Public Act 098-0609
 
HB2962 EnrolledLRB098 05470 RPM 35504 b

    AN ACT concerning regulation.
 
    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:
 
    Section 5. The Illinois Insurance Code is amended by
changing Sections 131.1, 131.2, 131.3, 131.4, 131.5, 131.6,
131.8, 131.8a, 131.11, 131.12, 131.12a, 131.13, 131.14,
131.16, 131.17, 131.18, 131.19, 131.20, 131.20a, 131.20b,
131.21, 131.22, 131.23, 131.24, 131.26, 131.27, and 408.3 and
by adding Sections 131.9a, 131.14a, 131.14b, 131.14c, 131.14d,
131.20c, 131.29, and 131.30 as follows:
 
    (215 ILCS 5/131.1)  (from Ch. 73, par. 743.1)
    Sec. 131.1. Definitions. As used in this Article, the
following terms have the respective meanings set forth in this
Section unless the context requires otherwise:
    (a) An "affiliate" of, or person "affiliated" with, a
specific person, is a person that directly, or indirectly
through one or more intermediaries, controls, or is controlled
by, or is under common control with, the person specified.
    (a-5) "Acquiring party" means such person by whom or on
whose behalf the merger or other acquisition of control
referred to in Section 131.4 is to be affected and any person
that controls such person or persons.
    (a-10) "Associated person" means, with respect to an
acquiring party, (1) any beneficial owner of shares of the
company to be acquired, owned, directly or indirectly, of
record or beneficially by the acquiring party, (2) any
affiliate of the acquiring party or beneficial owner, and (3)
any other person acting in concert, directly or indirectly,
pursuant to any agreement, arrangement, or understanding,
whether written or oral, with the acquiring party or beneficial
owner, or any of their respective affiliates, in connection
with the merger, consolidation, or other acquisition of control
referred to in Section 131.4 of this Code.
    (a-15) "Company" has the same meaning as "company" as
defined in Section 2 of this Code, except that it does not
include agencies, authorities, or instrumentalities of the
United States, its possessions and territories, the
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the District of Columbia, or a
state or political subdivision of a state.
    (b) "Control" (including the terms "controlling",
"controlled by" and "under common control with") means the
possession, direct or indirect, of the power to direct or cause
the direction of the management and policies of a person,
whether through the ownership of voting securities, the holding
of shareholders' or policyholders' proxies by contract other
than a commercial contract for goods or non-management
services, or otherwise, unless the power is solely the result
of an official position with or corporate office held by the
person. Control is presumed to exist if any person, directly or
indirectly, owns, controls, holds with the power to vote, or
holds shareholders' proxies representing 10% or more of the
voting securities of any other person, or holds or controls
sufficient policyholders' proxies to elect the majority of the
board of directors of the domestic company. This presumption
may be rebutted by a showing made in the manner as the Director
may provide by rule. The Director may determine, after
furnishing all persons in interest notice and opportunity to be
heard and making specific findings of fact to support such
determination, that control exists in fact, notwithstanding
the absence of a presumption to that effect.
    (b-5) "Enterprise risk" means any activity, circumstance,
event, or series of events involving one or more affiliates of
a company that, if not remedied promptly, is likely to have a
material adverse effect upon the financial condition or
liquidity of the company or its insurance holding company
system as a whole, including, but not limited to, anything that
would cause the company's risk-based capital to fall into
company action level as set forth in Article IIA of this Code
or would cause the company to be in hazardous financial
condition as set forth in Article XII 1/2 of this Code.
    (b-10) "Exchange Act" means the Securities Exchange Act of
1934, as amended, together with the rules and regulations
promulgated thereunder.
    (c) "Insurance holding company system" means two or more
affiliated persons, one or more of which is an insurance
company as defined in paragraph (e) of Section 2 of this Code.
    (d) (Blank). "Company" has the same meaning as "Company" as
defined in Section 2 of this Code, except that it does not
include agencies, authorities or instrumentalities of the
United States, its possessions and territories, the
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the District of Columbia or a
State or political subdivision of a State.
    (d-5) "Non-operating holding company" is a general
business corporation functioning solely for the purpose of
forming, owning, acquiring, and managing subsidiary business
entities and having no other business operations not related
thereto.
    (d-10) "Own", "owned," or "owning" means shares (1) with
respect to which a person has title or to which a person's
nominee, custodian, or other agent has title and which such
nominee, custodian, or other agent is holding on behalf of the
person or (2) with respect to which a person (A) has purchased
or has entered into an unconditional contract, binding on both
parties, to purchase the shares, but has not yet received the
shares, (B) owns a security convertible into or exchangeable
for the shares and has tendered the security for conversion or
exchange, (C) has an option to purchase or acquire, or rights
or warrants to subscribe to, the shares and has exercised such
option, rights, or warrants, or (D) holds a securities futures
contract to purchase the shares and has received notice that
the position will be physically settled and is irrevocably
bound to receive the underlying shares. To the extent that any
affiliates of the stockholder or beneficial owner are acting in
concert with the stockholder or beneficial owner, the
determination of shares owned may include the effect of
aggregating the shares owned by the affiliate or affiliates.
Whether shares constitute shares owned shall be decided by the
Director in his or her reasonable determination.
    (e) "Person" means an individual, a corporation, a limited
liability company, a partnership, an association, a joint stock
company, a trust, an unincorporated organization, any similar
entity or any combination of the foregoing acting in concert,
but does not include any securities broker performing no more
than the usual and customary broker's function or joint venture
partnership exclusively engaged in owning, managing, leasing
or developing real or tangible personal property other than
capital stock.
    (e-5) "Policyholders' proxies" are proxies that give the
holder the right to vote for the election of the directors and
other corporate actions not in the day to day operations of the
company.
    (f) (Blank). "Securityholder" of a specified person is one
who owns any security of such person, including common stock,
preferred stock, debt obligations, and any other security
convertible into or evidencing the right to acquire any of the
foregoing.
    (g) "Subsidiary" of a specified person is an affiliate
controlled by such person directly, or indirectly through one
or more intermediaries.
    (h) "Voting Security" is a security which gives to the
holder thereof the right to vote for the election of directors
and includes any security convertible into or evidencing a
right to acquire a voting security.
    (i) (Blank). "Acquiring Party" means such person by whom or
on whose behalf the merger or other acquisition of control
referred to in Section 131.4 is to be affected and any person
that controls such person or persons.
    (j) (Blank). "Policyholders' Proxies" are proxies which
give the holder the right to vote for the election of the
directors and other corporate actions not in the day-to-day
operations of the company.
    (k) (Blank). "Non-operating Holding Company" is a general
business corporation functioning solely for the purpose of
forming, owning, acquiring and managing subsidiary business
entities and having no other business operations not related
thereto.
(Source: P.A. 84-805.)
 
    (215 ILCS 5/131.2)  (from Ch. 73, par. 743.2)
    Sec. 131.2. Subsidiaries. A domestic company, either by
itself or in cooperation with one or more persons, may organize
or acquire one or more subsidiaries. The subsidiaries may
conduct any kind of business or businesses and their authority
to do so shall not be limited by reason of the fact that they
are subsidiaries of a domestic company. In addition to
investments in common stock, preferred stock, debt obligations
and other securities of subsidiaries permitted under all other
sections of this Code, a domestic company, other than a company
subject to Articles XVIII or XIX, may also:
        (a) invest, in common stock, preferred stock, debt
    obligations, and other securities of one or more
    subsidiaries, amounts which do not exceed the lesser of 10%
    of the company's assets or 50% of the company's surplus as
    regards policyholders, but after such investments the
    company's surplus as regards policyholders must be
    reasonable in relation to the company's outstanding
    liabilities and adequate to its financial needs. In
    calculating the amount of such investments, there must be
    included (i) total net monies or other consideration
    expended and obligations assumed in the acquisition or
    formation of a subsidiary, including all organizational
    expenses and contributions to capital and surplus of the
    subsidiary whether or not represented by the purchase of
    capital stock or issuance of other securities, and (ii) all
    amounts expended in acquiring additional common stock,
    preferred stock, debt obligations, and other securities,
    and all contributions to the capital or surplus of a
    subsidiary subsequent to its acquisition or formation;
        (b) invest any amount in common stock, preferred stock,
    debt obligations and other securities of one or more direct
    subsidiaries acting only as a non-operating holding
    company or engaged or organized exclusively for the
    ownership and management of assets authorized as
    investments for the company, provided that each subsidiary
    agrees to limit its investments in any asset so that such
    investments will not cause the amount of the total
    investment of the company to exceed the amount the company
    could have invested in such asset. For the purpose of this
    clause, "the total investment of the company" will include
    (i) any direct investment by the company in an asset and
    (ii) the company's proportionate share of any investment in
    such asset by any direct subsidiary of the company, which
    must be calculated by multiplying the amount of the
    subsidiary's investment by the percentage of the company's
    ownership of such subsidiary;
        (c) invest in common stock of one or more insurance
    corporation subsidiaries any amount by which the investing
    company's capital and surplus exceeds the minimum capital
    and surplus required of a new company under Section 13 to
    qualify for a certificate of authority to write the kind or
    kinds of insurance which the company is authorized to
    write, if the company is a stock company, and if the
    company is other than a stock company, the company may
    invest the amount by which the company's surplus exceeds
    the minimum surplus required of a new company under Section
    43 or 66 to qualify for a certificate of authority to write
    the kind or kinds of insurance which the company is
    authorized to write;
        (d) with the approval of the Director, invest any
    greater amount in common stock, preferred stock, debt
    obligations, or other securities of one or more
    subsidiaries, but after such investment the company's
    surplus as regards policyholders must be reasonable in
    relation to the company's outstanding liabilities and
    adequate to its financial needs.
(Source: P.A. 85-1186.)
 
    (215 ILCS 5/131.3)  (from Ch. 73, par. 743.3)
    Sec. 131.3. (1) Investments in common stock, preferred
stock, debt obligations or other securities of subsidiaries
made under Section 131.2 of this Article are subject to
Sections 126.3, 126.4, 126.5, 126.6, 126.7, and 133 of this
Code but are not subject to any other of the otherwise
applicable restrictions or prohibitions contained in this Code
applicable to such investments of a domestic company subject to
this Code.
    (2) If a company ceases to control a subsidiary, it must
dispose of any investment therein made under this section
within 3 years from the time of the cessation of control or
within such further time as the Director may prescribe, unless
at any time after the investment is made, the investment meets
the requirements for investment under any other section of this
Code, and the company has notified the Director thereof.
    (3) Whether any investment made pursuant to this Section
meets the applicable requirements of this Section is to be
determined before the investment is made by calculating the
applicable investment limitations as though the investment had
already been made, taking into account the then outstanding
principal balance on all previous investments in debt
obligations, and the value of all previous investments in
equity securities as of the day they were made, net of any
return of capital invested, not including dividends.
(Source: P.A. 90-418, eff. 8-15-97.)
 
    (215 ILCS 5/131.4)  (from Ch. 73, par. 743.4)
    Sec. 131.4. Acquisition of control of or merger with
domestic company.
    (a) No person other than the issuer may make a tender for
or a request or invitation for tenders of, or enter into an
agreement to exchange securities for, or seek to acquire or
acquire shareholders' proxies to vote or seek to acquire or
acquire in the open market, or otherwise, any voting security
of a domestic company or acquire policyholders' proxies of a
domestic company or any entity that controls a domestic
company, for consideration if, after the consummation thereof,
that person would, directly or indirectly, (or by conversion or
by exercise of any right to acquire) be in control of the
company, and no person may enter into an agreement to merge or
consolidate with or otherwise to acquire control of a domestic
company, unless the offer, request, invitation, or agreement is
conditioned on receiving the approval of the Director based on
Section 131.8 of this Article and no such acquisition of
control or a merger with a domestic company may be consummated
unless the person has filed with the Director and has sent to
the company a statement containing the information required by
Section 131.5 and the Director has approved the transaction or
granted an exemption. For purposes of this Section a domestic
company includes any other person which controls a domestic
company or holds or controls sufficient policyholders' proxies
to elect the majority of the board of directors of the domestic
company. Prior to the acquisition, the Director may conclude
that a statement need not be filed by the acquiring party if
the acquiring party demonstrates to the satisfaction of the
Director that:
        (1) such transaction will not result in the change of
    control of the domestic company; or
        (2) (blank); the person which is subject to the
    acquisition has assets in excess of $1,000,000 and
    shareholders of record of 500 or more and its insurance
    business either directly or through its affiliates is an
    insignificant portion of its total business; or
        (3) the acquisition of, or attempt to acquire control
    of, such other person is subject to requirements in the
    jurisdiction of its domicile which are substantially
    similar to those contained in this Section and Sections
    131.5 through 131.12; or
        (4) the control of the policyholders' proxies is being
    acquired solely by virtue of the holders official office
    and not as the result of any agreement or for any
    consideration.
        The purpose of this Section is to afford to the
    Director the opportunity to review acquisitions in order to
    determine whether or not the acquisition would be adverse
    to the interests of the existing and future policyholders
    of the company.
    (b) For purposes of this Section, any controlling person of
a domestic company seeking to divest its controlling interest
in the domestic company in any manner shall file with the
Director, with a copy to the company, confidential notice of
its proposed divestiture at least 30 days prior to the
cessation of control. The Director shall determine those
instances in which the party or parties seeking to divest or to
acquire a controlling interest in a company shall be required
to file for and obtain approval of the transaction. The
information shall remain confidential until the conclusion of
the transaction unless the Director, in his or her discretion,
determines that confidential treatment shall interfere with
enforcement of this Section. If the statement referred to in
subsection (a) of this Section is otherwise filed in connection
with the proposed divesture or related acquisition, this
subsection (b) shall not apply.
    (c) For purposes of this Section, a domestic company shall
include any person controlling a domestic company unless the
person, as determined by the Director, is either directly or
through its affiliates primarily engaged in business other than
the business of insurance. For the purposes of this Section,
"person" shall not include any securities broker holding, in
the usual and customary broker's function, less than 20% of the
voting securities of an insurance company or of any person that
controls an insurance company.
(Source: P.A. 86-784.)
 
    (215 ILCS 5/131.5)  (from Ch. 73, par. 743.5)
    Sec. 131.5. Statement; contents Statement-Contents. In
order to seek the approval of the Director pursuant to Section
131.8, the applicant must file a statement with the Director
under oath or affirmation which contains as a minimum the
following information:
    (1) The name and address of each acquiring party, and
    (a) if such person is an individual, his principal
occupation and all offices and positions held during the past 5
years, and any conviction of crimes, other than minor traffic
violations, during the past 10 years;
    (b) if such person is not an individual, a report of the
nature of its business operations during the past 5 years or
for such lesser period as the person and any predecessors
thereof has been in existence; an informative description of
the business intended to be conducted by the person and the
person's subsidiaries; and a list of all individuals who are or
who have been selected to become directors or executive
officers of the person, or who perform or will perform
functions appropriate to such positions. The list must include
for each individual the information required by subsection
(1)(a).
    (2) The source, nature and amount of the consideration used
or to be used in effecting the merger, consolidation or other
acquisition of control, a description of any transaction
wherein funds were or are to be obtained for any such purpose,
including any pledge of the company's own securities or the
securities of any of its subsidiaries or affiliates, and the
identity of persons furnishing such consideration. However,
where a source of such consideration is a loan made in the
lender's ordinary course of business, the identity of the
lender must remain confidential, if the person filing the
statement so requests.
    (3) Financial information as to the earnings and financial
condition of each acquiring party for the preceding 5 fiscal
years of each acquiring party (or for such lesser period as the
acquiring party and any predecessors thereof have been in
existence) audited by an independent certified public
accountant in accordance with generally accepted auditing
standards and similar unaudited information for the second and
third preceding fiscal years and as of a date not earlier than
90 days prior to the filing of the statement. If an acquiring
party is an insurer which has been actively engaged in the
business of insurance for 10 years, the financial information
need not be audited, provided it is based on the annual
statements of such acquiring person filed with the insurance
department of the person's domiciliary state and is in
accordance with the requirement of insurance or other
accounting principles prescribed or permitted under the laws
and regulations of such state.
    (a) When an applicant is controlled by an individual,
financial information for that individual will not be required
if the applicant is currently subject to the registration and
reporting requirements of Section 12(g) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 or is an insurer which has been actively
engaged in the business of insurance for a period in excess of
10 years;
    (b) When an individual as an acquiring party must file
financial information under this paragraph such information
need not be delivered to the company. However, such information
shall be available if the Director holds a hearing pursuant to
Section 131.8.
    (4) Any plans or proposals which each acquiring party may
have to liquidate such company, to sell its assets or merge or
consolidate it with any person, or to make any other material
change in its business or corporate structure or management.
    (5) The number of shares of any security referred to in
Section 131.4 which each acquiring party proposes to acquire,
and the terms of the offer, request, invitation, agreement, or
acquisition referred to in Section 131.4, and a statement as to
the method by which the fairness of the proposal was arrived.
    (6) The amount of each class of any security referred to in
Section 131.4 which is beneficially owned or concerning which
there is a right to acquire beneficial ownership by each
acquiring party.
    (7) A full description of any existing contracts,
arrangements or understandings with respect to any security
referred to in Section 131.4 in which any acquiring party is
involved, including but not limited to transfer of any of the
securities, joint ventures, loan or option arrangements, puts
or calls, guarantees of loans, guarantees against loss or
guarantees of profits, division of losses or profits, or the
giving or withholding of proxies. The description must identify
the persons with whom such contracts, arrangements or
understandings have been entered into.
    (8) A description of the acquisition of any security or
policyholders' proxy referred to in Section 131.4 during the 12
calendar months preceding the filing of the statement, by any
acquiring party, including the dates of acquisition, names of
the acquiring parties acquirors, and consideration paid or
agreed to be paid therefor.
    (9) A description of any recommendations to acquire any
security referred to in Section 131.4 made during the 12
calendar months preceding the filing of the statement, by any
acquiring party, or by anyone based upon interviews or at the
suggestion of such acquiring party.
    (10) Copies of all tender offers for, requests or
invitations for tenders of, exchange offers for, and agreements
to acquire or exchange any securities referred to in Section
131.4, and (if distributed) of additional soliciting material
relating thereto.
    (11) The terms of any agreement, contract or understanding
made with, or proposed to be made with, any broker-dealer as to
solicitation of securities referred to in Section 131.4 for
tender, and the amount of any fees, commissions or other
compensation to be paid to broker-dealers with regard thereto.
    (12) Beginning July 1, 2014, an agreement by the person
required to file the statement referred to in this Section
131.5 that the person will provide the annual report specified
in Section 131.14b for so long as control exists.
    (13) Beginning July 1, 2014, an acknowledgement by the
person required to file the statement referred to in this
Section 131.5 that the person and all subsidiaries within its
control in the insurance holding company system shall provide
information to the Director upon request as necessary to
evaluate enterprise risk to the company.
    (14) Any additional information as the Director may by rule
or regulation prescribe as necessary or appropriate for the
protection of policyholders or in the public interest.
    (15) With respect to each acquiring party, the following
information:
        (A) the name and address of all associated persons and
    a detailed description of every agreement, arrangement,
    and understanding between the acquiring party and all
    associated persons in connection with the merger,
    consolidation, or other acquisition of control;
        (B) the class or series and number of shares of
    securities of the company that are directly or indirectly
    owned beneficially and of record by the acquiring party or
    the associated persons or both; and
        (C) a detailed description of each proxy, contract,
    arrangement, understanding, or relationship pursuant to
    which the acquiring party or the associated persons, or
    both, have a right to vote, or cause or direct the vote of,
    any securities of the company.
(Source: P.A. 84-805.)
 
    (215 ILCS 5/131.6)  (from Ch. 73, par. 743.6)
    Sec. 131.6. (1) If the person required to file the
statement referred to in Section 131.5 is a partnership,
limited partnership, syndicate or other group, the Director may
require that the information be given with respect to each
partner of such partnership or limited partnership, each member
of such syndicate or group, and each person who controls such
partner or member. If any partner, member or person is a
corporation or the person required to file the statement
referred to in Section 131.5 is a corporation, the Director may
require that the information be given with respect to the
corporation, each officer and director of the corporation, and
each person who is directly or indirectly the beneficial owner
of more than 10% of the outstanding voting securities of the
corporation.
    (2) If any material change occurs in the facts set forth in
the statement filed with the Director and sent to the company
under Section 131.5 131.9, an amendment setting forth the
change, together with copies of all documents and other
material relevant to the change, must be filed with the
Director and sent to the company within 2 business days after
the person learns of the change.
(Source: P.A. 84-805.)
 
    (215 ILCS 5/131.8)  (from Ch. 73, par. 743.8)
    Sec. 131.8. (1) After the statement required by Section
131.5 has been filed, the Director shall approve must
disapprove any merger, consolidation or other acquisition of
control referred to in Section 131.4 unless the acquiring party
demonstrates to the Director finds that:
        (a) after the After change of control, the domestic
    company referred to in Section 131.4 would not be able to
    satisfy the requirements for the issuance of a license to
    write the line or lines of insurance for which it is
    presently licensed;
        (b) the effect of the merger, consolidation or other
    acquisition of control would be not substantially to lessen
    competition in insurance in this State or not tend to
    create a monopoly therein. In applying the competitive
    standard in this paragraph:
            (i) the informational requirements of subsection
        (3)(a) and the standards of subsection (4)(b) of
        Section 131.12a shall apply,
            (ii) the merger or other acquisition shall not be
        found substantially to lessen competition in insurance
        in this State or tend to create a monopoly therein
        disapproved if the Director finds acquiring party
        demonstrates that any of the situations meeting the
        criteria provided by subsection (4)(c) of Section
        131.12a exist, and
            (iii) the Director may condition the approval of
        the merger or other acquisition on the removal of the
        basis of disapproval within a specified period of time;
        (c) the financial condition of any acquiring party is
    such as might to not jeopardize the financial stability of
    the domestic company or not jeopardize the interests of its
    policyholders;
        (d) the plans or proposals which the acquiring party
    has to liquidate the domestic company, sell its assets or
    consolidate or merge it with any person, or to make any
    other material change in its business or corporate
    structure or management, are unfair fair and unreasonable
    reasonable to policyholders of such company and not in the
    public interest; or
        (e) the competence, experience and integrity of those
    persons who would control the operation of the domestic
    company are such that it would be in the best interests of
    policyholders of such company and of the insurance buying
    public to permit the merger, consolidation or other
    acquisition of control.
    (2) The Director may hold a public hearing on any merger,
consolidation or other acquisition of control referred to in
Section 131.4 if the Director determines that the statement
filed as required by Section 131.5 does not demonstrate
compliance with the standards referred to in subsection (1), of
this Section, or if he determines that such acquisition of
control is likely to be hazardous or prejudicial to the will
adversely affect policyholders or the insurance buying public.
    (3) The public hearing referred to in subsection (2) must
be held within 60 days after the statement required by Section
131.5 is filed, and at least 20 days' notice thereof must be
given by the Director to the person filing the statement and to
the domestic company. Not less than 7 12 days' notice of such
hearing must be given by the person filing the statement to
such other persons as may be designated by the Director and by
the company to its shareholders securityholders. The Director
must make a determination within 60 30 days after the
conclusion of the hearing. At the hearing, the person filing
the statement, the domestic company, any person to whom notice
of the hearing was sent, and any other person whose interests
may be affected thereby has the right to present evidence,
examine and cross-examine witnesses, and offer oral and written
arguments and in connection therewith is entitled to conduct
discovery proceedings in the same manner as is presently
allowed in the Circuit Courts of this State. All discovery
proceedings must be concluded not later than 3 days prior to
the commencement of the public hearing.
    (4) If the proposed acquisition of control will require the
approval of more than one state insurance commissioner, the
public hearing referred to in subsection (2) of this Section
may be held on a consolidated basis upon request of the person
filing the statement referred to in Section 131.5 of this Code.
Such person shall file the statement referred to in Section
131.5 of this Code with the National Association of Insurance
Commissioners (NAIC) within 5 days after making the request for
a public hearing. A commissioner may opt out of a consolidated
hearing and shall provide notice to the applicant of the opt
out within 10 days after the receipt of the statement referred
to in Section 131.5 of this Code. A hearing conducted on a
consolidated basis shall be public and shall be held within the
United States before the commissioners of the states in which
the companies are domiciled. Such commissioners shall hear and
receive evidence. A commissioner may attend such hearing in
person or by telecommunication.
    (5) In connection with a change of control of a domestic
company, any determination by the Director that the person
acquiring control of the company shall be required to maintain
or restore the capital of the company to the level required by
the laws and regulations of this State shall be made not later
than 60 days after the filing of the statement required by
Section 131.5 of this Code.
(Source: P.A. 84-805.)
 
    (215 ILCS 5/131.8a)  (from Ch. 73, par. 743.8a)
    Sec. 131.8a. The Director may retain at the applicant's
expense any attorneys, actuaries, accountants and other
experts not otherwise a part of the Director's staff as may be
reasonably necessary to assist in reviewing the conduct of
financial or character examinations in conjunction with an
acquisition proposed under Section 131.4. The applicant shall
deposit with the Director cash, bonds or securities, acceptable
to the Director, in a reasonable amount not to exceed $100,000,
for purpose of securing the payment of any expert's cost.
(Source: P.A. 86-753.)
 
    (215 ILCS 5/131.9a new)
    Sec. 131.9a. Exemptions. Sections 131.4 through 131.12 do
not apply to:
        (1) any transaction that is subject to Article X of
    this Code dealing with merger, consolidation, or plans of
    exchange; or
        (2) any offer, request, invitation, agreement, or
    acquisition that the Director by order exempts therefrom as
    (A) not having been made or entered into for the purpose
    and not having the effect of changing or influencing the
    control of a domestic company or (B) otherwise not
    comprehended within the purposes of Sections 131.4 through
    131.12.
 
    (215 ILCS 5/131.11)  (from Ch. 73, par. 743.11)
    Sec. 131.11. The following are violations of Sections 131.4
through 131.12:
    (1) the failure to file any statement, amendment, or other
material required to be filed under Sections 131.4 or 131.5; or
    (2) the effectuation or any attempt to effectuate an
acquisition of control of, divestiture of, or merger or
consolidation with, a domestic company unless the Director has
given his approval thereto.
(Source: P.A. 77-673.)
 
    (215 ILCS 5/131.12)  (from Ch. 73, par. 743.12)
    Sec. 131.12. The courts of this State are hereby vested
with jurisdiction over every person not resident, domiciled, or
authorized to do business in this State who files a statement
with the Director under Section 131.4, and over all actions
involving such person arising out of violations of Sections
131.4, 131.5, 131.6, 131.9 or 131.11, and each such person is
deemed to have performed acts equivalent to and constituting an
appointment by such a person of the Director to be his true and
lawful attorney upon whom may be served all lawful process in
any action, suit or proceeding arising out of violations of
Sections 131.4, 131.5, 131.6, 131.9 or 131.11. Copies of all
such lawful process must be served on the Director and
transmitted by registered or certified mail by the Director to
such person at his last known address.
(Source: P.A. 77-673.)
 
    (215 ILCS 5/131.12a)  (from Ch. 73, par. 743.12a)
    Sec. 131.12a. Acquisitions involving companies insurers
not otherwise covered.
    (1) Definitions. The following definitions shall apply for
the purposes of this Section only:
    (a) "Acquisition" means any agreement, arrangement or
activity the consummation of which results in a person
acquiring directly or indirectly the control of another person
or control of the insurance in force of another person, and
includes but is not limited to the acquisition of voting
securities, the acquisition of assets, the transaction of bulk
reinsurance and the act of merging or consolidating.
    (b) An "involved company insurer" includes a company an
insurer which either acquires or is acquired, is affiliated
with an acquirer or acquired or is the result of a merger.
 
    (2) Scope.
    (a) Except as exempted in paragraph (b) of this subsection
(2), this Section applies to any acquisition in which there is
a change in control of a company an insurer authorized to do
business in this State.
    (b) This Section shall not apply to the following:
        (i) an acquisition subject to approval or disapproval
    by the Director pursuant to Section 131.8;
        (ii) a purchase of securities solely for investment
    purposes so long as such securities are not used by voting
    or otherwise to cause or attempt to cause the substantial
    lessening of competition in any insurance market in this
    State. If a purchase of securities results in a presumption
    of control under subsection (b) of Section 131.1, it is not
    solely for investment purposes unless the commissioner of
    the company's insurer's state of domicile accepts a
    disclaimer of control or affirmatively finds that control
    does not exist and such disclaimer action or affirmative
    finding is communicated by the domiciliary commissioner to
    the Director of this State;
        (iii) the acquisition of a person by another person
    when both persons are neither directly nor through
    affiliates primarily engaged in the business of insurance,
    if pre-acquisition notification is filed with the Director
    in accordance with subsection (3)(a) of this Section, 30
    days prior to the proposed effective date of the
    acquisition. However, such pre-acquisition notification is
    not required for exclusion from this Section if the
    acquisition would otherwise be excluded from this Section
    by any other subparagraph of subsection (2)(b);
        (iv) the acquisition of already affiliated persons;
        (v) an acquisition if, as an immediate result of the
    acquisition,
            (A) in no market would the combined market share of
        the involved companies insurers exceed 5% of the total
        market,
            (B) there would be no increase in any market share,
        or
            (C) in no market would the combined market share of
        the involved companies insurers exceed 12% of the total
        market, and the market share increase by more than 2%
        of the total market.
        For the purpose of this subparagraph (b)(v), "market"
    means direct written insurance premium in this State for a
    line of business as contained in the annual statement
    required to be filed by companies insurers licensed to do
    business in this State;
        (vi) an acquisition for which a pre-acquisition
    notification would be required pursuant to this Section due
    solely to the resulting effect on the ocean marine
    insurance line of business;
        (vii) an acquisition of a company an insurer whose
    domiciliary commissioner affirmatively finds that such
    company insurer is in failing condition; there is a lack of
    feasible alternative to improving such condition; the
    public benefits of improving such company's insurer's
    condition through the acquisition exceed the public
    benefits that would arise from not lessening competition;
    and such findings are communicated by the domiciliary
    commissioner to the Director of this State.
 
    (3) Pre-acquisition Notification; Waiting Period. An
acquisition covered by subsection (2) may be subject to an
order pursuant to subsection (5) unless the acquiring person
files a pre-acquisition notification and the waiting period has
expired. The acquired person may file a pre-acquisition
notification. The Director shall give confidential treatment
to information submitted under this subsection in the same
manner as provided in Section 131.22 of this Article.
    (a) The pre-acquisition notification shall be in such form
and contain such information as prescribed by the Director,
which shall conform substantially to the form of notification
adopted by the National Association of Insurance Commissioners
relating to those markets which, under subsection (b)(v) of
Section (2), cause the acquisition not to be exempted from the
provisions of this Section. The Director may require such
additional material and information as he deems necessary to
determine whether the proposed acquisition, if consummated,
would violate the competitive standard of subsection (4). The
required information may include an opinion of an economist as
to the competitive impact of the acquisition in this State
accompanied by a summary of the education and experience of
such person indicating his or her ability to render an informed
opinion.
    (b) The waiting period required shall begin on the date of
the receipt by the Director of a pre-acquisition notification
and shall end on the earlier of the 30th day after the date of
such receipt, or termination of the waiting period by the
Director. Prior to the end of the waiting period, the Director
on a one time basis may require the submission of additional
needed information relevant to the proposed acquisition, in
which event the waiting period shall end on the earlier of the
30th day after the receipt of such additional information by
the Director or termination of the waiting period by the
Director.
 
    (4) Competitive Standard.
    (a) The Director may enter an order under subsection (5)(a)
with respect to an acquisition if there is substantial evidence
that the effect of the acquisition may be substantially to
lessen competition in any line of insurance in this State or
tend to create a monopoly therein or if the company insurer
fails to file adequate information in compliance with
subsection (3).
    (b) In determining whether a proposed acquisition would
violate the competitive standard of paragraph (a) of this
subsection the Director shall consider the following:
        (i) any acquisition covered under subsection (2)
    involving 2 or more companies insurers competing in the
    same market is prima facie evidence of violation of the
    competitive standards:
            (A) if the market is highly concentrated and the
        involved companies insurers possess the following
        shares of the market:
          Company Insurer A     Company Insurer B
                  4%                    4% or more
                 10%                    2% or more
                 15%                    1% or more
            (B) if the market is not highly concentrated and
        the involved companies insurers possess the following
        shares of the market:
          Company Insurer A     Company Insurer B
                  5%                    5% or more
                 10%                    4% or more
                 15%                    3% or more
                 19%                    1% or more
        A highly concentrated market is one in which the share
    of the 4 largest companies insurers is 75% or more of the
    market. Percentages not shown in the tables are to be
    interpolated proportionately to the percentages that are
    shown. If more than 2 companies insurers are involved,
    exceeding the total of the 2 columns in the table is prima
    facie evidence of violation of the competitive standard in
    paragraph (a) of this subsection. For the purpose of this
    subparagraph, the company insurer with the largest share of
    the market shall be deemed to be Company Insurer A.
        (ii) There is a significant trend toward increased
    concentration when the aggregate market share of any
    grouping of the largest companies insurers in the market
    from the 2 largest to the 8 largest has increased by 7% or
    more of the market over a period of time extending from any
    base year 5-10 years prior to the acquisition up to the
    time of the acquisition. Any acquisition covered under
    subsection (2) involving 2 or more companies insurers
    competing in the same market is prima facie evidence of
    violation of the competitive standard in paragraph (a) of
    this subsection if:
            (A) there is a significant trend toward increased
        concentration in the market,
            (B) one of the companies insurers involved is one
        of the companies insurers in a grouping of such large
        companies insurers showing the requisite increase in
        the market share, and
            (C) another involved company's insurer's market is
        2% or more.
        (iii) For the purpose of subsection (4)(b):
            (A) The term "company" "insurer" includes any
        company or group of companies under common management,
        ownership or control.
            (B) The term "market" means the relevant product
        and geographic markets. In determining the relevant
        product and geographical markets, the Director shall
        give due consideration to, among other things, the
        definitions or guidelines, if any, promulgated by the
        National Association of Insurance Commissioners and to
        information, if any, submitted by parties to the
        acquisition. In the absence of sufficient information
        to the contrary, the relevant product market is assumed
        to be the direct written insurance premium for a line
        of business with such line being that used in the
        annual statement required to be filed by companies
        insurers doing business in this State and the relevant
        geographical market is assumed to be this State.
            (C) The burden of showing prima facie evidence of
        violation of the competitive standard rests upon the
        Director.
        (iv) Even though an acquisition is not prima facie
    violative of the competitive standard under subparagraph
    (b)(i) and (b)(ii) of this subsection the Director may
    establish the requisite anticompetitive effect based upon
    other substantial evidence. Even though an acquisition is
    prima facie violative of the competitive standard under
    subparagraphs (b)(i) and (b)(ii) of this subsection (4), a
    party may establish the absence of the requisite
    anticompetitive effect based upon other substantial
    evidence. Relevant factors in making a determination under
    this paragraph include, but are not limited to, the
    following: market shares, volatility of ranking of market
    leaders, number of competitors, concentration, trend of
    concentration in the industry, and ease of entry and exit
    into the market.
    (c) An order may not be entered under subsection (5)(a) if:
        (i) the acquisition will yield substantial economies
    of scale or economies in resource utilization that cannot
    be feasibly achieved in any other way, and the public
    benefits which would arise from such economies exceed the
    public benefits which would arise from not lessening
    competition; or
        (ii) the acquisition will substantially increase the
    availability of insurance, and the public benefits of such
    increase exceed the public benefits which would arise from
    not lessening competition.
 
    (5) Orders and Penalties:
        (a)(i) If an acquisition violates the standard of this
    Section, the Director may enter an order
            (A) requiring an involved company insurer to cease
        and desist from doing business in this State with
        respect to the line or lines of insurance involved in
        the violation, or
            (B) denying the application of an acquired or
        acquiring company insurer for a license to do business
        in this State.
        (ii) Such an order shall not be entered unless there is
    a hearing, notice of such hearing is issued prior to the
    end of the waiting period and not less than 15 days prior
    to the end of the waiting period and not less than 15 days
    prior to the hearing, and the hearing is concluded and the
    order is issued no later than 60 days after the end of the
    waiting period. Every order shall be accompanied by a
    written decision of the Director setting forth his findings
    of fact and conclusions of law.
        (iii) (Blank). An order entered under this paragraph
    shall not become final earlier than 30 days after it is
    issued, during which time the involved insurer may submit a
    plan to remedy the anticompetitive impact of the
    acquisition within a reasonable time. Based upon such plan
    or other information, the Director shall specify, if any,
    the conditions under and the time period during which the
    aspects of the acquisition causing a violation of the
    standards of this Section would be remedied and the order
    vacated or modified.
        (iv) An order pursuant to this paragraph shall not
    apply if the acquisition is not consummated.
    (b) Any person who violates a cease and desist order of the
Director under paragraph (a) and while such order is in effect
may after notice and hearing and upon order of the Director be
subject at the discretion of the Director to any one or more of
the following:
        (i) a monetary penalty of not more than $10,000 for
    every day of violation or
        (ii) suspension or revocation of such person's license
    or both.
    (c) Any company insurer or other person who fails to make
any filing required by this Section and who also fails to
demonstrate a good faith effort to comply with any such filing
requirement shall be subject to a civil penalty of not more
than $50,000.
 
    (6) Inapplicable Provisions. Subsections (2) and (3) of
Section 131.23 and Section 131.25 do not apply to acquisitions
covered under subsection (2).
(Source: P.A. 92-16, eff. 6-28-01.)
 
    (215 ILCS 5/131.13)  (from Ch. 73, par. 743.13)
    Sec. 131.13. Registration of companies. Every company
which is authorized to do business in this State and which is a
member of an insurance holding company system must register
with the Director, except a foreign or alien company subject to
registration requirements and standards adopted by statute or
regulation in the jurisdiction of its domicile which are
substantially similar to those contained in this section and
Sections 131.14 through 131.20a 131.19. Any company which is
subject to registration under this section must register within
60 days after the effective date of this Article or 15 days
after it becomes subject to registration, whichever is later,
unless the Director for good cause shown extends the time for
registration, and then within such extended time. The Director
may require any authorized company which is a member of a
holding company system which is not subject to registration
under this section to furnish a copy of the registration
statement or other information filed by such company with the
insurance regulatory authority of its domiciliary
jurisdiction.
    If upon review of the information filed pursuant to this
Section and the information included in the annual statement
filed pursuant to Section 136, the Director determines there is
a potential for adverse economic impact due to substantial
ownership of companies authorized to do business in this State
by persons who are not citizens or residents of the United
States or entities which are not organized or created under the
laws of any state or territory of the United States, he shall
report such determination along with any legislative
recommendations to the General Assembly.
(Source: P.A. 84-805.)
 
    (215 ILCS 5/131.14)  (from Ch. 73, par. 743.14)
    Sec. 131.14. Every company subject to registration must
file a registration statement on a in the form and in a format
prescribed designated by the Director, which shall contain the
following contains current information about:
    (1) the capital structure, general financial condition,
ownership and management of the company and any person
controlling the company;
    (2) the identity and relationship of every member of the
insurance holding company system;
    (3) the following agreements in force, relationships
subsisting, and transactions currently outstanding or that
have occurred during the last calendar year between such
company and its affiliates:
    (a) loans, other investments, or purchases, sales or
exchanges of or securities of the affiliates by the company or
of the company by its affiliates;
    (b) purchases, sales, or exchanges of assets;
    (c) transactions not in the ordinary course of business;
    (d) guarantees or undertakings for the benefit of an
affiliate which result in an actual contingent exposure of the
company's assets to liability, other than insurance contracts
entered into in the ordinary course of the company's business;
    (e) all management agreements, and service contracts, and
all cost-sharing arrangements, other than cost allocation
arrangements based upon generally accepted accounting
principles; and
    (f) reinsurance agreements;
    (f-5) dividends and other distributions to shareholders;
    (g) any pledge of the company's own securities, securities
of any subsidiary or controlling affiliate, to secure a loan
made to any member of the insurance holding company system; and
    (h) consolidated tax allocation agreements; .
    (4) (blank); other matters concerning transactions between
registered companies and any affiliates as may be included from
time to time in any registration forms adopted or approved by
the Director.
    (5) financial statements of or within an insurance holding
company system, including all affiliates, if requested by the
Director; financial statements may include, but are not limited
to, annual audited financial statements filed with the U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) pursuant to the
Securities Act of 1933, as amended, or the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934, as amended; a company required to file financial
statements pursuant to this paragraph (5) may satisfy the
request by providing the Director with the most recently filed
parent corporation financial statements that have been filed
with the SEC;
    (6) statements that the company's or its parent company's
board of directors or a committee thereof oversees corporate
governance and internal controls and that the company's
officers or senior management have approved and implemented and
continue to maintain and monitor corporate governance and
internal controls; and
    (7) other matters concerning transactions between
registered companies and any affiliates as may be included from
time to time in any registration forms adopted or approved by
the Director.
(Source: P.A. 84-805.)
 
    (215 ILCS 5/131.14a new)
    Sec. 131.14a. Summary filing. Every company subject to
registration must file a summary outlining all items in the
current registration statement representing changes from the
prior registration statement.
 
    (215 ILCS 5/131.14b new)
    Sec. 131.14b. Enterprise risk filing. The ultimate
controlling person of every company subject to registration
shall also file an annual enterprise risk report. The report
shall, to the best of the ultimate controlling person's
knowledge and belief, identify the material risks within the
insurance holding company system that could pose enterprise
risk to the company. The report shall be filed with the lead
state commissioner of the insurance holding company system as
determined by the procedures within the Financial Analysis
Handbook adopted by the National Association of Insurance
Commissioners.
 
    (215 ILCS 5/131.14c new)
    Sec. 131.14c. Violations. The failure to file a
registration statement or any summary of the registration
statement or enterprise risk filing required by this Article
within the time specified for filing shall be a violation of
this Article.
 
    (215 ILCS 5/131.14d new)
    Sec. 131.14d. Confidentiality.
    (a) Documents, materials, or other information in the
possession or control of the Director that are obtained by,
created by, or disclosed to the Director or any other person
pursuant to Section 131.14b are recognized as being proprietary
and to contain trade secrets. Disclosure of such documents,
materials, or other information is recognized as damaging to
the competitive position of the insurer whose confidential
information is in the possession or control of the Director.
All such documents, materials, or other information shall be
confidential by law and privileged, shall not be subject to the
Freedom of Information Act, shall not be subject to subpoena,
and shall not be subject to discovery or admissible in evidence
in any private civil action. However, the Director is
authorized to use such documents, materials, or other
information in the furtherance of any regulatory or legal
action brought as a part of the Director's official duties. The
Director shall not otherwise disclose or make such documents,
materials, or other information public without the prior
written consent of the insurer.
    (b) An insurer whose documents, materials, or other
information is in the possession or control of the Director or
any other person pursuant to Section 131.14b of this Code and
who is aggrieved by an actual or threatened disclosure of such
documents, materials, or other information or by any violation
of this Section, may commence proceedings, subject in the case
of the Director to Article III of the Code of Civil Procedure,
in any court of competent jurisdiction to prevent such
disclosure or to enforce the provisions of this Section.
    (c) Neither the Director nor any person who received
documents, materials, or other information relating to the
report required by Section 131.14b of this Code, through
examination or otherwise, while acting under the authority of
the Director or with whom such documents, materials, or other
information are shared pursuant to this Section, Section
131.14b or Section 131.20c of this Code shall be permitted or
required to testify in any private civil action concerning any
confidential documents, materials, or information subject to
subsection (a) of this Section.
    (d) Solely to assist in the performance of the Director's
regulatory duties, the Director may do the following:
        (1) upon request, share documents, materials, or other
    information relating to the report required by Section
    131.14b of this Code, including the confidential and
    privileged documents, materials, or information subject to
    subsection (a) of this Section, including proprietary and
    trade secret documents and materials with other state,
    federal, and international financial regulatory agencies,
    including members of any supervisory college as provided
    for in Section 131.20c of this Code, with the NAIC and with
    any third-party consultants designated by the Director,
    provided that the recipient agrees in writing to maintain
    the confidentiality and privileged status of the
    documents, materials, or other information relating to the
    report required by Section 131.14b of this Code and has
    verified in writing the legal authority to maintain
    confidentiality; and
        (2) receive documents, materials, or other information
    relating to the report required by Section 131.14b of this
    Code, including otherwise confidential and privileged
    documents, materials, or information, including
    proprietary and trade secret information or documents,
    from regulatory officials of other foreign or domestic
    jurisdictions, including members of any supervisory
    college as defined in Section 131.20c of this Code, and
    from the NAIC, and shall maintain as confidential or
    privileged any documents, materials, or information
    received with notice or the understanding that it is
    confidential or privileged under the laws of the
    jurisdiction that is the source of the document, material,
    or information.
    (e) The Director shall enter into a written agreement with
any member of a supervisory college as provided for in Section
131.20c of this Code, the International Association of
Insurance Supervisors (IAIS), the NAIC, or any third-party
consultant governing sharing and use of information provided
pursuant to this Section. The agreement shall do the following:
        (1) specify procedures and protocols regarding the
    confidentiality and security of information shared with
    the member of a supervisory college, the IAIS, the NAIC, or
    the third-party consultant pursuant to this Section,
    including procedures and protocols for sharing by the
    member of a supervisory college, the IAIS, or the NAIC with
    international, federal, or state regulators;
        (2) specify that ownership of information shared with
    the member of a supervisory college, the IAIS, the NAIC, or
    the third-party consultant pursuant to this Section
    remains with the Director and that the member of a
    supervisory college's, the IAIS's, the NAIC's, or the
    third-party consultant's use of the information is subject
    to the direction of the Director;
        (3) restrict the member of a supervisory college, the
    IAIS, the NAIC, or the third-party consultant from storing
    the information shared pursuant to this Section in a
    permanent database;
        (4) require notice to be given within 5 business days
    to an insurer whose confidential information, in the
    possession of the member of a supervisory college, the
    IAIS, the NAIC, or the third-party consultant pursuant to
    this Section, is subject to a request or subpoena to the
    member of a supervisory college, the IAIS, the NAIC, or the
    third-party consultant for disclosure or production;
        (5) require the member of a supervisory college, the
    IAIS, the NAIC, or the third-party consultant to consent to
    intervention by an insurer in any judicial or
    administrative action in which the member of a supervisory
    college, the IAIS, the NAIC, or the third-party consultant
    may be required to disclose confidential information about
    the insurer shared with the member of a supervisory
    college, the IAIS, the NAIC, or the third-party consultant
    pursuant to this Section; and
        (6) in the case of an agreement involving a third-party
    consultant, provide for the insurer's prior written
    consent to the sharing of information with that third-party
    consultant.
    (f) The sharing of information and documents by the
Director pursuant to this Section shall not constitute a
delegation of regulatory authority or rulemaking, and the
Director is solely responsible for the administration and
execution of the provisions of this Section. An insurer whose
confidential information is in the possession of the member of
a supervisory college, the IAIS, the NAIC, or third-party
consultant pursuant to this Section and who is aggrieved by an
actual or threatened disclosure of confidential information,
or by any violation of this Section, may commence proceedings
in any court of competent jurisdiction to prevent such
disclosure or to enforce the provisions of this Section.
    (g) No waiver of any applicable privilege or claim of
confidentiality in the documents, proprietary and trade secret
materials, or other information relating to the report required
by Section 131.14b of this Section, shall occur as a result of
disclosure of such documents, materials, or other information
relating to the report required by Section 131.14b of this
Section to the Director or as a result of sharing as authorized
in this Section.
    (h) Documents, materials, or other information in the
possession or control of a member of a supervisory college, the
IAIS, the NAIC, or a third-party consultant pursuant to this
Section shall be confidential by law and privileged, shall not
be subject to the Freedom of Information Act, shall not be
subject to subpoena, and shall not be subject to discovery or
admissible in evidence in any private civil action.
 
    (215 ILCS 5/131.16)  (from Ch. 73, par. 743.16)
    Sec. 131.16. Reporting material changes or additions;
penalty for late registration statement.
    (1) Each registered company must keep current the
information required to be included in its registration
statement by reporting all material changes or additions on
amendment forms designated by the Director within 15 days after
the end of the month in which it learns of each change or
addition, or within a longer time thereafter as the Director
may establish. Any transaction which has been submitted to the
Director pursuant to Section 131.20a need not be reported to
the Director under this subsection; except each registered
company must report all dividends and other distributions to
shareholders within 15 5 business days following the
declaration and no less than 10 business days prior to payment
thereof.
    (2) On or before May 1 each year, each company subject to
registration under this Article shall file a statement in a
format as designated by the Director. This statement shall
include information previously included in an amendment under
subsection (1) of this Section, transactions and agreements
submitted under Section 131.20a, and any other material
transactions which are required to be reported.
    (2.5) Any person within an insurance holding company system
subject to registration shall be required to provide complete
and accurate information to a company where the information is
reasonably necessary to enable the company to comply with the
provisions of this Article.
    (3) Any company failing, without just cause, to file any
registration statement, any summary of changes to a
registration statement, or any Enterprise Risk Filing or any
person within an insurance holding company system who fails to
provide complete and accurate information to a company as
required in this Code shall be required, after notice and
hearing, to pay a penalty of up to $1,000 for each day's delay,
to be recovered by the Director of Insurance of the State of
Illinois and the penalty so recovered shall be paid into the
General Revenue Fund of the State of Illinois. The maximum
penalty under this section is $50,000. The Director may reduce
the penalty if the company demonstrates to the Director that
the imposition of the penalty would constitute a financial
hardship to the company.
(Source: P.A. 88-364.)
 
    (215 ILCS 5/131.17)  (from Ch. 73, par. 743.17)
    Sec. 131.17. (1) The Director must terminate the
registration of any company which demonstrates that it no
longer is a member of an insurance holding company system.
    (2) The Director may require or allow 2 or more affiliated
companies subject to registration to file a consolidated
registration statement. Two or more affiliated companies
subject to registration hereunder may file a consolidated
registration statement or consolidated reports amending their
consolidated registration statement or their individual
registration statements unless the Director requires a
separate registration statement or report from each registered
company.
    (3) A company which is authorized to do business in this
State and which is part of an insurance holding company system
may register on behalf of any affiliated company which is
required to register under Section 131.13 and to file all
information and material required to be filed under this
Article unless the Director requires a separate registration by
the affiliated company.
(Source: P.A. 77-673.)
 
    (215 ILCS 5/131.18)  (from Ch. 73, par. 743.18)
    Sec. 131.18. Sections 131.13 through 131.19 do not apply to
any company, information, or transaction if and to the extent
that the Director by rule, regulation, or order may exempt the
same from Sections 131.13 through 131.19.
    Any requirement for the furnishing of financial statements
of the insurance holding company system, or any member thereof,
as part of or in connection with the registration statement
filed under Section 131.14 shall not apply to any company which
submits and maintains in effect in lieu thereof a guarantee or
a bond acceptable to the Director in an amount equal to the
capital and surplus of the company as shown on its most recent
audited financial statements, payable to the Director for the
benefit of the creditors, policyholders and stockholders of the
company as their interests may appear. Such guarantee, if
issued by a national bank, and such a bond, if issued by a
licensed insurance company which is not a member of the
insurance holding company system, in each case having capital
and surplus in excess of $25,000,000, shall be deemed
acceptable.
(Source: P.A. 77-673.)
 
    (215 ILCS 5/131.19)  (from Ch. 73, par. 743.19)
    Sec. 131.19. Disclaimer of affiliation. Any person may file
with the Director a disclaimer of affiliation with any
authorized company or a disclaimer may be filed by the a
company or any member of an insurance holding company system.
The disclaimer shall must fully disclose all material
relationships and bases basis for affiliation between the
person and the company as well as the basis for disclaiming the
affiliation. A disclaimer of affiliation shall be deemed to
have been granted unless the Director, within 30 days following
receipt of a complete disclaimer, notifies the filing party
that the disclaimer is disallowed. In the event of
disallowance, the disclaiming party may request an
administrative hearing, which shall be granted. The
disclaiming party shall be relieved of its duty to register
under Section 131.13 of this Code if approval of the disclaimer
has been granted by the Director or if the disclaimer is deemed
to have been approved. After a disclaimer is filed, the company
is relieved of any duty to register or report under Section
131.13 which may arise out of the company's relationship with
the person unless and until the Director disallows the
disclaimer. The Director may disallow such a disclaimer only
after furnishing all parties in interest with notice and
opportunity to be heard and after making specific findings of
fact to support the disallowance.
(Source: P.A. 84-805.)
 
    (215 ILCS 5/131.20)  (from Ch. 73, par. 743.20)
    Sec. 131.20. Standards for transactions with affiliates;
adequacy of surplus.
    (1) Transactions Material transactions with their
affiliates by companies subject to registration are subject to
the following standards:
        (a) the terms are fair and reasonable;
        (a-5) agreements for cost sharing services and
    management shall include such provisions as may be required
    by rules and regulations issued by the Director;
        (b) charges or fees for services performed are
    reasonable;
        (c) expenses incurred and payment received must be
    allocated to the company insurer in conformity with
    customary insurance accounting practices consistently
    applied;
        (d) the books, accounts, and records of each party must
    be so maintained as to clearly and accurately disclose the
    precise nature and details of the transactions, including
    accounting information necessary to support the
    reasonableness of the charges or fees to the respective
    parties; and
        (e) the company's surplus as regards policyholders
    following any transactions with affiliates or dividends or
    distributions to securityholders or affiliates must be
    reasonable in relation to the company's outstanding
    liabilities and adequate to meet its financial needs.
    (2) For purposes of this Article, in determining whether a
company's surplus as regards policyholders is reasonable in
relation to the company's outstanding liabilities and adequate
to meet its needs, the following factors, among others, may be
considered:
        (a) the size of the company as measured by its assets,
    capital and surplus, reserves, premium writings, insurance
    in force and other appropriate criteria;
        (b) the extent to which the company's business is
    diversified among the several lines of insurance;
        (c) the number and size of risks insured in each line
    of business;
        (d) the extent of the geographical dispersion of the
    company's insured risks;
        (e) the nature and extent of the company's reinsurance
    program;
        (f) the quality, diversification, and liquidity of the
    company's investment portfolio;
        (g) the recent past and projected future trend in the
    size of the company's investment portfolio surplus as
    regards policyholders;
        (h) the surplus as regards policyholders maintained by
    companies comparable to the registrant in respect of the
    factors enumerated in this paragraph;
        (i) the adequacy of the company's reserves;
        (j) the quality of the company's earnings and the
    extent to which the reported earnings include
    extraordinary items; and
        (k) the quality and liquidity of investments in
    affiliates subsidiaries made under Section 131.2 or 131.3.
    The Director may discount any such investment or treat any
    such investment as a non-admitted asset for purposes of
    determining the adequacy of surplus as regards
    policyholders whenever the investment so warrants.
(Source: P.A. 88-364.)
 
    (215 ILCS 5/131.20a)  (from Ch. 73, par. 743.20a)
    Sec. 131.20a. Prior notification of transactions;
dividends and distributions.
    (1) (a) The following transactions listed in items (i)
through (vii) involving between a domestic company and any
person in its insurance holding company system, including
amendments or modifications (other than termination) of
affiliate agreements previously filed pursuant to this
Section, which are subject to any materiality standards
contained in this Section, may not be entered into unless the
company has notified the Director in writing of its intention
to enter into such transaction at least 30 days prior thereto,
or such shorter period as the Director may permit, and the
Director has not disapproved it within such period. The notice
for amendments or modifications (other than termination) shall
include the reasons for the change and the financial impact on
the domestic company. Informal notice shall be reported, within
30 days after a termination of a previously filed agreement, to
the Director for determination of the type of filing required,
if any. :
        (i) Sales, purchases, exchanges of assets, loans or
    extensions of credit, guarantees, investments, or any
    other transaction, except dividends, (A) that involves the
    transfer of assets from or liabilities to a company (A)
    equal to or exceeding the lesser of 3% of the company's
    admitted assets or 25% of its surplus as regards
    policyholders as of the 31st day of December next preceding
    or (B) that is proposed when the domestic company is not
    eligible to declare and pay a dividend or other
    distribution pursuant to the provisions of Section 27.
        (ii) Loans or extensions of credit to any person that
    is not an affiliate (A) that involve the lesser of 3% of
    the company's admitted assets or 25% of the company's
    surplus, each as of the 31st day of December next
    preceding, made with the agreement or understanding that
    the proceeds of such transactions, in whole or in
    substantial part, are to be used to make loans or
    extensions of credit to, to purchase assets of, or to make
    investments in, any affiliate of the company making such
    loans or extensions of credit or (B) that are proposed when
    the domestic company is not eligible to declare and pay a
    dividend or other distribution pursuant to the provisions
    of Section 27.
        (iii) Reinsurance agreements or modifications thereto,
    including all reinsurance pooling agreements, reinsurance
    agreements in which the reinsurance premium or a change in
    the company's liabilities, or the projected reinsurance
    premium or a change in the company's liabilities in any of
    the next 3 years, equals or exceeds 5% of the company's
    surplus as regards policyholders, as of the 31st day of
    December next preceding, including those agreements that
    may require as consideration the transfer of assets from a
    company an insurer to a nonaffiliate, if an agreement or
    understanding exists between the company insurer and
    nonaffiliate that any portion of those assets will be
    transferred to one or more affiliates of the company
    insurer.
        (iv) All management agreements; , service contracts,
    other than agency contracts; tax allocation agreements;
    all reinsurance allocation agreements related to
    reinsurance agreements required to be filed under this
    Section; and all cost-sharing arrangements, and any other
    contracts providing for the rendering of services on a
    regular systematic basis.
        (v) Direct or indirect acquisitions or investments in a
    person that controls the company, or in an affiliate of the
    company, in an amount which, together with its present
    holdings in such investments, exceeds 2.5% of the company's
    surplus as regards policyholders. Direct or indirect
    acquisitions or investments in subsidiaries acquired
    pursuant to Section 131.2 of this Article (or authorized
    under any other Section of this Code), or in non-subsidiary
    insurance affiliates that are subject to the provisions of
    this Article, are exempt from this requirement.
        (vi) Any series of the previously described
    transactions that are substantially similar to each other,
    that take place within any 180 day period, and that in
    total are equal to or exceed the lesser of 3% of the
    domestic company's insurer's admitted assets or 25% of its
    policyholders surplus, as of the 31st day of the December
    next preceding.
        (vii) (vi) Any other material transaction that the
    Director by rule determines might render the company's
    surplus as regards policyholders unreasonable in relation
    to the company's outstanding liabilities and inadequate to
    its financial needs or may otherwise adversely affect the
    interests of the company's policyholders or shareholders.
    Nothing herein contained shall be deemed to authorize or
permit any transactions that, in the case of a company an
insurer not a member of the same holding company system, would
be otherwise contrary to law.
    (b) Any transaction or contract otherwise described in
paragraph (a) of this subsection that is between a domestic
company insurer and any person that is not its affiliate and
that precedes or follows within 180 days or is concurrent with
a similar transaction between that nonaffiliate and an
affiliate of the domestic company and that involves amounts
that are equal to or exceed the lesser of 3% of the domestic
company's insurer's admitted assets or 25% of its surplus as
regards policyholders at the end of the prior year may not be
entered into unless the company has notified the Director in
writing of its intention to enter into the transaction at least
30 days prior thereto or such shorter period as the Director
may permit, and the Director has not disapproved it within such
period.
    (c) A company may not enter into transactions which are
part of a plan or series of like transactions with any person
within the holding company system if the purpose of those
separate transactions is to avoid the statutory threshold
amount and thus avoid the review that would occur otherwise. If
the Director determines that such separate transactions were
entered into for such purpose, he may exercise his authority
under subsection (2) of Section 131.24.
    (d) The Director, in reviewing transactions pursuant to
paragraph (a), shall consider whether the transactions comply
with the standards set forth in Section 131.20 and whether they
may adversely affect the interests of policyholders.
    (e) The Director shall be notified within 30 days of any
investment of the domestic company insurer in any one
corporation if the total investment in that corporation by the
insurance holding company system exceeds 10% of that
corporation's voting securities.
    (f) Except for those transactions subject to approval under
other Sections of this Code, any such transaction or agreements
which are not disapproved by the Director may be effective as
of the date set forth in the notice required under this
Section.
    (g) If a domestic company insurer enters into a transaction
described in this subsection without having given the required
notification, the Director may cause the company insurer to pay
a civil forfeiture of not more than $250,000. Each transaction
so entered shall be considered a separate offense.
    (2) No domestic company subject to registration under
Section 131.13 may pay any extraordinary dividend or make any
other extraordinary distribution to its shareholders
securityholders until: (a) 30 days after the Director has
received notice of the declaration thereof and has not within
such period disapproved the payment, or (b) the Director
approves such payment within the 30-day period. For purposes of
this subsection, an extraordinary dividend or distribution is
any dividend or distribution of cash or other property whose
fair market value, together with that of other dividends or
distributions, made within the period of 12 consecutive months
ending on the date on which the proposed dividend is scheduled
for payment or distribution exceeds the greater of: (a) 10% of
the company's surplus as regards policyholders as of the 31st
day of December next preceding, or (b) the net income of the
company for the 12-month period ending the 31st day of December
next preceding, but does not include pro rata distributions of
any class of the company's own securities.
    Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the company may
declare an extraordinary dividend or distribution which is
conditional upon the Director's approval, and such a
declaration confers no rights upon security holders until: (a)
the Director has approved the payment of the dividend or
distribution, or (b) the Director has not disapproved the
payment within the 30-day period referred to above.
(Source: P.A. 92-140, eff. 7-24-01.)
 
    (215 ILCS 5/131.20b)
    Sec. 131.20b. Controlled companies insurers; management;
directors.
    (1) Notwithstanding the control of a domestic company
insurer by any person, the officers and directors of the
company insurer shall not thereby be relieved of any obligation
or liability to which they would otherwise be subject by law,
and the company insurer shall be managed so as to assure its
separate operating identity consistent with this Article VIII
1/2 of this Code.
    (2) Nothing in this Section shall preclude a domestic
company insurer from having or sharing a common management or a
cooperative or joint use of personnel, property, or services
with one or more affiliated persons under arrangements meeting
the standards and requirements of Sections 131.20 and 131.20a.
    (3) Not After June 30, 2002, not less than one-third of the
directors of a domestic company, and not less than one-third of
the members of each committee of the board of directors of any
domestic company, insurer that is a member of an insurance
holding company system shall be persons who are not officers or
employees of the company insurer or of any entity controlling,
controlled by, or under common control with the company insurer
and who are not beneficial owners of a controlling interest in
the voting stock of the company insurer or any such entity. At
least one such person shall be included in any quorum for the
transaction of business at any meeting of the board of
directors or any committee thereof.
    (3.5) The board of directors of a domestic company or
ultimate controlling company shall establish one or more
committees comprised solely of directors who are not officers
or employees of the company or of any entity controlling,
controlled by, or under common control with the company and who
are not beneficial owners of a controlling interest in the
voting stock of the company or any such entity. The committee
or committees shall have responsibility for nominating
candidates for director for election by shareholders or
policyholders, evaluating the performance of officers deemed
to be principal officers of the company, and recommending to
the board of directors the selection and compensation of the
principal officers.
    (4) Subsections Subsection (3) and (3.5) of this Section do
does not apply to a domestic company insurer if the ultimate
controlling company or the person entity controlling the
company, such as a company, a mutual insurance holding company,
or a publicly held corporation, has a board of directors and
committees thereof that meet the requirements of subsections
(3) and (3.5) with respect to such controlling entity or are
subject to and meet the requirements of the corporate
governance rules of a national securities exchange, such as the
New York Stock Exchange, or an inter-dealer quotation system,
such as the National Association of Securities Dealers
Automatic Quotation the insurer, whether directly or through an
intermediate subsidiary, has a board of directors composed in
accordance with that subsection.
    (5) (Blank). Subsection (3) of this Section does not apply
to a domestic insurer if the ultimate controlling party of the
domestic insurer is a corporation whose equity securities or
equivalent instruments are listed on the New York Stock
Exchange.
    (6) A company may make application to the Director for a
waiver from the requirements of this Section, if the company's
annual direct written and assumed premium, excluding premiums
reinsured with the Federal Crop Insurance Corporation and
Federal Flood Program, is less than $300,000,000. A company may
also make application to the Director for a waiver from the
requirements of this Section based upon unique circumstances.
The Director may consider various factors, including, but not
limited to, the type of business entity, volume of business
written, availability of qualified board members, or the
ownership or organizational structure of the entity.
(Source: P.A. 92-140, eff. 7-24-01.)
 
    (215 ILCS 5/131.20c new)
    Sec. 131.20c. Supervisory colleges.
    (a) With respect to any company registered under Section
131.13 of this Code, and in accordance with subsection (c) of
this Section, the Director shall also have the power to
participate in a supervisory college for any domestic company
that is part of an insurance holding company system with
international operations in order to determine compliance by
the company with this Article. The powers of the Director with
respect to supervisory colleges include, but are not limited
to:
        (1) initiating the establishment of a supervisory
    college;
        (2) clarifying the membership and participation of
    other supervisors in the supervisory college;
        (3) clarifying the functions of the supervisory
    college and the role of other regulators, including the
    establishment of a group-wide supervisor;
        (4) coordinating the ongoing activities of the
    supervisory college, including planning meetings,
    supervisory activities, and processes for information
    sharing; and
        (5) establishing a crisis management plan.
    (b) Each registered company subject to this Section shall
be liable for and shall pay the reasonable expenses of the
Director's participation in a supervisory college in
accordance with subsection (c) of this Section, including
reasonable travel expenses. For purposes of this Section, a
supervisory college may be convened as either a temporary or
permanent forum for communication and cooperation between the
regulators charged with the supervision of the company or its
affiliates, and the Director may establish a regular assessment
to the company for the payment of these expenses.
    (c) In order to assess the business strategy, financial
position, legal and regulatory position, risk exposure, risk
management, and governance processes, and as part of the
examination of individual companies in accordance with Section
131.21 of this Code, the Director may participate in a
supervisory college with other regulators charged with
supervision of the company or its affiliates, including other
state, federal, and international regulatory agencies. The
Director may enter into agreements in accordance with Section
131.22 of this Code providing the basis for cooperation between
the Director and the other regulatory agencies and the
activities of the supervisory college. Nothing in this Section
shall delegate to the supervisory college the authority of the
Director to regulate or supervise the company or its affiliates
within its jurisdiction.
 
    (215 ILCS 5/131.21)  (from Ch. 73, par. 743.21)
    Sec. 131.21. Examination.
    (1) Subject to the limitation contained in this section and
in addition to the powers which the Director has under Sections
132 through 132.7 and 401 through 403 of this Code relating to
the examination of companies, the Director shall have the power
to examine any company registered under Section 131.13 of this
Code and its affiliates to ascertain the financial condition of
the company, including the enterprise risk to the company by
the ultimate controlling party, or by any entity or combination
of entities within the insurance holding company system, or by
the insurance holding company system on a consolidated basis.
also has the power to order any company registered under
Section 131.13 to produce such records, books, or other
information papers in the possession of the company or its
affiliates as are reasonably necessary to ascertain the
financial condition of such company or to determine compliance
with this Article. In the event the company fails to comply
with the order, the Director has the power to examine the
affiliates to obtain such information.
    (1.5) The Director may order any company registered under
Section 131.13 of this Code to produce such records, books, or
other information papers in the possession of the company or
its affiliates as are reasonably necessary to determine
compliance with this Article. To determine compliance with this
Article, the Director may order any company registered under
Section 131.13 of this Code to produce information not in the
possession of the company if the company can obtain access to
such information pursuant to contractual relationships,
statutory obligations, or other methods. In the event the
company cannot obtain the information requested by the
Director, the company shall provide the Director a detailed
explanation of the reason that the company cannot obtain the
information and the identity of the holder of the information.
Whenever the Director determines that the detailed explanation
is without merit, the Director may require, after notice and
hearing, the company to pay a penalty of up to $1,000 for each
day's delay, or may suspend or revoke the company's license.
    (2) The Director may retain at the registered company's
expense any attorneys, actuaries, accountants and other
experts not otherwise a part of the Director's staff as may be
reasonably necessary to assist in the conduct of the
examination under subsection (1). Any persons so retained are
under the direction and control of the Director and may act in
a purely advisory capacity.
    (3) Each registered company producing for examination
records, books and papers under subsection (1.5) (1) is liable
for and must pay the expense of the examination in accordance
with Section 408 of this Code.
    (4) The Director may retain at the registered company's
expense any attorneys, actuaries, accountants, and other
experts not otherwise a part of the Director's staff as may be
reasonably necessary to assist in the conduct of the
examination under subsection (1) of this Section. Any persons
so retained are under the direction and control of the Director
and may act in a purely advisory capacity.
    (5) In the event the company fails to comply with an order,
the Director shall have the power to examine the affiliates to
obtain the information. The Director shall also have the power
to issue subpoenas, to administer oaths, and to examine under
oath any person for purposes of determining compliance with
this Section. Upon the failure or refusal of any person to obey
a subpoena, the Director may petition a court of competent
jurisdiction and, upon proper showing, the court may enter an
order compelling the witness to appear and testify or produce
documentary evidence. Failure to obey the court order shall be
punishable as contempt of court. Every person shall be obliged
to attend as a witness at the place specified in the subpoena,
when subpoenaed, anywhere within the State. He or she shall be
entitled to the same fees and mileage, if claimed, as a witness
in the Circuit Court, which fees, mileage, and actual expense,
if any, necessarily incurred in securing the attendance of
witnesses, and their testimony, shall be itemized and charged
against, and be paid by, the company being examined.
(Source: P.A. 89-97, eff. 7-7-95.)
 
    (215 ILCS 5/131.22)  (from Ch. 73, par. 743.22)
    Sec. 131.22. Confidential treatment.
    (a) Documents, materials, or other information in the
possession or control of the Department that are obtained by or
disclosed to the Director or any other person in the course of
an examination or investigation made pursuant to this Article
and all information reported pursuant to this Article shall be
confidential by law and privileged, shall not be subject to the
Illinois Freedom of Information Act, shall not be subject to
subpoena, and shall not be subject to discovery or admissible
in evidence in any private civil action. However, the Director
is authorized to use the documents, materials, or other
information in the furtherance of any regulatory or legal
action brought as a part of the Director's official duties. The
Director shall not otherwise make the documents, materials, or
other information public without the prior written consent of
the company to which it pertains unless the Director, after
giving the company and its affiliates who would be affected
thereby prior written notice and an opportunity to be heard,
determines that the interest of policyholders, shareholders,
or the public shall be served by the publication thereof, in
which event the Director may publish all or any part in such
manner as may be deemed appropriate.
    (b) Neither the Director nor any person who received
documents, materials, or other information while acting under
the authority of the Director or with whom such documents,
materials, or other information are shared pursuant to this
Article shall be permitted or required to testify in any
private civil action concerning any confidential documents,
materials, or information subject to subsection (a) of this
Section.
    (c) In order to assist in the performance of the Director's
duties, the Director:
        (1) may share documents, materials, or other
    information, including the confidential and privileged
    documents, materials, or information subject to subsection
    (a) of this Section, with other state, federal, and
    international regulatory agencies, with the NAIC and its
    affiliates and subsidiaries, and with state, federal, and
    international law enforcement authorities, including
    members of any supervisory college allowed by this Article,
    provided that the recipient agrees in writing to maintain
    the confidentiality and privileged status of the document,
    material, or other information, and has verified in writing
    the legal authority to maintain confidentiality;
        (1.5) notwithstanding paragraph (1) of this subsection
    (c), may only share confidential and privileged documents,
    material, or information reported pursuant to Section
    131.14b with commissioners of states having statutes or
    regulations substantially similar to subsection (a) of
    this Section and who have agreed in writing not to disclose
    such information;
        (2) may receive documents, materials, or information,
    including otherwise confidential and privileged documents,
    materials, or information from the NAIC and its affiliates
    and subsidiaries and from regulatory and law enforcement
    officials of other foreign or domestic jurisdictions, and
    shall maintain as confidential or privileged any document,
    material, or information received with notice or the
    understanding that it is confidential or privileged under
    the laws of the jurisdiction that is the source of the
    document, material, or information; any such documents,
    materials, or information, while in the Director's
    possession, shall not be subject to the Illinois Freedom of
    Information Act and shall not be subject to subpoena; and
        (3) shall enter into written agreements with the NAIC
    governing sharing and use of information provided pursuant
    to this Article consistent with this subsection (c) that
    shall (i) specify procedures and protocols regarding the
    confidentiality and security of information shared with
    the NAIC and its affiliates and subsidiaries pursuant to
    this Article, including procedures and protocols for
    sharing by the NAIC with other state, federal, or
    international regulators; (ii) specify that ownership of
    information shared with the NAIC and its affiliates and
    subsidiaries pursuant to this Article remains with the
    Director and the NAIC's use of the information is subject
    to the direction of the Director; (iii) require prompt
    notice to be given to a company whose confidential
    information in the possession of the NAIC pursuant to this
    Article is subject to a request or subpoena to the NAIC for
    disclosure or production; and (iv) require the NAIC and its
    affiliates and subsidiaries to consent to intervention by a
    company in any judicial or administrative action in which
    the NAIC and its affiliates and subsidiaries may be
    required to disclose confidential information about the
    company shared with the NAIC and its affiliates and
    subsidiaries pursuant to this Article.
    (d) The sharing of documents, materials, or information by
the Director pursuant to this Article shall not constitute a
delegation of regulatory authority or rulemaking, and the
Director is solely responsible for the administration,
execution, and enforcement of the provisions of this Article.
    (e) No waiver of any applicable privilege or claim of
confidentiality in the documents, materials, or information
shall occur as a result of disclosure to the Director under
this Section or as a result of sharing as authorized in
subsection (c) of this Section.
    (f) Documents, materials, or other information in the
possession or control of the NAIC pursuant to this Article
shall be confidential by law and privileged, shall not be
subject to the Illinois Freedom of Information Act, shall not
be subject to subpoena, and shall not be subject to discovery
or admissible in evidence in any private civil action. All
information, documents, and copies thereof obtained by or
disclosed to the Director or any other person in the course of
an examination or investigation made under Section 131.21 and
all information submitted under Sections 131.13 or 131.20a and
all personal financial statement information submitted under
Section 131.5 must be given confidential treatment and is not
subject to subpoena and may not be made public by the Director
or any other person, without the prior written consent of the
company to which it pertains unless the Director, after giving
the company and its affiliates who would be affected thereby
notice and opportunity to be heard, determines that the
interests of policyholders, shareholders or the public will be
served by the publication thereof in which event he may publish
all or any part thereof in such manner as he may deem
appropriate.
    Nothing contained in this Section shall prevent or be
construed as prohibiting the Director from disclosing such
information to the insurance department of any other state or
county or to law enforcement officials of this or any other
state or agency of the federal government at any time upon the
written agreement of the entity receiving the information to
hold that information confidential and in a manner consistent
with this Code.
(Source: P.A. 88-364.)
 
    (215 ILCS 5/131.23)  (from Ch. 73, par. 743.23)
    Sec. 131.23. Injunctions; prohibitions against voting
securities; sequestration of voting securities. (1) Whenever
it appears to the Director that any company or any director,
officer, employee or agent thereof has committed or is about to
commit a violation of this Article or of any rule, regulation,
or order issued by the Director hereunder, the Director may
apply to the Circuit Court for the county in which the
principal office of the company is located or to the Circuit
Court for Sangamon County for an order enjoining the company or
the director, officer, employee or agent thereof from violating
or continuing to violate this Article or any rule, regulation
or order, and for any other equitable relief as the nature of
the case and the interests of the company's policyholders,
creditors or the public may require. In any proceeding, the
validity of the rule, regulation or order alleged to have been
violated may be determined by the Court.
    (2) No security or shareholder's or policyholder's proxy
which is the subject of any agreement or arrangement regarding
acquisition, or which is acquired or to be acquired, in
contravention of this Article or of any rule, regulation or
order issued by the Director hereunder may be voted at any
shareholders' securityholders' meeting, or may be counted for
quorum purposes, and any action of shareholders
securityholders' requiring the affirmative vote of a
percentage of securities shall may be taken as though such
securities (including securities that may be voted pursuant to
such proxies) were not issued and outstanding; but no action
taken at any such meeting may be invalidated by the voting of
such securities or proxies, unless the action would materially
affect control of the company or unless any court of this State
has so ordered. If the Director has reason to believe that any
security or shareholder's or policyholder's proxy of the
company has been or is about to be acquired in contravention of
this Article or of any rule, regulation or order issued by the
Director hereunder the company or the Director may apply to the
Circuit Court for Sangamon County or to the Circuit Court for
the county in which the company has its principal place of
business (a) to enjoin the further pursuit or use of any offer,
request, invitation, agreement or acquisition made in
contravention of Sections 131.4 through 131.12 or any rule,
regulation, or order issued by the Director thereunder; (b) to
enjoin the voting of any security or proxy so acquired; (c) to
void any vote of such security or proxy already cast at any
meeting of shareholders securityholders; and (d) for any other
equitable relief as the nature of the case and the interests of
the company's policyholders, creditors, or the public may
require.
    (3) In any case where a person has acquired or is proposing
to acquire any voting securities or shareholder's or
policyholder's proxy in violation of this Article or any rule,
regulation or order issued by the Director hereunder, the
Circuit Court for Sangamon County or the Circuit Court for the
county in which the company has its principal place of business
may, on such notice as the court deems appropriate, upon the
application of the company or the Director seize or sequester
any voting securities or shareholder's or policyholder's proxy
of the company owned directly or indirectly by such person, and
issue any orders with respect thereto as may be appropriate to
effectuate this Article. Notwithstanding any other provisions
of law, for the purposes of this Article, the situs of the
ownership of the securities of domestic companies is deemed to
be in this State.
    (4) If the Director has reason to believe that any
shareholders' or policyholders' proxies have been or are about
to be acquired in contravention of this Article or of any rule,
regulations or order issued by the Director hereunder, the
Director may apply to the Circuit Court for Sangamon County or
to the Circuit Court for the county in which the company has
its principal place of business (a) to enjoin further pursuit
or use of any offer, request, invitation, agreement or
acquisition made in contravention of Section 131.4 through
131.12 and (b) for any other equitable relief as the nature of
the case and the interests of the company's policyholders,
creditors or the public may require.
(Source: P.A. 84-805.)
 
    (215 ILCS 5/131.24)  (from Ch. 73, par. 743.24)
    Sec. 131.24. Sanctions.
    (1) Every director or officer of an insurance holding
company system who knowingly violates, participates in, or
assents to, or who knowingly permits any of the officers or
agents of the company to engage in transactions or make
investments which have not been properly filed or approved or
which violate this Article, shall pay, in their individual
capacity, a civil forfeiture of not more than $100,000 per
violation, after notice and hearing before the Director. In
determining the amount of the civil forfeiture, the Director
shall take into account the appropriateness of the forfeiture
with respect to the gravity of the violation, the history of
previous violations, and such other matters as justice may
require.
    (2) Whenever it appears to the Director determines that any
company subject to this Article or any director, officer,
employee or agent thereof has engaged in any transaction or
entered into a contract which is subject to Section 131.20, and
any one of Sections 131.16, 131.20a, 141, 141.1, or 174 of this
Code and which would not have been approved had such approval
been requested or would have been disapproved had required
notice been given, the Director may order the company to cease
and desist immediately any further activity under that
transaction or contract. After notice and hearing the Director
may also order (a) the company to void any such contracts and
restore the status quo if such action is in the best interest
of the policyholders or the public, and (b) any affiliate of
the company, which has received from the company dividends,
distributions, assets, loans, extensions of credit,
guarantees, or investments in violation of any such Section, to
immediately repay, refund or restore to the company such
dividends, distributions, assets, extensions of credit,
guarantees or investments.
    (3) Whenever it appears to the Director determines that any
company or any director, officer, employee or agent thereof has
committed a willful violation of this Article, the Director may
cause criminal proceedings to be instituted in the Circuit
Court for the county in which the principal office of the
company is located or in the Circuit Court of Sangamon or Cook
County against such company or the responsible director,
officer, employee or agent thereof. Any company which willfully
violates this Article commits a business offense and may be
fined up to $500,000. Any individual who willfully violates
this Article commits a Class 4 felony and may be fined in his
individual capacity not more than $500,000 or be imprisoned for
not less than one year nor more than 3 years, or both.
    (4) Any officer, director, or employee of an insurance
holding company system who willfully and knowingly subscribes
to or makes or causes to be made any false statements or false
reports or false filings with the intent to deceive the
Director in the performance of his duties under this Article,
commits a Class 3 felony and upon conviction thereof, shall be
imprisoned for not less than 2 years nor more than 5 years or
fined $500,000 or both. Any fines imposed shall be paid by the
officer, Director, or employee in his individual capacity.
    (5) Whenever the Director determines that any person has
committed a violation of Section 131.14b of this Code which
prevents the full understanding of the enterprise risk to the
company by affiliates or by the insurance holding company
system, the violation may serve as an independent basis, after
an opportunity for a hearing, for disapproving dividends or
distributions and for placing the company under an order of
supervision in accordance with Article XII 1/2 of this Code.
(Source: P.A. 93-32, eff. 7-1-03.)
 
    (215 ILCS 5/131.26)  (from Ch. 73, par. 743.26)
    Sec. 131.26. Revocation, suspension, or non-renewal of
company's license. Whenever it appears to the Director
determines that any person has committed a violation of this
Article which makes the continued operation of a company
contrary to the interests of policyholders or the public, the
Director may, after notice and hearing suspend, revoke or
refuse to renew the company's license or authority to do
business in this State for such a period as the Director he
finds is required for the protection of policyholders or the
public. Any such determination must be accompanied by specific
findings of fact and conclusions of law.
(Source: P.A. 77-673.)
 
    (215 ILCS 5/131.27)  (from Ch. 73, par. 743.27)
    Sec. 131.27. Judicial review.
    (1) Any order or decision made, issued or executed by the
Director under this Article whereby any person or company is
aggrieved is subject to review by the Circuit Court of Sangamon
County or the Circuit Court of Cook County.
    The Administrative Review Law, as now or hereafter amended,
and the rules adopted pursuant thereto, applies to and governs
all proceedings for review of final administrative decisions of
the Director provided for in this Section. The term
"administrative decision" is defined as in Section 3-101 of the
Code of Civil Procedure.
    (2) The filing of an appeal pursuant to this Section shall
stay the application of any rule, regulation, order, or other
action of the Director to the appealing party unless the court,
after giving the party notice and an opportunity to be heard,
determines that a stay would be detrimental to the interest of
policyholders, shareholders, creditors, or the public.
    (3) Any person aggrieved by any failure of the Director to
act or make a determination required by this Article may
petition the circuit courts of Sangamon County or Cook County
for a writ in the nature of a mandamus or a peremptory mandamus
directing the Director to act or make a determination.
(Source: P.A. 82-783.)
 
    (215 ILCS 5/131.29 new)
    Sec. 131.29. Rulemaking power. The Director may adopt such
administrative rules as are necessary to implement the
provisions of this Article.
 
    (215 ILCS 5/131.30 new)
    Sec. 131.30. Conflict with other laws. This Article
supersedes all laws and parts of laws of this State
inconsistent with this Code with respect to matters covered by
this Code.
 
    (215 ILCS 5/408.3)  (from Ch. 73, par. 1020.3)
    Sec. 408.3. Insurance Financial Regulation Fund; uses. The
monies deposited into the Insurance Financial Regulation Fund
shall be used only for (i) payment of the expenses of the
Department, including related administrative expenses,
incurred in analyzing, investigating and examining the
financial condition or control of insurance companies and other
entities licensed or seeking to be licensed by the Department,
including the collection, analysis and distribution of
information on insurance premiums, other income, costs and
expenses, and (ii) to pay internal costs and expenses of the
Interstate Insurance Receivership Commission allocated to this
State and authorized and admitted companies doing an insurance
business in this State under Article X of the Interstate
Receivership Compact. All distributions and payments from the
Insurance Financial Regulation Fund shall be subject to
appropriation as otherwise provided by law for payment of such
expenses.
    Sums appropriated under clause (ii) of the preceding
paragraph shall be deemed to satisfy, pro tanto, the
obligations of insurers doing business in this State under
Article X of the Interstate Insurance Receivership Compact.
    Nothing in this Code shall prohibit the General Assembly
from appropriating funds from the General Revenue Fund to the
Department for the purpose of administering this Code.
    No fees collected pursuant to Section 408 of this Code
shall be used for the regulation of pension funds or activities
by the Department in the performance of its duties under
Article 22 of the Illinois Pension Code.
    If at the end of a fiscal year the balance in the Insurance
Financial Regulation Fund which remains unexpended or
unobligated exceeds the amount of funds that the Director may
certify is needed for the purposes enumerated in this Section,
then the General Assembly may appropriate that excess amount
for purposes other than those enumerated in this Section.
    Moneys in the Insurance Financial Regulation Fund may be
transferred to the Professions Indirect Cost Fund, as
authorized under Section 2105-300 of the Department of
Professional Regulation Law of the Civil Administrative Code of
Illinois.
(Source: P.A. 94-91, eff. 7-1-05.)
 
    Section 97. Severability. The provisions of this Act are
severable under Section 1.31 of the Statute on Statutes.
 
    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect January
1, 2014, except that Section 131.14b of the Illinois Insurance
Code takes effect July 1, 2014.