whether in this State or elsewhere, against the
company or its assets or property or the Director except insofar as those
actions or proceedings arise in or are brought in the conservation,
rehabilitation, or liquidation proceeding. The court may issue such other
injunctions or
enter such other orders as may be deemed necessary to prevent interference
with the proceedings, or with the Director’s possession and control or
title, rights or interests as herein provided or to prevent interference
with the conduct of the business by the Director, and may issue such other
injunctions or enter such other orders as may be deemed necessary to
prevent waste of assets or the obtaining, asserting, or enforcing of
preferences, judgments,
attachments, or other like liens, including common law retaining
liens, or
the making of any levy against such
company or its property and assets while in the possession and control of
the Director. The court may issue any other injunctions or enter any other
orders that are necessary to protect enrollees in accordance with subsection
(c) of Section 5-6 of the Health Maintenance Organization Act. Any
injunction
issued under this article may be served and
enforced as in other civil proceedings, but no bond or other security shall
be required of the plaintiff, either for costs or for any injunction. The provisions of this Section are subject to the exclusion set forth in subsection (o) of Section 204 of this Article.
(Source: P.A. 100-89, eff. 8-11-17.)
(215 ILCS 5/190) (from Ch. 73, par. 802)
Sec. 190.
Practice, hearing, order and appeal.
(1) The defendant company shall appear within 10 days after the service
of the summons as in this Article provided, exclusive of the day of
service. If, on the return day of the summons the defendant shall enter its
appearance in the action and apply for further time in which to answer, the
court shall, upon request of the defendant, extend the time for answering
for a period not to exceed 10 days from said return day. If the defendant
fails to answer on the return day or within the time granted, or fails to
appear, the court shall proceed to hear and determine the cause as herein
provided.
(2) The court, on the return day of the summons as originally fixed or
extended hereunder, shall set the cause for hearing on some day not
exceeding 20 days from the return day, or the extended return day as herein
provided.
(3) No motions or other pleadings, whether to dissolve, modify or
continue any injunction or otherwise, shall be filed by, or permitted on
behalf of the defendant prior to the filing of an answer to the complaint.
All pleadings shall be filed within the time herein provided.
(4) The pleadings and proceedings insofar as not otherwise regulated by
this Article, shall be as in other civil proceedings.
(5) Upon the hearing, at which the complaint and any exhibits filed
therewith shall be received as prima facie evidence of the facts therein
recited, the court shall enter an order either dismissing the complaint or
finding that sufficient cause exists for rehabilitation or liquidation and
directing the Director to take possession of the property, business and
affairs of such company and to rehabilitate or liquidate the same as the
case may be. The Director shall be responsible on his official bond for all
assets coming into his possession.
(6) An appeal, if taken from such order, shall be prosecuted on an expedited
basis as provided for in such cases by Illinois Supreme Court Rule 307.
(7) A claim for attorneys’ fees incurred by the company in contesting its
conservation, rehabilitation, or liquidation may be filed in the proceedings,
and the claim may be allowed upon a showing that (i) the attorneys’ fees
incurred are reasonable; (ii) the board of directors of the company incurred
such attorneys’ fees based upon their best knowledge, information, and belief
formed after reasonable inquiry indicating such contention is well grounded in
fact and is warranted by existing law or a good faith argument of the
extension, modification, or reversal of existing law; and (iii) the contention
is not pursued for any improper purpose, including harassment, unnecessary
delay in the proceedings, or waste of estate
assets. Such claims, if allowed, shall be accorded a priority of distribution
under paragraph (g) of subsection (1) of Section 205. This
subsection (7)
applies to all liquidation, rehabilitation, or conservation proceedings that
are pending on the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1993 and to all
future liquidation, rehabilitation, or conservation proceedings.
(Source: P.A. 88-297; 88-670, eff. 12-2-94; 89-206, eff. 7-21-95.)
(215 ILCS 5/190.1) (from Ch. 73, par. 802.1)
Sec. 190.1. Appeal of order directing liquidation – special claims procedure.
(1) Within 5 days of the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1982,
or, if later, within 5 days after the filing of a notice of appeal of an
order of liquidation, which order has not been stayed, the Director shall
present for the circuit court’s approval a plan for the continued performance
of the defendant company’s policy claims obligations, including the duty
to defend insureds under liability insurance policies, during the pendency
of an appeal. Such plan shall provide for the continued performance and
payment of policy claims obligations in the normal course of events, notwithstanding
the grounds alleged in support of the order of liquidation including the
ground of insolvency. In the event the defendant company’s financial condition
will not, in the judgment of the Director, support the full performance
of all policy claims obligations during the appeal pendency period, the
plan may prefer the claims of certain policyholders and claimants over creditors
and interested parties as well as other policyholders and claimants, as
the Director finds to be fair and equitable considering the relative circumstances
of such policyholders and claimants. The circuit court shall examine the
plan submitted by the Director and if it finds the plan to be in the best
interests of the parties, the circuit court shall approve the plan.
No action shall lie against the Director or any of his deputies, agents,
clerks, assistants or attorneys by any party based on preference in an appeal
pendency plan approved by the circuit court.
(2) The appeal pendency plan shall not supersede or affect the obligations
of any insurance guaranty fund which under its own state law is required
to pay covered claims obligations during the appeal pendency period.
(Source: P.A. 96-1000, eff. 7-2-10.)
(215 ILCS 5/191) (from Ch. 73, par. 803)
Sec. 191.
Title to property of company.
The Director and his successor and successors in office shall be vested
by operation of law with the title to all property, contracts, and rights
of
action of the company as of the date of the order directing rehabilitation
or liquidation. The Director is entitled to immediate possession and control
of all property, contracts, and rights of action of the company, and is further
authorized and directed to remove any and all records and property of the
company to the Director’s possession and control or to such other place as may
be convenient for the purposes of efficient and orderly administration of the
rehabilitation or liquidation. All persons, companies, and entities shall
immediately release their possession and control of any and all property,
contracts, and rights of action of the company to the Director including, but
not limited to, bank accounts and bank records, premium and related records,
and claim, underwriting, accounting, and litigation files. The entry of an
order of rehabilitation or liquidation creates an estate that comprises all of
the liabilities and assets of the company. The filing or recording of such
order in the office of the
recorder or the Registrar of Titles in any county of this State
shall impart the same notice that a deed, bill of sale or other evidence of
title duly filed for record by such company would have imparted.
(Source: P.A. 89-206, eff. 7-21-95.)
(215 ILCS 5/192) (from Ch. 73, par. 804)
Sec. 192.
Duties of
Director as rehabilitator; termination.
(1) Upon the entry of an order directing rehabilitation, the Director
shall immediately proceed to conduct the business of the company and take
such steps towards removal of the causes and conditions which have made
such proceedings necessary as may be expedient.
(2) The Director is authorized to deal with the property and business of
the company in his name as Director, or, if the Court shall so order, in
the name of the company. The Director may, subject to the approval
of the Court, sell
or otherwise dispose of the real and personal property, or any part
thereof, and sell or compromise all doubtful or uncollectible debts or
claims owing to the company in any rehabilitation proceeding now
pending or hereafter instituted, except that whenever the value of any real
or personal property or the amount of any such debt owing to the company does
not exceed $25,000, the Director may sell, dispose of, compromise, or compound
the same upon such terms as the Director deems to be in the best interest of
the company without obtaining approval of the court unless otherwise directed
by the court. The Director may solicit contracts whereby a solvent company
agrees to assume, in whole or in part, or upon a modified basis, the
liabilities of a company in rehabilitation in a manner consistent with
subsection (4) of Section 193 of this Code.
(3) The Director may bring any action, claim, suit, or proceeding against
any director or officer of the company or against any other person with respect
to that person’s dealings with the company including, but not limited to,
prosecuting any action, claim, suit, or proceeding on behalf of the creditors,
members, policyholders, or shareholders of the company. Nothing in this
subsection shall be construed to affect the standing of the Illinois Insurance
Guaranty Fund, the Illinois Life and Health Insurance Guaranty Association, or
the Illinois Health Maintenance Organization Guaranty Association to sue or be
sued under applicable law.
(4) If at any time the Director finds that it is in the best
interests
of policyholders, creditors and the company to effect a plan of
mutualization or rehabilitation, the Director may submit such plan
to the court for
its approval. Such plan, in addition to any other terms and provisions as
may by the Director be deemed necessary or advisable, may include a
provision imposing liens upon the net equities of policyholders of the
company, and in the case of life companies, a provision imposing a
moratorium upon the loan or cash surrender values of the policies, for such
period and to such an extent as may be necessary. Notice of the hearing
upon any such plan shall be given in the manner as may be fixed by the
court and upon such hearing the court may either approve or disapprove the
plan or modify it in such manner and to such extent as to the court shall
seem appropriate.
(5) Where in such proceedings the Court has entered an order
for the
filing of claims and it subsequently appears that the total amount of all
allowable claims exceed the assets in the possession of the Rehabilitator,
the Court may upon the application of the Director authorize a distribution
of assets in accordance with the applicable provisions of Section 210.
The Director may at such time apply under this Section for an order
dissolving the company in accordance with the applicable provisions of
Section 196.
(6) If at any time the Director finds that the causes and
conditions
which made such proceeding necessary have been removed he may petition the
court for an order terminating the conduct of the business by the Director
and permitting such company to resume possession of its property and the
conduct of its business and for a full discharge of all liability and
responsibility of the Director. No order for the return to such company of
its property and business shall be granted unless the court after a full
hearing determines that the purposes of the proceeding have been fully
accomplished.
(Source: P.A. 89-206, eff. 7-21-95; 90-381, eff. 8-14-97.)
(215 ILCS 5/193) (from Ch. 73, par. 805)
Sec. 193.
Duties of
Director as liquidator; sales; reinsurance.
(1) Upon the entry of an order directing liquidation, the Director shall
immediately proceed to liquidate the property, business, and affairs of the
company. The Director is hereby authorized to deal with the
property, business, and affairs of
the company in his name as Director, or, if the court shall so order, in
the name of the company.
(2) The Director may, subject to the approval of the court, sell
or otherwise
dispose of the real and personal property, or any part thereof, and sell or
compromise all debts or claims owing to
the
company, except that
whenever the value of any real or personal property or the amount of any debt
owing to the
company does not exceed $25,000, the Director may sell, dispose
of,
compromise, or compound the
same upon such terms as the Director deems to
be in the best interest of the company
without obtaining approval of the court.
(3) The Director may bring any action, claim, suit, or proceeding
against any director or officer of the company or against any other person
with respect to that person’s dealings with the company including, but not
limited to, prosecuting any action, claim, suit, or proceeding on behalf of the
creditors, members, policyholders, or shareholders of
the company. Nothing in this subsection shall be construed to affect the
standing of the Illinois Insurance Guaranty Fund, the Illinois Life and Health
Insurance Guaranty Association, or the Illinois Health Maintenance Organization
Guaranty Association to sue or be sued under applicable law.
(4) In order to preserve so far as possible the rights and interests of
the policyholders of the company whose contracts were cancelled by the
liquidation order and of such other creditors as may be possible, the
Director may solicit a contract or contracts whereby a solvent company or
companies will agree to assume in whole, or in part, or upon a modified
basis, the liabilities owing to said former policyholders or creditors. The
Director may, subject to Section 531.08(h) of this Code or Section 6-8 of
the Health Maintenance Organization Act, cede or reinsure
all or so much as may be necessary of the
in-force business to another company using assets of the liquidated company
to pay therefor in preference to satisfying other obligations or creditors.
The Director may assign any rights or interests of the company to receive
reinsurance proceeds for losses to the Illinois Life and Health Insurance
Guaranty Association, the Illinois Health Maintenance Organization Guaranty
Association or any similar organization in any other state. If,
after a full hearing upon a petition filed by the Director, the court
shall find that the Director endeavored to obtain the best contract for the
benefit of said parties in interest, and if the said Director shall report
to the court that he is ready and willing to enter into a contract and
submit a copy thereof to the court, the court shall examine the procedure
and acts of the Director, and if the court shall find that the best
possible contract in the interests of said parties has been obtained and
that it is best for the interests of said parties that said contract be
entered into, the court shall by written order approve the acts of the
Director and authorize him to execute said contract.
(5) In recognition of the rights of policyholders whose “claims
made” contracts were cancelled by the liquidation order, he may, in his
discretion, permit such policyholders to purchase an extended discovery
period which is subject to the limitations in this Article. The
policyholder shall pay to the liquidator a premium which is appropriate for
the rights purchased as determined by the liquidator and approved by the
court. No extended discovery period purchased before or after the entry of
the liquidation order shall extend the time to file claims as set by the
court pursuant to Section 208 of this Code. Claims accruing by virtue of
such extended discovery period shall be treated as any other claim under
Article XXXIV of this Code, and shall be subject to the limitations,
exclusions and conditions in the Illinois Insurance Guaranty Fund Act and
in the laws governing similar organizations in other states.
(6) The Director is authorized to cancel policies, bonds, and contracts of
insurance subject to court approval.
(7) All persons, companies, and entities shall immediately turn over to
the Director all unearned premium that has been collected by or on behalf of
the company and all earned premium owing the company unless otherwise directed
in writing by the Director or by court order. Within 30 days of the date of a
written request of
the Director, those persons, companies, and entities shall
submit affidavits verifying amounts collected by, on behalf
of, or due and owing the company and further shall provide copies of all
premium fund trust account information and such other applicable documentation
as requested by the Director. Nothing in this subsection shall be construed to
affect the rights of (i) the Illinois Life and Health Insurance Guaranty
Association to collect premium under item (6) of Section 531.08 of this Code or
(ii) the Illinois Health Maintenance Organization Guaranty Association to
collect premium under item (11) of Section 6-8 of the Health Maintenance
Organization Act.
(8) The amount recoverable by the Director from a reinsurer shall not be
reduced or diminished as a result of the entry of an order of liquidation
notwithstanding any provision in the reinsurance contract or other such
agreement. Payment made by a reinsurer to or on behalf of an insured of the
company shall not diminish the reinsurer’s obligation to the company except
when the reinsurance agreement lawfully provides for payment to or on behalf of
the company’s insured by the reinsurer. All reinsurance contracts to which the
company is a party, which do
not contain the provisions required with respect to the obligation of a
reinsurer in the event of insolvency of the reinsured to obtain credit for
reinsurance or pursuant to other applicable statutes, shall contain or be
construed to contain all of the following provisions:
- (a) Upon the entry of an order of liquidation and notwithstanding the Director’s failure to pay all or a portion of a claim, the reinsurance obligation shall be due and owing to the Director on the basis of claims allowed in the liquidation proceeding. The reinsurer shall submit the amounts due and owing directly to the company as ceding insurer or to the Director.
- (b) The Director shall give written notice or arrange for the giving of written notice to reinsurers or their agents of the pendency of a claim against the company indicating the policy or bond reinsured within a reasonable time after the claim is filed. The reinsurer may interpose, at its own expense, in the proceeding where the claim is to be adjudicated, any defenses that it may deem available to the company or the Director.
(Source: P.A. 88-297; 89-206, eff. 7-21-95.)
(215 ILCS 5/194) (from Ch. 73, par. 806)
Sec. 194.
Rights and
liabilities of creditors fixed upon liquidation.
(a) The rights and liabilities of the company and of its creditors,
policyholders, stockholders or members and all other persons interested in
its assets, except persons entitled to file contingent claims, shall be
fixed as of the date of the entry of the Order directing liquidation or
rehabilitation unless otherwise provided by Order of the Court. The rights
of claimants entitled to file
contingent claims or to have their claims estimated shall be determined as
provided in Section 209.
(b) The Director may,
within 2 years after the entry of an order for
rehabilitation or liquidation or within such further time as applicable law
permits, institute an action, claim, suit, or proceeding
upon any cause of action against which the period of limitation fixed
by applicable law has not expired at the time of filing of the complaint upon
which the order is entered.
(c) The time between the
filing of a complaint for conservation, rehabilitation, or liquidation against
the company and the denial of the complaint shall not be considered to be a
part of the time within which any action may be commenced against the company.
Any action against the company that might have been commenced when the
complaint was filed may be commenced for at least 180 days after the complaint
is denied.
(Source: P.A. 88-297; 89-206, eff. 7-21-95.)
(215 ILCS 5/195) (from Ch. 73, par. 807)
Sec. 195.
Borrowing
on the pledge of assets.
For the purpose of facilitating the rehabilitation, liquidation,
conservation or dissolution provided for by this article, the Director may,
subject to the approval of the court, borrow money and execute, acknowledge
and deliver certificates of indebtedness upon such terms and entitled to
such liens and priorities as may be fixed by the court, or notes or other
evidence of indebtedness therefor and secure the repayment of the same by
the mortgage, pledge, assignment, transfer in trust or hypothecation or any
or all of the property whether real, personal or mixed of the company
against which a proceeding has been brought under this article. Subject to
the approval of the court, he shall also have power to take any and all
other action necessary and proper to consummate any such loans and to
provide for the repayment thereof. The Director shall incur no personal
liability by virtue of any loan made pursuant to this section.
(Source: Laws 1937, p. 696.)
(215 ILCS 5/196) (from Ch. 73, par. 808)
Sec. 196.
Order of dissolution.
If the company against whom the complaint
for liquidation is filed
is a
corporation and the complaint prays for dissolution of such company, the
court shall have jurisdiction either before or after final liquidation of
the property, business and affairs of such company, after service of
summons and complaint as above stated and a full hearing, to enter a judgment
dissolving such company, and if an order of liquidation has been entered
against a company, the court shall have jurisdiction, upon the petition of the
Director, to enter an order dissolving the company. The court may likewise,
regardless of whether an
order of liquidation is sought or has been obtained, upon proper complaint
or petition by the Director, order dissolution of a company where it has
failed to qualify for a certificate of authority authorizing it to commence
the transaction of its business, or where a company has no assets and no
means for payment of liabilities.
(Source: P.A. 89-206, eff. 7-21-95.)
(215 ILCS 5/197) (from Ch. 73, par. 809)
Sec. 197.
Rights, powers, and duties ancillary to domiciliary proceeding.
The rights, powers, and duties of the Director as conservator,
rehabilitator, or liquidator, with reference to the assets of a foreign or
alien company, whether authorized or unauthorized, shall be ancillary to
the rights, powers and duties imposed upon any receiver or other person, if
any, in charge of the property, business and affairs of such company in its
domiciliary state or country.
(Source: P.A. 86-1154; 86-1156.)
(215 ILCS 5/198) (from Ch. 73, par. 810)
Sec. 198.
Service of
summons and return.
(1) Upon the filing of a complaint, summons shall forthwith issue,
returnable in 3 days after its date, and a copy of the summons together
with the complaint in any proceeding under this article shall be served
upon the company named in such complaint by delivering the same to its
president, vice president, secretary, treasurer, director, or to its
managing agent, or if the company lack any of the aforesaid officers, or
they cannot be found within the State, to the officer performing
corresponding functions under another name; if it be a Lloyds, reciprocal
or inter-insurance exchange, by delivering such summons and copy of the
complaint to the duly designated attorney-in-fact.
(2) When it is satisfactorily proved by the report of an examiner of the
department made in accordance with the provisions of this Code, or by
affidavit if anyone familiar with the facts, that the officers, directors,
trustees or managing agents or members of any company named in said
complaint upon whom service is required to be made as above provided, have,
or if a Lloyds, reciprocal or inter-insurance exchange be named in the
complaint, that the duly designated attorney-in-fact, has, departed from
the State or keep themselves or himself concealed therein, or if such of
the persons residing in this State and upon whom service is required to be
made as above provided have resigned from their offices, or that service
cannot be made immediately by the exercise of reasonable diligence, such
service may be had by the mailing of a copy of the complaint and summons to
the last known address of the company, or by publication in such form and
in such manner as the court shall order.
(Source: Laws 1959, p. 1422.)
(215 ILCS 5/199) (from Ch. 73, par. 811)
Sec. 199.
Removal of
proceedings to Sangamon or Cook county.
In the event an order is entered directing liquidation, rehabilitation
or conservation, the Director may remove the property and assets of the
company to the county of Sangamon or to the county of Cook. In the event of
such removal or contemplated removal the court shall upon proper petition
showing the necessity therefor, filed by the Director, order the clerk of
the court wherein such proceeding was commenced to make a full transcript
of the petition for removal and the order thereon and to transmit the same
together with all papers theretofore filed in the cause, to the Clerk of
the Circuit Court of the county of Sangamon or to the Clerk of the Circuit
Court of the county of Cook, as the case may be, and the proceeding shall
thereafter be conducted in the same manner as if it had been commenced in
the county to which the cause is transferred.
(Source: Laws 1965, p. 3563.)
(215 ILCS 5/200) (from Ch. 73, par. 812)
Sec. 200.
Examinations.
The pendency of any proceeding under this Article shall in no way affect
the power and authority of the Director to conduct any examination provided
for in Sections 132 through 132.7, in connection with the
business, conduct or affairs
of the company sought to be liquidated, rehabilitated or conserved.
An annual audit of any business having assets of more than $500,000 which
is under liquidation or rehabilitation pursuant to this Act shall be performed
by an independent outside certified public accountant, who is currently
engaged in the conduct of audits under the Illinois State Auditing Act.
The cost of this audit shall be paid by the Director out of the assets of
the business being liquidated or rehabilitated.
An annual audit of any special deputy appointed under Section 202
shall be conducted by an independent, outside certified public accountant
performing the audits provided for in the preceding paragraph. The cost of
this audit shall be allocated among the estates of the companies in
conservation, rehabilitation, or liquidation
on the basis of allocation methods established by the Director. The
Illinois Auditor General may, at his option, participate in the audit of
any special deputy.
Copies of all audits prepared under this Section shall be promptly provided
after completion to the Governor, to the Illinois Auditor General,
and to the majority and minority leaders of the Senate and the House of
Representatives.
(Source: P.A. 89-97, eff. 7-7-95.)
(215 ILCS 5/201) (from Ch. 73, par. 813)
Sec. 201.
Who may apply for appointment of receiver or liquidator.)
No order or judgment enjoining, restraining or interfering with
the prosecution of the business of any company, or for the appointment
of a temporary or permanent receiver, rehabilitator or liquidator of a
domestic company, or receiver or conservator of a foreign or alien
company, shall be made or granted otherwise than upon the complaint of
the Director represented by the Attorney General as provided in this
article, except in an action by a judgment creditor or in proceedings
supplementary thereto after notice that a final judgment has been
entered and that the judgment creditor intends to file a complaint
praying for any of the relief in this section mentioned, has been served
upon the Director at least 30 days prior to the filing of such complaint
by such judgment creditor.
(Source: P.A. 84-546.)
(215 ILCS 5/202) (from Ch. 73, par. 814)
Sec. 202.
Appointment of special deputies; employees and professional advisors;
contracts; qualified immunity.
(a) For the purpose of assisting the Director in the performance of the
Director’s duties under Articles VII, XIII, and XIII 1/2 of this Code, the
Director has authority to appoint one or more special deputies as
the Director’s agent or agents, and clerks, assistants, attorneys, and other
personnel as the Director may deem necessary and to delegate to each such
person authority to assist the Director as the Director may consider
appropriate. The compensation of each special deputy, clerk,
assistant, attorney, and other designated personnel shall be fixed and paid
by the Director. The Director shall also have the authority to retain and
pay
attorneys, actuaries, accountants, consultants, and such other persons as
the Director may deem necessary and appropriate. The Director shall fix the
rate of compensation of these attorneys, actuaries, accountants, consultants,
and other persons subject to the approval of the court. The Director,
however, has the authority to fix, without the approval of the court, the rate
of compensation of attorneys, actuaries, accountants, consultants, and other
persons that he considers necessary and appropriate if the Director determines
that the projected expenditure for professional fees to each such person will
not exceed $20,000 per company in any calendar year.
(b) The special deputies may enter into leases or contracts for the
procurement of real or personal property, and on such terms and conditions
as the Director may deem necessary or advisable for the purpose of
performing the Director’s duties under Articles VII, XIII, and XIII 1/2 of
this Code. Any such lease or contract that requires an aggregate
expenditure in excess of $150,000 shall be subject to the approval of the
court before which is pending the delinquency proceeding of the estate of
the company on whose behalf the lease or contract is entered into. In the
event that the lease or contract is entered into on behalf of 2 or more
companies, the delinquency proceedings of the 2 or more companies shall be
consolidated for the sole purpose of obtaining approval of the lease or
contract from the court before which is pending the delinquency proceeding
of the estate of the company that, in the judgment of the Director at the
time of application for approval, is to bear the largest portion of the
amounts to be expended under the lease or contract under the allocation
methods established by the Director under subsection (c)(1) of this Section.
(c) (1) The compensation of the persons appointed by the Director and
the attorneys, actuaries, accountants, consultants, and other persons
retained by the Director, the payments under the leases or contracts
described in subsection (b) of this Section, and all other expenses of taking possession
of the property and the administration of the company and its property
shall be paid (i) out of the funds or assets of the company on whose behalf
the compensation, payments, or expenses were incurred or (ii) in the event
that the compensation, payments, or expenses were, in the judgment of the
Director, incurred in behalf of 2 or more companies, out of the assets of
those companies on the basis of allocation methods established by the Director.
(2) Notwithstanding the foregoing provisions of this subsection (c),
the salary of the special deputies, together with the salaries or fees of
those clerks, assistants, attorneys, actuaries, accountants, consultants,
or other persons appointed or retained by the Director under this Section,
and the other expenses of taking possession of the property and the
administration of the company and its property, may be paid out of
amounts appropriated to the Department of Insurance. Any amounts paid
under this Section from appropriated funds shall be repaid to the State
treasury from any available funds or assets of the company on whose behalf
the expenses were incurred, subject to the approval of the court before
which is pending the delinquency proceeding of the company.
(d) (1) For each calendar quarter or other period
as the court may determine, the Director shall file with the court before
which is pending the
delinquency proceeding of each company in liquidation or rehabilitation a
report for the period reflecting the company’s (i) cash and invested assets
held by the Director at the beginning of the period, (ii) cash receipts,
(iii) cash disbursements for payments of salaries, compensation,
professional fees, and all other expenses of administration of the company
and its property, (iv) all other cash disbursements, and (v) cash and
invested assets held by the Director at the end of the period; provided
that the report need not be filed more than once for each calendar year if
the cash and invested assets of the company are less than $250,000.
For each such period, the Director shall file with the court a similar report
for each company in conservation, except that this report shall reflect
only those cash disbursements for payments of salaries, compensation,
professional fees, and all other expenses of the administration of the
company and its property.
(2) No party to the proceedings may object to any aspect of that
report unless the basis of the party’s objection is set forth in a motion
filed with the court not later than 30 days after the filing of the report.
In the event that objections to the report are filed, the Director shall
have 15 days to file a response to the objections, and a hearing on the
matter shall be held at the earliest possible date consistent with the
schedule of the court. Any hearing on objections shall be limited solely to the
specific objections raised in the original motion.
(e) (1) For purposes of this subsection (e):
“Receiver” means the Director in his or her capacity
as the liquidator, rehabilitator, or conservator of a company in
liquidation, rehabilitation, or conservation.
“Director as trustee” means the Director when appointed as trustee under
this Article.
“Employees” means all present and former special deputies
appointed by the Director and all persons that the Director or special
deputies may appoint or employ or may have appointed or employed to assist
in the liquidation, rehabilitation, or conservation of a company.
“Employees” shall not include any attorneys, accountants, auditors, or
other professional persons or firms (or their employees) who are
retained as independent contractors by either the Director or by any
special deputy appointed under
this Section.
“Advisors” means all persons that the Director may appoint or
may have appointed under Section 202.1.
(2) If a cause of action is commenced against the receiver,
the Director as trustee, employees, or advisors, either personally or in
their official
capacity, alleging property damage, property loss, personal injury, or other
civil liability arising out of any act, error, or omission of the receiver,
the Director as trustee, employees, or advisors committed within the scope
of their duties or
employment involving a company in liquidation, rehabilitation, or
conservation, the receiver, the Director as trustee, employees, or advisors
shall be indemnified out
of the assets of the company for all expenses, attorneys’ fees, judgments,
settlements, decrees, fines, penalties, or amounts paid in satisfaction of
or incurred in the defense of the cause of action unless it is determined
upon a final adjudication on the merits that the act, error, or omission of
the receiver, the Director as trustee, employees, advisors, or the court
giving rise to the claim
was not within the scope of his or her duties or employment or was caused
by intentional, wilful, or wanton misconduct. Any payments out of the
assets of the company under this subsection (e) shall be
subject to the prior approval of the court before which is pending the
delinquency proceeding of the company.
The court shall be entitled to indemnification under Section 2 of
the Representation and Indemnification of State Employees Act.
Attorneys’ fees and expenses incurred in defending an action
against the receiver, the Director as trustee, employees, or advisors for
which indemnity is
available under this part (2) may, upon the approval of the
receiver and the court before which is pending the delinquency proceeding
of the company, be paid from the assets of the company’s estate in advance
of the final disposition of the action upon receipt of an undertaking by or
on behalf of the receiver, the Director as trustee, employees, or advisors
to pay that amount, if it
shall ultimately be determined upon a final adjudication on the merits that
he or she is not entitled to be indemnified under this part (2).
Any indemnification, expense payments, and attorneys’ fees from the
company’s assets for actions against the receiver, the Director as trustee,
employees, or advisors
under this part (2) shall be considered an administrative
expense of the estate.
In the event of actual or threatened litigation against the
receiver, the Director as trustee, employees, or advisors for which
indemnity is available under this
part (2), a reasonable amount of funds, which in the judgment of
the Director may be needed to provide indemnity, may be segregated and
reserved from the assets of the company as security for the payment of
indemnity until all applicable statutes of limitations shall have run and
all actual or threatened actions against the receiver, the Director as
trustee, employees, or
advisors have been completely and finally resolved.
(3) Nothing contained or implied in this subsection (e) shall
operate, or be construed or applied, to deprive the Director, receiver, the
Director as trustee, the
company’s estate, any employee, any advisor or the court of any defense,
claim, or right of immunity
heretofore available.
(Source: P.A. 88-297; 89-206, eff. 7-21-95.)
(215 ILCS 5/202.1) (from Ch. 73, par. 814.1)
Sec. 202.1.
The Director may, with the approval of the court, appoint
an Advisory Committee, consisting of policyholders, claimants, or other
creditors, including Guaranty Funds and Guaranty Associations, should the
Director deem it necessary to the proper performance of his
responsibilities under this Article and Article XIII 1/2. The Committee
shall serve at the pleasure of the Director and shall serve without
compensation other than reimbursement for travel
and per diem living expenses incurred in attending committee meetings. No
other committees of any nature shall be appointed by the Director or the
court in any proceeding conducted under this Article and Article XIII 1/2.
(Source: P.A. 86-1155; 86-1156.)
(215 ILCS 5/203) (from Ch. 73, par. 815)
Sec. 203.
Exemption
from filing fees.
The Director shall not be required to pay any fee to any public officer
for filing, recording or in any manner authenticating any paper or
instrument relating to any proceeding under this article, nor for services
rendered by any public officer for serving any process; but such fees and
costs may be taxed as costs against the defendant in the suit by order of
the court and paid to such public officer.
(Source: Laws 1937, p. 696.)
(215 ILCS 5/204) (from Ch. 73, par. 816)
Sec. 204. Prohibited and voidable transfers and liens.
(a)(1) A preference is a transfer of any of the property of a company
to or for the benefit of a creditor, for or on account of an antecedent
debt, made or suffered by the company within 2 years before
the
filing of
a complaint under this Article, the effect of which may be to
enable the creditor to obtain a greater percentage of this debt than
another creditor of the same class would receive.
(2) Any preference may be avoided by the Director as rehabilitator,
liquidator, or conservator if:
- (A) the company was insolvent at the time of the transfer; and
- (B) the transfer was made within 4 months before the filing of the complaint; or the creditor receiving it was (i) an officer, or any employee or attorney or other person who was in fact in a position of comparable influence in the company to an officer whether or not that person held such a position, (ii) any shareholder holding, directly or indirectly, more than 5% of any class of any equity security issued by the company, or (iii) any other person, firm, corporation, association, or aggregation of individuals with whom the company did not deal at arm’s length.
(3) Where the preference is voidable, the Director as rehabilitator,
liquidator, or conservator may recover the property or, if it has been
converted, its value from any person who has received or converted the
property; except where a bona fide purchaser or lienor has given less than
fair equivalent value, the purchaser or lienor shall have a lien upon the
property to the extent of the consideration actually given. Where a
preference by way of lien or security title is voidable, the court may on
due notice order the lien or title to be preserved for the benefit of the
estate, in which event the lien or title shall pass to the Director as
rehabilitator or liquidator.
(b)(1) A transfer of property other than real property shall be deemed
to be made or suffered when it becomes so far perfected that no subsequent
lien obtainable by legal or equitable proceedings on a simple contract
could become superior to the rights of the transferee.
(2) A transfer of real property shall be deemed to be made or suffered
when it becomes so far perfected that no subsequent bona fide purchaser
from the company could obtain rights superior to the rights of the transferee.
(3) A transfer that creates an equitable lien shall not be deemed to be
perfected if there are available means by which a legal lien could be created.
(4) A transfer not perfected before the filing of a complaint shall
be deemed to be made immediately before the filing of the complaint.
(5) The provisions of this subsection apply whether or not there are or
were creditors who might have obtained liens or persons who might have
become bona fide purchasers.
(c) For purposes of this Section:
- (1) A lien obtainable by legal or equitable proceedings upon a simple contract is one arising in the ordinary course of the proceedings upon the entry or docketing of a judgment or decree, or upon attachment, garnishment, execution, or like process, whether before, upon, or after judgment or decree and whether before or upon levy. It does not include liens that, under applicable law, are given a special priority over other liens that are prior in time.
- (2) A lien obtainable by legal or equitable proceedings could become superior to the rights of a transferee, or a purchaser could obtain rights superior to the rights of a transferee within the meaning of subsection (b) of this Section, if such consequences would follow only from the lien or purchase itself, or from the lien or purchase followed by any step wholly within the control of the respective lienholder or purchaser, with or without the aid of ministerial action by public officials. A lien could not, however, become superior and a purchase could not create superior rights for the purpose of subsection (b) of this Section through any acts subsequent to an obtaining of the lien or subsequent to a purchase that requires the agreement or concurrence of any third party or that requires any further judicial action or ruling.
(d) A transfer of property for or on account of a new and
contemporaneous consideration which is deemed under subsection (b) of this
Section to be made or suffered after the transfer because of delay in
perfecting it does not thereby become a transfer for or on account of an
antecedent debt if any acts required by the applicable law to be performed
in order to perfect the transfer as against liens or bona fide purchasers’
rights are performed within 21 days or any period expressly allowed
by the law, whichever is less. A transfer to secure a future loan, if the
loan is actually made, or a transfer that becomes security for a future
loan, shall have the same effect as a transfer for or on account of a new
and contemporaneous consideration.
(e) If any lien deemed voidable under part (2) of subsection
(a) of this Section has been dissolved by the furnishing of a bond or other
obligation, the surety on which has been indemnified directly or indirectly
by the transfer of or the creation of a lien upon any property of a company
before the filing of a complaint under this Article, the indemnifying
transfer or lien shall also be deemed voidable.
(f) The property affected by any lien deemed voidable under subsections
(a) and (e) of this Section shall be discharged from the lien, and that
property and any of the indemnifying property transferred to or for the
benefit of a surety shall pass to the Director as rehabilitator or
liquidator, except that the court may, on due notice, order any such lien to
be preserved for the benefit of the estate and the court may direct that
such conveyance be executed as may be proper or adequate to
evidence the title of the Director as
rehabilitator or liquidator.
(g) The court shall have summary jurisdiction over any proceeding by the
Director as rehabilitator, liquidator, or conservator to hear and determine
the rights of any parties under this Section. Reasonable notice of any
hearings in the proceeding shall be given to all parties in interest,
including the obligee of a releasing bond or other life obligation. Where an
order is entered for the recovery of indemnifying property in kind
or for the avoidance of
an indemnifying lien, the court, upon application of any party in interest,
shall in the same proceeding ascertain the value of the property or lien,
and if the value is less than the amount for which the property is
indemnity or than the amount of the lien, the transferee or lienholder may
elect to retain the property or lien upon payment of its value, as
ascertained by the court, to the Director as rehabilitator, liquidator, or
conservator, within such reasonable times as the court shall fix.
(h) The liability of the surety under the releasing bond or other similar
obligation shall be discharged to the extent of the value of the
indemnifying property recovered or the indemnifying lien nullified and
avoided by the Director as
rehabilitator, liquidator, or conservator. Where the property is retained
under subsection (g) of this Section, the liability shall be discharged to
the extent of the amount paid to the
Director as rehabilitator, liquidator, or conservator.
(i) If a creditor has been preferred and thereafter in good faith gives
the company further credit without security of any kind, for property which
becomes a part of the company’s estate, the amount of the new credit
remaining unpaid at the time of the petition may be set off against the
preference which would otherwise be recoverable from the creditor.
(j) If a company shall, directly or indirectly, within 4 months
before the filing of a complaint under this Article, or at any time in
contemplation of such a proceeding, pay money or transfer property to any
attorney for services rendered or to be rendered, the transactions may be
examined by the court on its own motion or shall be examined by the court
on petition of the
Director as rehabilitator, liquidator, or conservator and shall be held
valid only to the extent of a reasonable amount to be determined by the
court, and the excess may be recovered by the Director as rehabilitator,
liquidator, or conservator for the benefit of the estate provided that where
the attorney is in a position of influence in the company or an affiliate
thereof payment of any money or the transfer of any property to the
attorney for services rendered or to be rendered shall be governed by
item (B) of part (2) of subsection (a) of this Section.
(k)(1) An officer, director, manager, employee,
shareholder,
member, subscriber,
attorney, or other person acting on behalf of the company who
knowingly
participates in giving any preference when that officer, director, manager,
employee,
shareholder, member, subscriber, attorney, or other person has reasonable
cause to believe the company is or is about to become insolvent at the time
of the preference shall be personally liable to the Director as
rehabilitator, liquidator, or conservator for the amount of the preference.
There is a reasonable cause to so believe
if the transfer was made within 4 months before the date of filing of the
complaint.
(2) A person receiving any property from the company or the
benefit
thereof as a preference voidable under subsection (a) of this Section
shall be personally liable therefor and shall be bound to account to the
Director as rehabilitator, liquidator, or conservator.
(3) Nothing in this Section shall prejudice any other claim by the
Director as rehabilitator, liquidator, or conservator against any person.
(l) For purposes of this Section, the company is presumed to have been
insolvent on and during the 4 month period immediately preceding the date
of the filing of the complaint.
(m) The Director as rehabilitator, liquidator, or conservator may not
avoid a transfer under this Section to the extent that the transfer was:
- (A) Intended by the company and the creditor to or for whose benefit the transfer was made to be a contemporaneous exchange for new value given to the company, and was in fact a substantially contemporaneous exchange; or
- (B) In payment of a debt incurred by the company in the ordinary course of business or financial affairs of the company and the transferee; made in the ordinary course of business or financial affairs of the company and the transferee; and made according to ordinary business terms;
- (C) In the case of a transfer by a company where the Director has determined that an event described in Section 35A-25 or 35A-30 has occurred, specifically approved by the Director in writing pursuant to this subsection, whether or not the company is in receivership under this Article. Upon approval by the Director, such a transfer cannot later be found to constitute a prohibited or voidable transfer based solely upon a deviation from the statutory payment priorities established by law for any subsequent receivership; or
- (D) Of money or other property arising under or in connection with any Federal Home Loan Bank security agreement or any pledge, security, collateral or guarantee agreement, or any other similar arrangement or credit enhancement relating to a Federal Home Loan Bank security agreement.
(n) The Director as rehabilitator, liquidator, or conservator may avoid
any transfer of or lien upon the property of a company that the estate of the
company or a policyholder, creditor, member, or stockholder of the company
may have avoided, and the Director as rehabilitator, liquidator, or conservator
may recover and collect the property so transferred or its value from the
person to whom it was transferred unless the property was transferred to a
bona fide holder for value before the filing of the complaint. The Director
as rehabilitator, liquidator, or conservator shall be deemed a creditor for
purposes of pursuing claims under the Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act.
(o) Notwithstanding any provision of this Article to the contrary, a Federal Home Loan Bank shall not be stayed, enjoined, or prohibited from exercising or enforcing any right or cause of action regarding collateral pledged under any security agreement or any pledge, security, collateral or guarantee agreement, or any other similar arrangement or credit enhancement relating to a Federal Home Loan Bank security agreement.
(Source: P.A. 100-89, eff. 8-11-17.)
(215 ILCS 5/205) (from Ch. 73, par. 817)
Sec. 205. Priority of distribution of general assets.
(1) The priorities of distribution of general assets from the
company’s estate is to be as follows:
- (a) The costs and expenses of administration, including, but not limited to, the following:
- (i) The reasonable expenses of the Illinois Insurance Guaranty Fund, the Illinois Life and Health Insurance Guaranty Association, and the Illinois Health Maintenance Organization Guaranty Association and of any similar organization in any other state, including overhead, salaries, and other general administrative expenses allocable to the receivership (administrative and claims handling expenses and expenses in connection with arrangements for ongoing coverage), but excluding expenses incurred in the performance of duties under Section 547 or similar duties under the statute governing a similar organization in another state. For property and casualty insurance guaranty associations that guaranty certain obligations of any member company as defined by Section 534.5, expenses shall include, but not be limited to, loss adjustment expenses, which shall include adjusting and other expenses and defense and cost containment expenses. The expenses of such property and casualty guaranty associations, including the Illinois Insurance Guaranty Fund, shall be reimbursed as prescribed by Section 545, but shall be subordinate to all other costs and expenses of administration, including the expenses reimbursed pursuant to subparagraph (ii) of this paragraph (a).
- (ii) The expenses expressly approved or ratified by the Director as liquidator or rehabilitator, including, but not limited to, the following:
- (1) the actual and necessary costs of preserving or recovering the property of the insurer;
- (2) reasonable compensation for all services rendered on behalf of the administrative supervisor or receiver;
- (3) any necessary filing fees;
- (4) the fees and mileage payable to witnesses;
- (5) unsecured loans obtained by the receiver; and
- (6) expenses approved by the conservator or rehabilitator of the insurer, if any, incurred in the course of the conservation or rehabilitation that are unpaid at the time of the entry of the order of liquidation.
- Any unsecured loan falling under item (5) of subparagraph (ii) of this paragraph (a) shall have priority over all other costs and expenses of administration, unless the lender agrees otherwise. Absent agreement to the contrary, all other costs and expenses of administration shall be shared on a pro-rata basis, except for the expenses of property and casualty guaranty associations, which shall have a lower priority pursuant to subparagraph (i) of this paragraph (a).
- (b) Secured claims, including claims for taxes and debts due the federal or any state or local government, that are secured by liens perfected prior to the filing of the complaint.
- (c) Claims for wages actually owing to employees for services rendered within 3 months prior to the date of the filing of the complaint, not exceeding $1,000 to each employee unless there are claims due the federal government under paragraph (f), then the claims for wages shall have a priority of distribution immediately following that of federal claims under paragraph (f) and immediately preceding claims of general creditors under paragraph (g).
- (d) Claims by policyholders, beneficiaries, and insureds, under insurance policies, annuity contracts, and funding agreements, liability claims against insureds covered under insurance policies and insurance contracts issued by the company, claims of obligees (and, subject to the discretion of the receiver, completion contractors) under surety bonds and surety undertakings (not to include mortgage or financial guaranty, or other forms of insurance offering protection against investment risk), claims by principals under surety bonds and surety undertakings for wrongful dissipation of collateral by the insurer or its agents, and claims incurred during any extension of coverage provided under subsection (5) of Section 193, and claims of the Illinois Insurance Guaranty Fund, the Illinois Life and Health Insurance Guaranty Association, the Illinois Health Maintenance Organization Guaranty Association, and any similar organization in another state as prescribed in Section 545. For purposes of this Section, “funding agreement” means an agreement whereby an insurer authorized to write business under Class 1 of Section 4 of this Code may accept and accumulate funds and make one or more payments at future dates in amounts that are not based upon mortality or morbidity contingencies.
- (e) Claims by policyholders, beneficiaries, and insureds, the allowed values of which were determined by estimation under paragraph (b) of subsection (4) of Section 209.
- (f) Any other claims due the federal government.
- (g) All other claims of general creditors not falling within any other priority under this Section including claims for taxes and debts due any state or local government which are not secured claims and claims for attorneys’ fees incurred by the company in contesting its conservation, rehabilitation, or liquidation.
- (h) Claims of guaranty fund certificate holders, guaranty capital shareholders, capital note holders, and surplus note holders.
- (i) Proprietary claims of shareholders, members, or other owners.
Every claim under a written agreement, statute, or rule providing that the
assets in a separate account are not chargeable with the liabilities arising
out of any other business of the insurer shall be satisfied out of the funded
assets in the separate account equal to, but not to exceed, the reserves
maintained in the separate account under the separate account agreement, and to
the extent, if any, the claim is not fully discharged thereby, the remainder
of the claim shall be treated as a priority level (d) claim under paragraph
(d) of this subsection to the extent that reserves have been established in the
insurer’s general account pursuant to statute, rule, or the separate account
agreement.
For purposes of this provision, “separate account policies, contracts, or
agreements” means any policies, contracts, or agreements that provide for
separate accounts as contemplated by Section 245.21.
To the extent that any assets of an insurer, other than those assets properly
allocated to and maintained in a separate account, have been used to fund or
pay any expenses, taxes, or policyholder benefits that are attributable to a
separate account policy, contract, or agreement that should have been paid by a
separate account prior to the commencement of receivership proceedings, then
upon the commencement of receivership proceedings, the separate accounts
that benefited from this payment or funding shall first be used to repay or
reimburse the company’s general assets or account for any unreimbursed net sums
due at the commencement of receivership proceedings prior to the application of
the separate account assets to the satisfaction of liabilities or the
corresponding separate account policies, contracts, and agreements.
To the extent, if any, reserves or assets maintained in the separate account
are in excess of the amounts needed to satisfy claims under the separate
account contracts, the excess shall be treated as part of the general assets of
the insurer’s estate.
(2) Within 120 days after the issuance of an Order of Liquidation with a
finding of insolvency against a domestic company, the Director shall make
application to the court requesting authority to disburse funds to the
Illinois Insurance Guaranty Fund, the Illinois Life and Health Insurance
Guaranty Association, the Illinois Health Maintenance Organization Guaranty
Association, and similar organizations in other states from time to time out
of the company’s marshaled assets as funds
become available in amounts equal to disbursements made by the
Illinois Insurance Guaranty Fund, the Illinois Life and Health Insurance
Guaranty Association, the Illinois Health Maintenance Organization Guaranty
Association, and similar organizations in other states
for covered claims obligations on the presentation of evidence that such
disbursements have been made by the Illinois Insurance
Guaranty Fund, the Illinois Life and Health Insurance Guaranty
Association, the Illinois Health Maintenance Organization Guaranty Association,
and similar organizations in other states.
The Director shall establish procedures for the ratable allocation and
distribution of disbursements to the Illinois Insurance Guaranty Fund,
the Illinois Life and Health Insurance Guaranty Association, the Illinois
Health Maintenance Organization Guaranty Association, and
similar organizations in other states. In determining the amounts available
for disbursement, the Director shall reserve sufficient assets for the
payment of the expenses of administration described in paragraph (1)(a)
of this Section. All funds available for disbursement after the establishment
of the prescribed reserve shall be promptly distributed. As a condition
to receipt of funds in reimbursement of covered claims obligations,
the Director shall secure from the Illinois Insurance Guaranty Fund,
the Illinois Life and Health Insurance Guaranty Association, the Illinois
Health Maintenance Organization Guaranty Association, and
each similar organization in other states, an agreement to return to the
Director on demand funds previously received as may be required to pay claims
of secured creditors and claims falling within the priorities established
in paragraphs (a), (b), (c), and (d) of subsection (1) of
this Section in accordance
with such priorities.
(3) The changes made in this Section by this amendatory Act of the 100th General Assembly apply to all liquidation,
rehabilitation, or conservation proceedings that are pending on the effective date of this amendatory
Act of the 100th General Assembly and to all future liquidation, rehabilitation, or conservation proceedings.
(4) The provisions of this Section are severable under Section 1.31 of
the Statute on Statutes.
(Source: P.A. 100-410, eff. 8-25-17; 101-652, eff. 1-1-23.)
(215 ILCS 5/205.1)
Sec. 205.1. Policyholder collateral, deductible reimbursements, and other policyholder obligations.
(a) Any collateral held by, for the benefit of, or assigned to the insurer or the Director as rehabilitator or liquidator to secure the obligations of a policyholder under a deductible agreement shall not be considered an asset of the estate and shall be maintained and administered by the Director as rehabilitator or liquidator as provided in this Section and notwithstanding any other provision of law or contract to the contrary.
(b) If the collateral is being held by, for the benefit of, or assigned to the insurer or subsequently the Director as rehabilitator or liquidator to secure obligations under a deductible agreement with a policyholder, subject to the provisions of this Section, the collateral shall be used to secure the policyholder’s obligation to fund or reimburse claims payment within the agreed deductible amount.
(c) If a claim that is subject to a deductible agreement and secured by collateral is not covered by any guaranty association or the Illinois Insurance Guaranty Fund and the policyholder is unwilling or unable to take over the handling and payment of the non-covered claims, the Director as rehabilitator or liquidator shall adjust and pay the non-covered claims utilizing the collateral but only to the extent the available collateral after allocation under subsection (d), is sufficient to pay all outstanding and anticipated claims. If the collateral is exhausted and the insured is not able to provide funds to pay the remaining claims within the deductible after all reasonable means of collection against the insured have been exhausted, the Director’s obligation to pay such claims from the collateral as the rehabilitator or liquidator terminates, and the remaining claims shall be claims against the insurer’s estate subject to complying with other provisions in this Article for the filing and allowance of such claims. When the liquidator determines that the collateral is insufficient to pay all additional and anticipated claims, the liquidator may file a plan for equitably allocating the collateral among claimants, subject to court approval.
(d) To the extent that the Director as rehabilitator or liquidator is holding collateral provided by a policyholder that was obtained to secure a deductible agreement and to secure other obligations of the policyholder to pay the insurer, directly or indirectly, amounts that become assets of the estate, such as reinsurance obligations under a captive reinsurance program or adjustable premium obligations under a retrospectively rated insurance policy where the premium due is subject to adjustment based upon actual loss experience, the Director as rehabilitator or liquidator shall equitably allocate the collateral among such obligations and administer the collateral allocated to the deductible agreement pursuant to this Section. With respect to the collateral allocated to obligations under the deductible agreement, if the collateral secured reimbursement obligations under more than one line of insurance, then the
collateral shall be equitably allocated among the various lines based upon the estimated ultimate exposure within the deductible amount for each line. The Director as rehabilitator or liquidator shall inform the guaranty association or the Illinois Insurance Guaranty Fund that is or may be obligated for claims against the insurer of the method and details of all the foregoing allocations.
(e) Regardless of whether there is collateral, if the insurer has contractually agreed to allow the policyholder to fund its own claims within the deductible amount pursuant to a deductible agreement, either through the policyholder’s own administration of its claims or through the policyholder providing funds directly to a third party administrator who administers the claims, the Director as rehabilitator or liquidator shall allow such funding arrangement to continue and, where applicable, will enforce such arrangements to the fullest extent possible. The funding of such claims by the policyholder within the deductible amount will act as a bar to any claim for such amount in the liquidation proceeding, including but not limited to any such claim by the policyholder or the third party claimant. The funding will extinguish both the obligation, if any, of any guaranty association or the Illinois Insurance Guaranty Fund to pay such claims within the deductible amount, as well as the obligations, if any, of the policyholder or third party administrator to reimburse the guaranty association or the Illinois Insurance Guaranty Fund. No charge of any kind shall be made by the Director as rehabilitator or liquidator against any guaranty association or the Illinois Insurance Guaranty Fund on the basis of the policyholder funding of claims payment made pursuant to the mechanism set forth in this subsection.
(f) If the insurer has not contractually agreed to allow the policyholder to fund its own claims within the deductible amount, to the extent a guaranty association or the Illinois Insurance Guaranty Fund is required by applicable state law to pay any claims for which the insurer would be or would have been entitled to reimbursement from the policyholder under the terms of the deductible agreement and to the extent the claims have not been paid by a policyholder or third party, the Director as rehabilitator or liquidator shall promptly bill the policyholder for such reimbursement and the policyholder will be obligated to pay such amount to the Director as rehabilitator or liquidator for the benefit of the guaranty association or the Illinois Insurance Guaranty Fund that paid such claims. Neither the insolvency of the insurer, nor its inability to perform any of its obligations under the deductible agreement, shall be a defense to the policyholder’s reimbursement obligation under the deductible agreement. When the policyholder reimbursements are collected, the Director as rehabilitator or liquidator shall promptly reimburse the guaranty association or the Illinois Insurance Guaranty Fund for claims paid that were subject to the deductible. If the policyholder fails to pay the amounts due within 60 days after such bill for such reimbursements is due, the Director as rehabilitator or liquidator shall use the collateral to the extent necessary to reimburse the guaranty association or the Illinois Insurance Guaranty Fund, and, at the same time, may pursue other collections efforts against the policyholder. If more than one guaranty association or the Illinois Insurance Guaranty Fund has a claim against the same collateral and the available collateral (after allocation under subsection (d)), along with billing and collection efforts, are together insufficient to pay each guaranty association or the Illinois Insurance Guaranty Fund in full, then the Director as rehabilitator or liquidator will pro-rate payments to each guaranty association or the Illinois Insurance Guaranty Fund based upon the relationship the amount of claims each guaranty association or the Illinois Insurance Guaranty Fund has paid bears to the total of all claims paid by such guaranty association or the Illinois Insurance Guaranty Fund.
(g) Director’s duties and powers as rehabilitator or liquidator.
- (1) The Director as rehabilitator or liquidator is entitled to deduct from reimbursements owed to guaranty associations or the Illinois Insurance Guaranty Fund or collateral to be returned to a policyholder reasonable actual expenses incurred in fulfilling the responsibilities under this provision, not to exceed 3% of the collateral or the total deductible reimbursements actually collected by the Director as rehabilitator or liquidator.
- (2) With respect to claim payments made by any guaranty association or the Illinois Insurance Guaranty Fund, the Director as rehabilitator or liquidator shall promptly provide the court, with a copy to the guaranty associations or the Illinois Insurance Guaranty Fund, with a complete report of the Director’s deductible billing and collection activities as rehabilitator or liquidator including copies of the policyholder billings when rendered, the reimbursements collected, the available amounts and use of collateral for each policyholder, and any pro-ration of payments when it occurs. If the Director as rehabilitator or liquidator fails to make a good faith effort within 120 days of receipt of claims payment reports to collect reimbursements due from a policyholder under a deductible agreement based on claim payments made by one or more guaranty associations or the Illinois Insurance Guaranty Fund, then after such 120 day period such guaranty associations or the Illinois Insurance Guaranty Fund may pursue collection from the policyholders directly on the same basis as the Director as rehabilitator or liquidator, and with the same rights and remedies, and will report any amounts so collected from each policyholder to the Director as rehabilitator or liquidator. To the extent that guaranty associations or the Illinois Insurance Guaranty Fund pay claims within the deductible amount, but are not reimbursed by either the Director as rehabilitator, liquidator, or conservator under this Section or by policyholder payments from the guaranty associations’ or the Illinois Insurance Guaranty Fund’s own collection efforts, the guaranty association or the Illinois Insurance Guaranty Fund shall have a claim in the insolvent insurer’s estate for such un-reimbursed claims payments.
- (3) The Director as rehabilitator or liquidator shall periodically adjust the collateral being held as the claims subject to the deductible agreement are run-off, provided that adequate collateral is maintained to secure the entire estimated ultimate obligation of the policyholder plus a reasonable safety factor, and the Director as rehabilitator or liquidator shall not be required to adjust the collateral more than once a year. The guaranty associations or the Illinois Insurance Guaranty Fund shall be informed of all such collateral reviews, including but not limited to the basis for the adjustment. Once all claims covered by the collateral have been paid and the Director as rehabilitator or liquidator is satisfied that no new claims can be presented, the Director as rehabilitator or liquidator will release any remaining collateral to the policyholder.
(h) The Illinois Circuit Court having jurisdiction over the liquidation proceedings shall have jurisdiction to resolve disputes arising under this provision.
(i) Nothing in this Section is intended to limit or adversely affect any right the guaranty associations or the Illinois Insurance Guaranty Fund may have under applicable state law to obtain reimbursement from certain classes of policyholders for claims payments made by such guaranty associations or the Illinois Insurance Guaranty Fund under policies of the insolvent insurer, or for related expenses the guaranty associations or the Illinois Insurance Guaranty Fund incur.
(j) This Section applies to all receivership proceedings under Article XIII that either (1) commence on or after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly or (2) are on file or open on the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly and in which an Order of Liquidation is entered on or after May 1, 2004. However, this Section applies to rehabilitation proceedings only to the extent that guaranty associations are required to pay claims and does not apply to receivership proceedings in which only an order of conservation has been entered.
(k) For purposes of this Section, a “deductible agreement” is any combination of one or more policies, endorsements, contracts, or security agreements, which provide for the policyholder to bear the risk of loss within a specified amount per claim or occurrence covered under a policy of insurance, and may be subject to the aggregate limit of policyholder reimbursement obligations. This
Section shall not apply to first party claims, or to claims funded by a guaranty association or the Illinois Insurance Guaranty Fund in excess of the deductible unless subsection (e) above applies. The term “non-covered claim” shall mean a claim that is subject to a deductible agreement and is not covered by a guaranty association or the Illinois Insurance Guaranty Fund.
(Source: P.A. 93-1028, eff. 8-25-04; 94-248, eff. 7-19-05.)
(215 ILCS 5/206) (from Ch. 73, par. 818)
Sec. 206.
Set-offs
or counterclaims.
In all cases of mutual debts or mutual credits between the company and
another person, such credits and debts shall be set off or counterclaimed
and the balance only shall be allowed or paid, provided, however, that no
set-off or counterclaim shall be allowed in favor of any person where
(a) the obligation of the company to such person was purchased by or
transferred to such person with a view of its being used as a set-off or
counterclaim, or
(b) the obligation of such person is to pay an assessment levied against
the members or subscribers of any company which issued assessable policies,
or to pay a balance upon a subscription to the shares of a stock company.
No set-off shall be allowed in favor of an insurance agent or broker
against his account with the company, for the unearned portion of the
premium on any cancelled policy, unless that policy was cancelled prior to
the entry of the Order of Liquidation or Rehabilitation, and unless the
unearned portion of the premium on that cancelled policy was refunded or
credited to the assured or his representative prior to the entry of the
Order of Liquidation or Rehabilitation.
(Source: Laws 1967, p. 789.)
(215 ILCS 5/206.1)
Sec. 206.1. Qualified financial contracts.
(a) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Article, including any other provision of this Article permitting the modification of contracts, or other law of a state, no person shall be stayed or prohibited from exercising:
- (1) a contractual right to cause the termination, liquidation, acceleration, or close out of obligations under or in connection with any netting agreement or qualified financial contract with an insurer because of:
- (A) the insolvency, financial condition, or default of the insurer at any time, provided that the right is enforceable under an applicable law other than this Code; or
- (B) the commencement of a formal delinquency proceeding under this Code;
- (2) any right under a pledge, security, collateral, reimbursement or guarantee agreement or arrangement, any other similar security agreement or arrangement, or other credit enhancement relating to one or more netting agreements or qualified financial contracts;
- (3) subject to any provision of Section 206 of this Article, any right to set off or net out any termination value, payment amount, or other transfer obligation arising under or in connection with one or more qualified financial contracts where the counterparty or its guarantor is organized under the laws of the United States or a state or a foreign jurisdiction approved by the Securities Valuation Office of the National Association of Insurance Commissioners as eligible for netting; or
- (4) if a counterparty to a master netting agreement or a qualified financial contract with an insurer subject to a proceeding under this Article terminates, liquidates, closes out or accelerates the agreement or contract, then damages shall be measured as of the date or dates of termination, liquidation, close out, or acceleration; the amount of a claim for damages shall be actual direct compensatory damages calculated in accordance with subsection (f) of this Section.
(b) Upon termination of a netting agreement or qualified financial contract, the net or settlement amount, if any, owed by a nondefaulting party to an insurer against which an application or petition has been filed under this Code shall be transferred to or on the order of the receiver for the insurer, even if the insurer is the defaulting party, notwithstanding any walkaway clause in the netting agreement or qualified financial contract.
For the purposes of this subsection (b), the term “walkaway clause” means a provision in a netting agreement or a qualified financial contract that, after calculation of a value of a party’s position or an amount due to or from one of the parties in accordance with its terms upon termination, liquidation, or acceleration of the netting agreement or qualified financial contract, either does not create a payment obligation of a party or extinguishes a payment obligation of a party in whole or in part solely because of the party’s status as a nondefaulting party. Any limited 2-way payment or first method provision in a netting agreement or qualified financial contract with an insurer that has defaulted shall be deemed to be a full 2-way payment or second method provision as against the defaulting insurer. Any such property or amount shall, except to the extent that it is subject to one or more secondary liens or encumbrances or rights of netting or setoff, be a general asset of the insurer.
(c) In making any transfer of a netting agreement or qualified financial contract of an insurer subject to a proceeding under this Code, the receiver shall either:
- (1) transfer to one party (other than an insurer subject to a proceeding under this Article) all netting agreements and qualified financial contracts between a counterparty or any affiliate of the counterparty and the insurer that is the subject of the proceeding, including:
- (A) all rights and obligations of each party under each netting agreement and qualified financial contract; and
- (B) all property, including any guarantees or other credit enhancement, securing any claims of each party under each netting agreement and qualified financial contract; or
- (2) transfer none of the netting agreements, qualified financial contracts, rights, obligations, or property referred to in paragraph (1) of this subsection (c) (with respect to the counterparty and any affiliate of the counterparty).
(d) If a receiver for an insurer makes a transfer of one or more netting agreements or qualified financial contracts, then the receiver shall use its best efforts to notify any person who is party to the netting agreements or qualified financial contracts of the transfer by 12:00 noon (the receiver’s local time) on the business day following the transfer. For the purposes of this subsection (d), “business day” means a day other than a Saturday, Sunday, or any day on which either the New York Stock Exchange or the Federal Reserve Bank of New York is closed.
(e) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Article, a receiver may not avoid a transfer of money or other property arising under or in connection with a netting agreement or qualified financial contract (or any pledge, security, collateral, or guarantee agreement or any other similar security arrangement or credit support document relating to a netting agreement or qualified financial contract) that is made before the commencement of a formal delinquency proceeding under this Article.
(f) The following provisions shall apply concerning disaffirmance and repudiation:
- (1) In exercising the rights of disaffirmance or repudiation of a receiver with respect to any netting agreement or qualified financial contract to which an insurer is a party, the receiver for the insurer shall either:
- (A) disaffirm or repudiate all netting agreements and qualified financial contracts between a counterparty or any affiliate of the counterparty and the insurer that is the subject of the proceeding; or
- (B) disaffirm or repudiate none of the netting agreements and qualified financial contracts referred to in subparagraph (A) (with respect to the person or any affiliate of the person).
- (2) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Article, any claim of a counterparty against the estate arising from the receiver’s disaffirmance or repudiation of a netting agreement or qualified financial contract that has not been previously affirmed in the liquidation or immediately preceding a conservation or rehabilitation case shall be determined and shall be allowed or disallowed as if the claim had arisen before the date of the filing of the petition for liquidation or, if a conservation or rehabilitation proceeding is converted to a liquidation proceeding, as if the claim had arisen before the date of the filing of the petition for conservation or rehabilitation. The amount of the claim shall be the actual direct compensatory damages determined as of the date of the disaffirmance or repudiation of the netting agreement or qualified financial contract. The term “actual direct compensatory damages” does not include punitive or exemplary damages, damages for lost profit or lost opportunity, or damages for pain and suffering, but does include normal and reasonable costs of cover or other reasonable measures of damages utilized in the derivatives, securities, or other market for the contract and agreement claims.
(g) The term “contractual right”, as used in this Section, includes any right set forth in a rule or bylaw of a derivatives clearing organization, as defined in the Commodity Exchange Act; a multilateral clearing organization, as defined in the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Improvement Act of 1991; a national securities exchange; a national securities association; a securities clearing agency; a contract market designated under the Commodity Exchange Act; a derivatives transaction execution facility registered under the Commodity Exchange Act; or a board of trade, as defined in the Commodity Exchange Act or in a resolution of the governing board thereof and any right, whether or not evidenced in writing, arising under statutory or common law or under law merchant or by reason of normal business practice.
(h) The provisions of this Section shall not apply to persons who are affiliates of the insurer that is the subject of the proceeding.
(i) All rights of counterparties under this Article shall apply to netting agreements and qualified financial contracts entered into on behalf of the general account or separate accounts if the assets of each separate account are available only to counterparties to netting agreements and qualified financial contracts entered into on behalf of that separate account.
(Source: P.A. 96-1450, eff. 8-20-10.)
(215 ILCS 5/207.1) (from Ch. 73, par. 819.1)
Sec. 207.1.
Contingent Liability Policies.
Upon the entry of an order of liquidation any provision in the policies
of a company providing for a contingent liability of the policyholders
shall become void.
(Source: P.A. 76-715.)
(215 ILCS 5/208) (from Ch. 73, par. 820)
Sec. 208.
Time to
file claims.
(1) When in a liquidation, rehabilitation, or conservation
proceeding
against an insurer under this Article an order has been entered for the
filing of claims, all persons who may have claims against such insurer
shall present the same to the Liquidator, Rehabilitator or Conservator, as
the case may be, at a place specified in the notice for filing of claims
within such time as may be fixed by order of the Court. The Director shall
notify all persons who may have claims against such insurer as disclosed by
its books and records, to present the same to him within the time as fixed.
The last date for the filing of proof of claim shall be specified in the
notice. Such notice shall be given in a manner determined by the Court. The
Director shall also cause a notice specifying the last day for filing of
claims to be published once a week for three consecutive weeks in a
newspaper published in the county where such proceedings are pending and in
such other newspapers as he may deem advisable.
(2) Proofs of claim on good cause shown may be filed after the
date specified, but except as provided in subsection (3), no such claim
shall share in the distribution of
assets until all allowed claims proofs of which have been filed before said
date, have been paid in full.
(3) The Director may deem proofs of claim filed after the date specified
as timely filed when the claimant shows to the Director’s reasonable
satisfaction
that (i) the claimant had no actual knowledge of the date before it had passed,
(ii) a proof of claim was not sent to the claimant until after the date had
passed, and (iii) the Director knew of the claimant’s existence and correct
address before the date had passed. Any such claim shall share in the
distribution of assets under Section 205.
(Source: P.A. 88-297.)
(215 ILCS 5/209) (from Ch. 73, par. 821)
Sec. 209. Proof and allowance of claims.
(1) The following provisions shall apply concerning proof and allowance of claims:
- (a) Proof of claim shall consist of a statement signed by the claimant or on behalf of the claimant that includes all of the following that are applicable:
- (i) the particulars of the claim including the consideration given for it;
- (ii) the identity and amount of the security on the claim;
- (iii) the payments made on the debt, if any;
- (iv) that the sum claimed is justly owing and that there is no setoff, counterclaim, or defense to the claim;
- (v) any right of priority of payment or other specific right asserted by the claimant;
- (vi) the name and address of the claimant and the attorney, if any, who represents the claimant; and
- (vii) the claimant’s social security or federal employer identification number.
- (b) The Director may require that a prescribed form be used and may require that other information and documents be included.
- (c) At any time the Director may require the claimant to present information or evidence supplementary to that required under paragraph (a) and may take testimony under oath, require production of affidavits or depositions, or otherwise obtain additional information or evidence.
(2) Whenever
a claim is based upon a document, the document, unless
lost or destroyed, shall be filed with the proof of claim. If the document is
lost or destroyed, a statement of that fact and of
the
circumstances of the loss or destruction shall be included in
the proof of claim.
A claim may be allowed even if contingent or unliquidated as of the date
fixed by the court
pursuant to subsection (a) of Section 194 if it is filed in accordance with
this subsection. Except as otherwise provided in subsection (7), a proof of
claim required under this Section must identify a known loss or occurrence.
(3) Upon the liquidation, rehabilitation, or conservation of
any
company which has issued policies insuring the lives of persons, the
Director shall, within a reasonable time, after the last day set for the
filing of claims, make a list of the persons who have not filed proofs of
claim with him and whose rights have not been reinsured, to whom it appears
from the books of the company, there are owing amounts on such policies and
he shall set opposite the name of each person such amount so owing to such
person. The Director shall incur no personal liability by reason of any
mistake in such list. Each person whose name shall appear upon said list
shall be deemed to have duly filed prior to the last day set for filing of
claims a proof of claim for the amount set opposite his name on said list.
(4)(a) When a Liquidation, Rehabilitation, or
Conservation Order has been entered in a proceeding against an insurer under
this Code, any insured under an insurance policy shall have
the right to file a contingent claim. The Court at the time of the entry of
the Order of Liquidation, Rehabilitation or Conservation shall fix the final
date for the liquidation of insureds’ contingent claims, but
in no event
shall said date be more than 3 years after the last day fixed for the filing of
claims, provided, such date may be extended by the Court on petition of the
Director should the Director determine that such extension will not delay
distribution of assets under Section 210. Such a contingent claim
shall be allowed if such claim is liquidated and the insured
claimant presents evidence of payment of such claim to the Director on or
before the last day fixed by the Court.
(b) When an insured has been unable to liquidate its claim under paragraph
(a) of this subsection (4), the insured may have its claim allowed by
estimation if (i) it may be reasonably inferred from the proof presented upon
the claim that a claim exists under the policy; (ii) the insured has furnished
suitable proof, unless the court for good cause shown shall otherwise direct,
that no further valid claims against the insurer arising out of the cause of
action other than those already presented can be made, and (iii) the total
liability of the insurer to all claimants arising out of the same act shall be
no greater than its total liability would be were it not in liquidation,
rehabilitation, or conservation.
(5) The obligation of the insurer, if any, to defend or continue the
defense
of any claim or suit under a liability insurance policy shall terminate on
the entry of the Order of Liquidation, Rehabilitation or Conservation,
except during the appeal of an Order of Liquidation as provided by Section
190.1 or, unless upon the petition of the Director, the court directs
otherwise. Insureds may include in contingent claims reasonable attorneys
fees for services rendered subsequent to the date of Liquidation,
Rehabilitation or Conservation in defense of claims or suits covered by the
insured’s policy provided such attorneys fees have actually been paid by the
assured and evidence of payment presented in the manner required for insured’s
contingent claims.
(6) When a liquidation, rehabilitation, or
conservation order has been
entered in a proceeding against
an insurer under this Code, any person who has a cause of action against an
insured of the insurer under an insurance
policy issued by the insurer shall have the right to file a
claim in the proceeding, regardless of the fact that the claim
may be contingent, and the claim may be allowed by estimation (a) if it may be
reasonably, inferred from proof presented upon the claim
that the claimant would be able to obtain a judgment upon
the cause of action against the insured; and (b) if
the person has furnished
suitable proof, unless the court for
good cause shown shall otherwise direct, that no further valid claims
against the insurer arising out of the cause of
action other than those
already presented can be made, and (c) the total liability of
the
insurer to all claimants arising out of the same act shall
be no greater than its total liability would be were it not in liquidation,
rehabilitation, or
conservation.
(7) Contingent or unliquidated general creditors’ and ceding insurers’
claims that are not made absolute and liquidated by the last day fixed by the
court pursuant to subsection (4) may be determined and allowed by estimation.
Any such estimate shall be based upon an actuarial evaluation made
with reasonable actuarial certainty or upon another accepted method of valuing
claims with reasonable certainty and, with respect to ceding insurers’ claims,
may include an estimate of incurred but not reported losses.
(7.5) (a) The estimation and allowance of the loss development on a known loss or occurrence shall trigger a reinsurer’s obligation to pay pursuant to its reinsurance contract with the insolvent company, provided that the allowance is made in accordance with paragraph (b) of subsection (4) or subsection (6). The Director shall have the authority to exercise all available remedies on behalf of the insolvent company to marshal these reinsurance recoverables.
(b) That portion of any estimated and allowed contingent claim that is attributable to claims incurred but not reported to the insolvent company’s reinsured shall not be billable to the insolvent company’s reinsurers, except to the extent that (A) such claims develop into known losses or occurrences and become billable under paragraph (a) of this subsection or (B) the reinsurance contract specifically provides for the payment of such losses or reserves.
(c) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code, the liquidator may negotiate a voluntary commutation and release of all obligations arising from reinsurance contracts or other agreements.
(8) No judgment against such an insured or an
insurer taken after the date of the entry of the liquidation,
rehabilitation, or conservation order shall be considered in the
proceedings
as evidence of liability, or of the amount of damages, and no judgment
against an insured or an insurer taken by default, or by collusion prior to
the entry of the liquidation order shall be considered as conclusive
evidence in the proceeding either of the liability of such insured to such
person upon such cause of action or of the amount of damages to which such
person is therein entitled.
(9) The value of securities held by secured creditors shall be
determined by converting the same into money according to the terms of the
agreement pursuant to which such securities were delivered to such
creditors, or by such creditors and the Director by agreement, or by the
court, and the amount of such value shall be credited upon the claims of
such secured creditors and their claims allowed only for the balance.
(10) Claims of creditors or policyholders who have received
preferences
voidable under Section 204 or to whom conveyances or transfers,
assignments or incumbrances have been made or given which are void under
Section 204, shall not be allowed unless such creditors or policyholders
shall surrender such preferences, conveyances, transfers, assignments or
incumbrances.
(11)(a) When the Director denies a claim or allows a claim for less than
the amount requested by the claimant, written notice of the determination and
of the right to object shall be given promptly to the claimant or the
claimant’s representative by first class mail at the address shown on the
proof of claim. Within 60 days from the mailing of the notice, the claimant
may
file his written objections with the Director. If no such filing is made on a
timely basis, the claimant may not further object to the determination.
(b) Whenever objections are filed with the Director and he does not alter
his determination as a result of the objection and the claimant continues to
object, the Director shall petition the court for a hearing as soon as
practicable and give notice of the hearing by first class mail to the claimant
or his representative and to any other persons known by the Director to be
directly affected, not less than 10 days before the date of the hearing.
(12) The Director shall review all claims duly filed in the liquidation,
rehabilitation, or conservation proceeding, unless otherwise directed by the
court, and shall make such further investigation as he considers necessary.
The Director may compound, compromise, or in any other manner negotiate the
amount for which claims will be recommended to the court. Unresolved disputes
shall be determined under subsection (11).
(13)(a) The Director shall present to the court reports of claims reviewed
under subsection (12) with his recommendations as to each claim.
(b) The court may approve or disapprove any recommendations contained in the
reports of claims filed by the Director, except that the Director’s agreements
with claimants shall be accepted as final by the court on claims settled for
$10,000 or less.
(14) The changes made in this Section by this amendatory Act of 1993
apply to
all
liquidation, rehabilitation, or
conservation proceedings that are pending on the effective date of this
amendatory Act of 1993 and to all future liquidation, rehabilitation, or
conservation proceedings,
except that the changes made to the provisions of
this Section by this amendatory Act of 1993 shall not apply to any company
ordered into liquidation on or before January 1, 1982.
(15) The changes made in this Section by this amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly do not apply to any company ordered into liquidation on or before January 1, 2004.
(Source: P.A. 96-1450, eff. 8-20-10.)
(215 ILCS 5/210) (from Ch. 73, par. 822)
Sec. 210. Distribution of assets; priorities; unpaid dividends.
(1) Any time after the last day fixed for the filing of
proofs of claims in the liquidation of a company, the court may, upon the
application of the Director authorize him to declare out of the funds
remaining in his hands, one or more dividends upon all claims allowed in
accordance with the priorities established in Section 205.
(2) Where there has been no adjudication of insolvency, the Director
shall pay all allowed claims in full in accordance with the priorities set
forth in Section 205. The director shall not be chargeable for any
assets so distributed to any claimant who has failed to file a proper proof
of claim before such distribution has been made.
(3) When subsequent to an adjudication of insolvency, pursuant to Section
208, a surplus is found to exist after the payment in full of all allowed
claims falling within the priorities set forth in paragraphs (a), (b), (c),
(d),
(e), (f) and (g) of subsection (1) of Section 205 and which have been duly
filed prior to the last date fixed for the filing thereof, and after the
setting aside of a reserve for all additional costs and expenses of the
proceeding, the court shall set a new date for the filing of claims. After the
expiration of the new date, all allowed claims filed on or before said new date
together with all previously allowed claims falling within the priorities set
forth in paragraphs (h) and (i) of subsection (1) of Section 205 shall be paid
in accordance with the priorities set forth in Section 205.
(4) Dividends remaining unclaimed or unpaid in the hands of the
Director for 6 months after the final order of distribution may be
by him deposited in one or more savings and loan associations, State or
national banks, trust companies or savings banks to the credit of the Director,
whomsoever he may be, in trust for the person entitled thereto, but no such
person shall be entitled to any interest upon such deposit. All such deposits
shall be entitled to priority of payment in case of the insolvency or voluntary
or involuntary liquidation of the depositary on an equality with any other
priority given by the banking law. Any such funds together with interest, if
any, paid or credited thereon, remaining and unclaimed in the hands of the
Director in Trust after 2 years shall be presumed abandoned and reported and
delivered to the State Treasurer and become subject to the provisions of the Revised
Uniform Unclaimed Property Act.
(Source: P.A. 100-22, eff. 1-1-18.)
(215 ILCS 5/211.1)
Sec. 211.1.
Termination of proceedings.
(a) When all assets justifying the
expense of collection and distribution have been marshaled and distributed
under this Code, the Director as liquidator shall petition the court to
terminate the liquidation proceedings and to close the estate. The court may
grant such other relief as may be appropriate, including a full discharge of
all
liability and responsibility of the
liquidator, a reservation of assets for administrative expenses incurred in the
closing of the estate, and the maintenance and destruction of records.
(b) Subject to the approval of the court, after the completion of all
postclosure activities for which moneys
were reserved, the Director is authorized to destroy company records and
documents notwithstanding any other applicable statutes and any remaining
reserved
assets that are provided for in subsection (a) and that may not be practicably
or
economically distributed to claimants shall be deposited into a segregated
account
to be known as the Closed Estate Fund Trust Account.
The Director may use moneys held in the account for paying the administrative
expenses of companies
subject
to this Article that lack sufficient assets to allow the Director to perform
his duties and obligations under this Article. An annual audit of
the Closed Estate Fund Trust Account shall be performed in accordance with
Section 200 of this Code regardless of its balance.
(c) The Director may petition the court to reopen the proceedings for
good cause shown, including the marshaling of additional assets, and the court
may enter such other orders as may be deemed appropriate.
(Source: P.A. 88-297; 89-206, eff. 7-21-95.)
(215 ILCS 5/212.1)
Sec. 212.1.
Subpoena and document production.
The court shall have
jurisdiction, upon, or at any time after the filing of the complaint, upon the
petition of the
Director to subpoena witnesses and
compel their attendance, administer oaths, examine any person under oath and
compel any person to subscribe to his or her testimony after it has been
correctly reduced to writing, and to require the production of any books,
papers, records, or other documents.
(Source: P.A. 88-297.)
(215 ILCS 5/213.5)
Sec. 213.5.
Severability.
The provisions of this Article are severable
under Section 1.31 of the Statute on Statutes.
(Source: P.A. 89-206, eff. 7-21-95.)
(215 ILCS 5/221) (from Ch. 73, par. 833)
Sec. 221.
Continuation of existing proceedings.
Every proceeding heretofore commenced under “An Act in relation to
delinquent insurance companies, associations and societies,” approved June
26, 1925, as from time to time amended, which is repealed by this Code
shall be continued as if said Act had not been repealed, but assessments
against members or subscribers of any company which has issued assessable
policies or contracts of insurance may be made in accordance with Section
193.
(Source: P.A. 83-333.)