Citation Numbers: 85 Op. Att'y Gen. 306
Judges: J. JOSEPH CURRAN, JR.
Filed Date: 10/30/2000
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
Dear Delegate Busch:
You have requested our opinion concerning a provision of the State insurance code that requires a title insurer to carry out an on-site evaluation of each "principal agent" that conducts real estate settlements involving its title insurance policies. Specifically, you ask how that provision applies to an insurer that has elected to issue all of its policies through a single entity that it has designated as its "principal agent." The insurer authorizes settlement companies to conduct the real estate settlements involving those policies but the settlement companies do not themselves issue the title insurance policies or receive commissions on the policies.
In our opinion, the insurance code requires the insurer to perform an on-site review of each settlement company it has authorized to conduct real estate settlements and not simply of the one entity it has designated as its "principal agent." The insurer has this obligation even though a title agency authorized to conduct settlements does not itself issue insurance policies on the insurer's behalf. However, the insurer need not review each individual agent affiliated with a settlement company, if it conducts a review of the settlement company itself.
insurance of owners of property or other persons that have an interest in the property against loss by encumbrance, defective title, invalidity of title, or adverse claim to title.
Annotated Code of Maryland, Insurance Article ("IN"), §
Title insurers, as well as title insurance agents and brokers,1 are licensed and regulated by the Maryland Insurance Administration ("MIA"). An insurer must obtain a certificate of authority from the Insurance Commissioner ("the Commissioner"). IN §
Nationally, the title insurance business is concentrated in a limited number of companies. See Nyce Boyer, An Analysis of theTitle Insurance Industry, 17 J. Ins. Reg. 213, 219 (1998). In Maryland, there are 25 title insurers licensed to do business. Generally, a title insurer authorizes local agents to issue policies on its behalf. Typically, these agents are either settlement companies or attorneys. D. Barlow Burke, Jr., Law of Title Insurance § 1.2.3 (2d ed. 1993 Supp. 1999). There are approximately 3,400 licensed title insurance agents and brokers in Maryland, including approximately 550 settlement companies.
B. On-Site Reviews of Agents by Insurers
The State insurance law imposes certain oversight responsibilities on title insurance companies with respect to settlement companies that handle real estate closings involving title insurance. In particular, an insurer must audit its agents as follows:
The title insurer shall, at least annually, conduct an on-site review of the underwriting, claims, and escrow practices of each title insurance agent appointed by the insurer as a principal agent as designated in the title insurance agency contract between the insurer and the agent. The on-site review shall include a review of the title insurance agent's or agency's policy blank inventory and processing operations.
IN §
C. Insurer That Issues Policies Through One Agent
Your request was prompted by an inquiry from counsel for a title insurance company. According to its counsel, that title insurer is unique in that it conducts its business in Maryland "through only one qualified agent." As we understand it, this agent issues all policies underwritten by the insurer in Maryland and is the only agent that receives a commission on the premiums related to those policies. This agent deals primarily with the lending institutions that finance real estate transactions, rather than with the settlement companies responsible for closing those transactions.
According to the insurer's counsel, the insurer's relationship with settlement companies is more limited than that of the typical title insurance company. The insurer approves a settlement company by means of an "appointment acknowledgment" that authorizes the settlement company to perform settlement services. However, the appointment does not authorize the settlement company to issue an insurance policy. Nor is the settlement company paid any commission on an insurance policy.3 At a closing, the settlement company collects the title insurance premium on behalf of the insurer's "one qualified agent." That agent in turn remits the premium to the insurer, less an amount retained as the agent's commission.
You ask whether the insurance code obligates this insurer to conduct an on-site review of each settlement company that it has authorized to conduct settlements or only of the one agent that issues policies on its behalf in Maryland.
A. 1995 Reform of Title Insurance Law
During the early 1990's, a number of high-profile cases arose involving the misappropriation of funds by those handling real estate settlements.See, e.g., United General Title Insurance Company v. Land Title Researchof Maryland, Inc.,
To address these problems, the General Assembly enacted legislation in 1995 that enlarged the scope of regulation. See Chapter 635, Laws of Maryland 1995. Two key elements of the reform legislation were the expansion of the class of agents subject to regulation and the enlistment of title insurers in the effort to oversee those agents.
Under the new definition, a person need not receive a commission or other direct compensation from the issuance of the title insurance policy in order to be a title insurance agent or broker. As explained by the House Economic Matters Committee, the 1995 legislation made "a number of changes . . . designed to strengthen regulation of the title insurance industry . . . [including expanding the class of] those who must be licensed as a title insurance agent or broker to include any person [that] provides escrow, closing, or settlement services which may result in the issuance of a title insurance contract. . . ." See Economic Matters Committee Floor Report on House Bill 1243 (1995) (emphasis supplied).
Because exemptions from the agent licensing requirement were perceived as a loophole, the legislation also eliminated the blanket exemption for attorneys. Title agencies owned or operated by attorneys or law firms became subject to the same licensing requirements as other agencies. However, an attorney who was involved with title insurance contracts "only as an incident to the practice of law" could obtain a special restricted certificate of qualification from the Commissioner and would continue to be exempt from certain bonding, education, and examination requirements applicable to licensees generally. Former Article 48A, §§ 173(e) and 173A, now codified at IN §
The reform legislation also augmented the Commissioner's power to obtain background information from potential licensees,7 imposed bonding requirements for an agency and its employees,8 and enhanced the Commissioner's authority to take action against an agency based upon the transgressions of individual agents affiliated with the agency.9
Thus, as a result of the 1995 legislation, any person responsible for a real estate settlement must have a certificate of qualification from the Commissioner and is subject to regulation under the State insurance code if the settlement involves property for which title insurance might be issued. To supplement the Commissioner's enhanced authority, the legislation also obligated title insurers to assist in the oversight of title insurance agents.
In addition, at least annually, the insurer was required to conduct an on-site review of the underwriting, claims, and escrow practices of each agent, including a review of the agent's policy blank inventory and processing operations. If an agency did not maintain separate bank accounts for each insurer it represented, the insurer was required to verify, as part of the on-site review, that the agent's books of accounts and records allowed the insurer to reasonably ascertain those funds held by the agent on its behalf.
A title insurer was required to prepare a written report of its review of an agent, which was subject to examination by the Commissioner. If, as a result of a review, an insurer had reasonable cause to believe that an agent had "failed to remit premiums or funds owed" or had otherwise violated the insurance code, the insurer was to report the suspected violation to the Commissioner, together with a copy of its examination of the agent.
B. 1996 Amendments
The General Assembly modified some of the new provisions during its next session. Chapter 206, Laws of Maryland 1996. Among other things,10
the 1996 amendments clarified and focused an insurer's oversight responsibilities with respect to its agents. The legislation relieved individual agents of the obligation to file an annual financial statement with a title insurer if "a statement of financial condition of the agency with which the individual is associated is on file with the title insurer. . . ." Former Article 48A, § 168A(m)(1), now codified at IN §
The 1996 amendments also modified the on-site review requirement. Rather than conduct on-site reviews of all of its title insurance agents and agencies, an insurer was now to review each agent "appointed by the insurer as a principal agent as designated in the title insurance agency contract between the insurer and the agent." See Former Article 48A, § 168A(m)(2)(i), now codified at IN §
As amended, House Bill 291 clarifies the current practice of the Maryland Insurance Administration with regard to . . . [a]llowing the title insurer to conduct an on-site review of the agency's underwriting, claims, and escrow practices rather than requiring [the] insurer to conduct [a] review of each of its agents associated with that agency. In other words, the review by the insurer of the insurer's principal agent will suffice to meet the requirements of the title law.
Testimony of Maryland Insurance Administration before Senate Finance Committee on House Bill 291 (March 26, 1996). The limitation of on-site audits to "principal agents," rather than the individual agents associated with an agency, appears consistent with the revised obligation to maintain financial statements for each agency rather than for each individual agent.
C. Extent of On-site Review Obligation
Your inquiry concerns the on-site review obligations of an insurer that issues all of its title policies through a single agent that the insurer has designated as its sole "principal agent." Your question, in essence, is whether that insurer is absolved of any obligation to conduct on-site reviews of the settlement companies11 that it has authorized to conduct real estate settlements. In our opinion, such an interpretation is unduly narrow and would frustrate the legislative intent.
When evaluating the Legislature's intention, we cannot lose sight of "the particular evil, abuse or defect which the statute was designed to correct and the remedy that was intended." Department of TidewaterFisheries v. Sollers,
Part of the legislative response was to expand the category of agents subject to regulation. There is no question that the settlement companies that conduct the closings at which this insurer's policies are issued are title insurance agents under the statute. In the statutory language, those companies provide "escrow, closing or settlement services" related to the issuance of a title insurance policy by the insurer. Even if they do not receive a commission from the policy premium itself, these companies collect the premium on behalf of the insurer and its intermediary "principal agent," and they handle other funds escrowed as part of the transaction.
In addition, to carry out the purposes of the reform legislation, the Legislature mandated that the title insurance industry undertake a measure of self-regulation. It charged each title insurer with monitoring certain business practices of its agents. Oversight responsibilities included maintaining agents' statements of financial condition, conducting annual on-site reviews, preparing written reports of the on-site reviews, and reporting to the Commissioner when problems were discovered. IN §
Under this legislative scheme, each on-site review is to encompass "the underwriting, claims, and escrow practices. . . ." of the agent. IN §
The limitation of the on-site review to a "principal agent as designated on the title insurance agency contract" was part of the 1996 amendments that relieved insurers of an obligation to monitor individual agents when those agents were affiliated with an agency. The term "principal agent" was not defined in the statute. Nor is it a term of art that has a well understood definition in the title insurance industry.12 Rather, it appears that the Legislature used that term to distinguish a settlement company from an individual agent associated with the settlement company — both of which would be licensed as "title insurance agents" under the insurance code. In the same manner that the 1996 legislation relieved insurers of the responsibility to collect financial statements from individual agents affiliated with a company, it also eliminated the obligation to audit individual agents if the insurer audited the company — i.e., the "principal agent" — with which the individual agents were affiliated.
An unduly narrow construction of the 1996 amendment could allow an insurer to eliminate any responsibility to review escrow practices simply by severing responsibility for issuance of title insurance policies from the handling of real estate settlements and labeling an intermediary agent that does not conduct settlements or handle escrowed funds as its only "principal agent." To construe the 1996 legislation in this manner would eliminate a key link in the oversight process. Nothing in the legislative history of the 1996 amendments indicates that the General Assembly intended to undermine in this manner the scheme of self-regulation it had created the year before.
Finally, at the time the 1996 amendments were under consideration by the Legislature, the MIA interpreted the proposal to limit on-site reviews to "principal agents" as simply a way to codify its administrative practice of permitting a title insurer to forego an audit of an individual agent if the insurer reviewed the company with which the individual was affiliated.13 In light of this history, we believe that a court would likely defer to the agency's interpretation. An interpretation by the agency charged with administering a statute, announced at the time of the law's enactment, should not be discarded absent the "strongest and most urgent reasons." Adamson v. CorrectionalMedical Services, Inc.,
We note that nothing in the insurance code would preclude the insurer from contracting with a qualified third party to conduct the on-site inspection of the insurer's Maryland agents on the insurer's behalf. However, ultimate responsibility for the on-site inspection, as well as for the related documentation and reporting requirements set forth under IN §
Very truly yours, J. Joseph Curran, Jr. Attorney General
William R. Varga Assistant Attorney General
Robert N. McDonald Chief Counsel
Opinions Advice
A title insurance agent or broker also must notify the Commissioner in writing if a licensed individual leaves employment or ends an association with the agent or broker. Former Article 48A, § 168A(n), nowcodified at IN §
In addition, the legislation authorized submission of a blanket surety bond, modified provisions concerning certificates of qualification for corporate applicants, expanded the grounds on which a certificate of qualification of a corporation or partnership could be denied, suspended, or revoked, and required an agent or broker to notify the insurer when a licensed individual left employment or ended an association with the agent or broker. These provisions were apparently based, at least in part, on recommendations of the Maryland Land Title Association. See Legislative File for House Bill 291 (1996).
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