Judges: Robert A. Butterworth Attorney General
Filed Date: 3/6/2002
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
The Honorable Tom Gallagher State Treasurer and Insurance Commissioner The Capitol Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0300
Dear Commissioner Gallagher:
You ask the following question:
Are funds derived from the premiums, assessments, investment income, and other revenue of the Citizens Property Insurance Corporation, proposed by Committee Substitute for Senate Bill 1418, included within the term "state revenues" for purposes of Article
In sum:
Funds derived from the premiums, assessments, investment income, and other revenue of the Citizens Property Insurance Corporation, proposed by Committee Substitute for Senate Bill 1418, are not included within the term "state revenues" for purposes of Article
Article VII, section 1(e), adopted by ballot initiative during the November 1994 general election, provides in pertinent part:
"Except as provided herein, state revenues collected for any fiscal year shall be limited to state revenues allowed under this subsection for the prior fiscal year plus an adjustment for growth. As used in this subsection, "growth" means an amount equal to the average annual rate of growth in Florida personal income over the most recent twenty quarters times the state revenues allowed under this subsection for the prior fiscal year. . . . State revenues collected for any fiscal year in excess of this limitation shall be transferred to the budget stabilization fund until the fund reaches the maximum balance specified in Section 19(g) of Article III, and thereafter shall be refunded to taxpayers as provided by general law. . . . For purposes of this subsection, "state revenues" means taxes, fees, licenses, and charges for services imposed by the legislature on individuals, businesses, or agencies outside state government. . . ."
The Constitution sets forth several specific exceptions to "state revenues."1 The premiums, assessments, investment income, and other revenue of the Citizens Property Insurance Corporation, proposed by Committee Substitute for Senate Bill 1418 (CS/SB 1418), however, do not appear to fall within any of the enumerated exceptions.
Under the current statutory system, there are two state-created associations that provide property insurance for those unable to obtain coverage from an authorized insurance company: the Florida Windstorm Underwriting Association (FWUA) and the Florida Residential Property and Casualty Joint Underwriting Association (JUA). The FWUA provides coverage for windstorm and hail damage in specified coastal areas. The JUA provides full homeowners' insurance and similar coverages statewide with certain exceptions. These associations make up what is known as the "residual" market for property insurance in Florida.
Resources for the payment of claims under these associations include a combination of premiums paid by the policyholders, recoveries from the Florida Hurricane Catastrophe Fund after major hurricanes, and assessments levied against property insurance companies and their policyholders statewide. Both associations also are authorized to borrow money by issuing revenue bonds backed by these assessments when other resources are not sufficient to pay claims.
These two residual market associations are restructured by CS/SB 1418, which renames the JUA, provides that all JUA policies, obligations, and liabilities belong to the corporation, and transfers all FWUA policies, obligations, and liabilities to the corporation effective July 1, 2002. The corporation was structured to meet the requirements of the Internal Revenue Service so that its income would be exempt from federal income taxation and its bonds would be tax-free.2
A question has been raised, however, as to whether the revenues of the corporation constitute "state revenues" for purposes of the limitation on state revenues imposed by Article
The Florida Supreme Court in Advisory Opinion to the Governor StateRevenue Cap,3 previously considered whether the JUA revenues, which included assessments, policy premiums, and policy surcharges, were "state revenues" for purposes of Article
In reaching its conclusion, the Court in Advisory Opinion to the GovernorRevenue Cap relied on an earlier decision which determined that assessments collected by an insurance guaranty association were not state tax revenue or general funds, and were not subject to the constitutional prohibitions on the treatment and usage of tax revenues and general funds.4 In that case, the Court held that funds collected by the Florida Insurance Guaranty Association to pay insurance claims made against insolvent insurers "[were] not in the class of state tax revenue or general funds and [did] not come within the ambit of the constitutional provisions that govern the deposit and disbursement of state tax or general revenue funds."5
The Court in the advisory opinion to the Governor considered the fact that the assessments, premiums, and policy surcharges collected by the JUA were treated in a significantly different fashion than the monies collected by the State through its agencies, boards, and commissions to provide support for its conclusion that the monies collected by the JUA were not "state revenues." While section
The Court stated that Article
As noted above, CS/SB 1418 renames the JUA as the Citizens Property Insurance Corporation. While the legislation removes language which states that this entity is not a state agency and restructures the association as a corporation with its governing board appointed by the Treasurer,6 much of the purpose and function of the corporation is the same as that of the JUA. Under the proposed legislation, the corporation would not perform a traditional governmental function. Its revenues would not be subject to legislative appropriation and would be held solely for the purpose of satisfying insurance claims. Though created by the Legislature, in practical effect the corporation would operate like a private insurance company.
The proposed legislation clearly evinces a legislative intent that the revenues of the corporation should not be considered "state revenues" for purposes of Article
Accordingly, I am of the view that funds derived from the premiums, assessments, investment income, and other revenue of the Citizens Property Insurance Corporation, proposed by Committee Substitute for Senate Bill 1418, are not included within the term "state revenues" for purposes of Article
Sincerely,
Robert A. Butterworth Attorney General
RAB/tzg
While this office notes that there is an express exemption for the Florida Hurricane Catastrophe Fund from the definition of "state revenues," the fund is created as a state trust fund under the direction and control of the State Board of Administration and, therefore, an express exemption was required.