(215 ILCS 5/234) (from Ch. 73, par. 846)
Sec. 234.
Notice of
premium required.
(1) No life company doing business in this State shall declare any
policy forfeited or lapsed within six months after default in payment of
any premium installment or interest or any portion thereof, nor shall any
such policy be forfeited or lapsed by reason of nonpayment when due of any
premium, installment or interest, or any portion thereof, required by the
terms of the policy to be paid, within six months from the default in
payment of such premium, installment or interest, unless a written or
printed notice stating the amount of such premium, installment, interest or
portion thereof due on such policy, the place where it shall be paid and
the person to whom the same is payable, shall have been duly addressed and
mailed with the required postage affixed, to the person whose life is
insured, or the assignee of the policy, (if notice of the assignment has
been given to the company) at his last known post office address, at least
fifteen days and not more than forty-five days prior to the day when the
same is due and payable, before the beginning of the period of grace,
except that in any case in which a parent insures the life of his minor
child, the company may send notice of premium due to the parent. Such
notice shall also state that unless such premium or other sums due shall be
paid to the company or its agents the policy and all payments thereon will
become forfeited and void, except as to the right to a surrender value or
paid-up policy as provided for by the policy. The affidavit of any officer,
clerk or agent of the company or of any one authorized to mail such notice
that the notice required by this section bearing the required postage has
been duly addressed and mailed shall be presumptive evidence that such
notice has been duly given.
(2) This section shall not apply to cancellable accident and health
policies which are renewable at the option of the company nor shall it
apply to group policies, industrial life policies, or to any policies upon
which premiums are payable monthly or at shorter intervals.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 3852.)
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(215 ILCS 5/236) (from Ch. 73, par. 848)
Sec. 236. Discrimination prohibited.
(a) No life company doing business in this State shall make or permit any
distinction or discrimination in favor of individuals among insured
persons of the same class and equal expectation of life in the issuance
of its policies, in the amount of
payment of premiums or rates charged for policies of insurance, in the
amount of any dividends or other benefits payable thereon, or in any
other of the terms and conditions of the contracts it makes.
(b) No life company shall make or permit any distinction or discrimination
against individuals
with disabilities in
the amount of payment
of premiums or rates charged for policies of life insurance, in the amount
of any dividends or death benefits payable thereon, or in any other terms
and conditions of the contract it makes unless the rate differential is
based on sound actuarial principles and a reasonable system of classification
and is related to actual or reasonably anticipated experience directly
associated with the disability.
(c) No life company shall refuse to insure, or refuse to continue to insure,
or limit the amount or extent or kind of coverage available to an
individual, or charge an individual a different rate for the same coverage
solely because of blindness or partial blindness. With respect to all
other conditions, including the underlying cause of the blindness or
partial blindness, persons who are blind or partially blind shall be
subject to the same standards of sound actuarial principles or actual or
reasonably anticipated experience as are sighted persons. Refusal to
insure includes denial by an insurer of disability insurance coverage on
the grounds that the policy defines "disability" as being presumed in the
event that the insured loses his or her eyesight. However, an insurer may
exclude from coverage disabilities consisting solely of blindness or
partial blindness when such condition existed at the time the policy was issued.
(d) No life company shall refuse to insure or to continue to insure an
individual solely because of the individual's status as a member of the
United States Air Force, Army, Coast Guard, Marines, or Navy or solely because
of the individual's status as a member
of the National Guard or Armed Forces Reserve.
(e) An insurer or producer authorized to issue policies of insurance in this State may not make a distinction or otherwise discriminate between persons, reject an applicant, cancel a policy, or demand or require a higher rate of premium for reasons based solely upon an applicant's or insured's past lawful travel experiences or future lawful travel plans. This subsection (e) does not prohibit an insurer or producer from excluding or limiting coverage under a policy or refusing to offer the policy based upon past lawful travel or future lawful travel plans or from charging a different rate for that coverage when that action is based upon sound actuarial principles or is related to actual or reasonably expected experience and is not based solely on the destination's inclusion on the United States Department of State's travel warning list. (Source: P.A. 99-143, eff. 7-27-15.)
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(215 ILCS 5/237) (from Ch. 73, par. 849)
Sec. 237.
Illegal inducements - Penalty.
No life company authorized to do business in this State shall issue
or deliver in this State or permit its agents, officers or employees to
issue or deliver in this State as an inducement to insurance or in
connection therewith, any agency company shares or other capital shares,
benefit certificates or shares in any common law corporation, securities
of any special or advisory board, or other contracts of any kind
promising returns and profits as an inducement to insurance; and no life
company shall be authorized to do business in this State which issues or
permits its agents, officers or employees to issue in this State or in
any other state, agency company shares or other capital shares or
benefit certificates or shares in any common law corporation or
securities of any special advisory board or other contracts of any kind
promising returns and profits as an inducement to insurance; and no
corporation acting as an agent of a life company, or any of its agents,
officers or employees shall be permitted to sell, agree or offer to
sell, or give or offer to give directly or indirectly, in any manner
whatsoever, as an inducement to insurance or in connection therewith,
any shares, securities, bonds or agreements of any form or nature
promising returns and profits as an inducement to insurance or in
connection therewith. It shall be the duty of the Director upon due
proof after notice and hearing to revoke the certificate of authority of
any company or the license of any agent so offending, or suspend such
license or certificate of authority for any period of time up to, but
not to exceed, two years; or may by order require such insurance company
or agent to pay to the people of the State of Illinois a penalty in a
sum not exceeding five hundred dollars, and upon the failure of such
insurance company or agent to pay such penalty within twenty days after
the mailing of such order, postage prepaid, registered, and addressed to
the last known place of business of such insurance company or agent,
unless such order is stayed by an order of a court of competent
jurisdiction, the Director of Insurance may revoke or suspend the
license or certificate of authority of such insurance company or agent
for any period of time up to, but not exceeding a period of, two years
if he finds that any such company or agent thereof has violated any of
the provisions of this section.
(Source: Laws 1957, p. 1530.)
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(215 ILCS 5/238) (from Ch. 73, par. 850)
Sec. 238. Exemption.
(a) All proceeds payable because of the death of the insured and the
aggregate net cash value of any or all life and endowment policies and
annuity contracts payable to a wife or husband of the insured, or to a
child, parent or other person dependent upon the insured, whether the power
to change the beneficiary is reserved to the insured or not, and whether
the insured or his estate is a contingent beneficiary or not, shall be
exempt from execution, attachment, garnishment or other process, for the
debts or liabilities of the insured incurred subsequent to the effective
date of this Code, except as to premiums paid in fraud of creditors within
the period limited by law for the recovery thereof.
(b) Any insurance company doing business
in this State and governed by this Code shall encumber or surrender
accounts as defined in Section 10-24 of the Illinois Public Aid Code held by
the insurance company owned by any responsible relative who is subject to a
child support lien, upon notice of the lien or levy by the Department of Healthcare and Family Services
(formerly Illinois Department
of Public Aid) or its successor agency
pursuant to Section 10-25.5 of the Illinois Public Aid Code, or upon
notice of interstate lien from any other state's agency responsible for
implementing the child support enforcement program set forth in Title IV, Part
D of the
Social Security Act.
This Section does not prohibit the furnishing of information in accordance
with the federal Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation
Act of 1996. Any insurance company governed by this Code shall enter into an
agreement for data exchanges with the Department of Healthcare and Family Services provided the
Department of Healthcare and Family Services
pays to the insurance company a reasonable fee not to exceed its
actual cost incurred. An insurance company providing
information in accordance with this item shall not be liable to any owner of an
account as defined in Section 10-24 of the Illinois Public Aid Code or other
person for any disclosure of information to the Department of Healthcare and Family Services (formerly
Department of Public Aid), for
encumbering or surrendering any accounts as defined in Section 10-24 of the
Illinois Public Aid Code held by the insurance company
in response to a lien
or order to withhold and deliver issued by a State agency, or for any other
action taken pursuant to this item, including individual or mechanical errors,
provided the action does not constitute gross negligence or willful misconduct.
An insurance company shall have no obligation to hold, encumber, or
surrender any accounts as defined in Section 10-24 of the Illinois Public Aid
Code until
it has been served with a subpoena, summons, warrant, court or administrative
order, lien, or levy requiring that action.
(Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07.)
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(215 ILCS 5/238.1)
Sec. 238.1. Data exchanges;
administrative liens.
(a) Any insurance company
doing business in the State and governed by
this Code shall enter into an agreement for data exchanges
with the Department of Healthcare and Family Services
for the purpose of locating accounts as defined in Section 10-24 of the
Illinois Public Aid Code of responsible relatives to
satisfy past-due child support owed by responsible
relatives under an order for support entered by a court or
administrative body of this or any other State on behalf
of resident or non-resident persons.
(b) Notwithstanding any provisions in this Code to the
contrary, an insurance company shall not be liable to any person:
(1) for any disclosure of information to the |
| Department of Healthcare and Family Services (formerly Illinois Department of Public Aid) under subsection (a);
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(2) for encumbering or surrendering any accounts as
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| defined in Section 10-24 of the Illinois Public Aid Code held by such insurance company in response to a notice of lien or levy issued by the Department of Healthcare and Family Services (formerly Illinois Department of Public Aid), or by any other state's child support enforcement agency, as provided for in Section 238 of this Code; or
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(3) for any other action taken in good faith to
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| comply with the requirements of subsection (a).
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(Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07.)
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(215 ILCS 5/242) (from Ch. 73, par. 854)
Sec. 242.
Rights of
minors.
Any minor of the age of fifteen years or more may, notwithstanding such
minority, contract for life, health and accident insurance on his own life
for his own benefit or for the benefit of his father, mother, husband,
wife, child, brother or sister, and may exercise all such contractual
rights and powers with respect to any such contract of insurance as might
be exercised by a person of full legal age, and may exercise with like
effect all rights and privileges under such contract, including the
surrender of his interest therein and the giving of a valid discharge for
any benefit accruing or money payable thereunder. Such minor shall not, by
reason of his minority, be entitled to rescind, avoid, or repudiate such
contract, or any exercise of a right or privilege thereunder.
(Source: Laws 1937, p. 696.)
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(215 ILCS 5/244.1) (from Ch. 73, par. 856.1)
Sec. 244.1.
Whenever the financial condition of any company transacting the kinds of
business authorized in Class 1 of Section 4, when reviewed in conjunction
with the kinds and nature of risks insured, the loss experience and
ownership of the company and the ratio of annual premium volume to the
incurred acquisition expenses, indicates a condition such that the
continued operation of the company might be hazardous to its policyholders,
creditors or the general public, then the Director may, after notice and
hearing, order the company to take such action as may be reasonably
necessary to rectify the existing condition, including but not necessarily
limited to one or more of the following steps:
(a) to reduce the loss exposure by reinsurance;
(b) to reduce the volume of new business being |
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(c) to reduce general or acquisition expenses by
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(d) to suspend the writing of new business for a
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| period not to exceed 3 months; or
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(e) to increase the company's surplus by a
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(Source: P.A. 77-1514 .)
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(215 ILCS 5/245) (from Ch. 73, par. 857)
Sec. 245.
Salaries; pensions.
(1) No domestic life company shall directly or indirectly pay any
salary, compensation or emolument to any officer, trustee or director
thereof, or any salary, compensation or emolument amounting in any year
to more than $200,000 to any person, firm or corporation,
unless such
payment be first authorized by a vote of the board of directors of such
company, which vote shall be duly recorded in the records of the
company. No such domestic life company shall make any agreement with any
of its officers, trustees or salaried employees whereby it agrees that
for any services rendered or to be rendered he shall receive any salary,
compensation or emolument, directly or indirectly, that will extend
beyond a period of three years from the date of such agreement except
that payment of an amount not in excess of 20% of the salary of any of
its officers, trustees, or salaried employees may by written agreement
be deferred beyond such period of three years, which agreement may
include conditions to be met by such officer, trustee, or salaried
employee before payment will be made. The limitation as to time
contained herein shall not apply to a contract for renewal commissions
with any such officer, trustee or salaried employee who is also an agent
of the company nor shall such limitation be construed as preventing a
domestic company from entering into contracts with its agents for the
payment of renewal commissions.
(2) No such life company shall grant any pension to any officer,
director or trustee thereof or to any member of his family after his
death except that it may provide a pension pursuant to the terms of the
uniform retirement plan adopted by the board of directors and for any person
who is or has been a salaried officer or
employee of such company and who may retire by reason of age or
disability.
(3) No such company shall hereafter create or establish any account
or fund for the purpose of promoting the health or welfare of its
employees except from annual accretions to earned surplus computed in
the manner provided by this Code. Contributions to such fund by any
company in any calendar year shall not exceed 15% of the accretion to
earned surplus in such calendar year. Before such account or fund shall
be established, maintained or operated, the plan for such account or
fund and its method of operation shall be approved by the board of
directors of the company, and submitted to the shareholders in the case
of a stock company, or members in the case of a mutual company, at a
special meeting called for the purpose of considering such plan.
Contributions to the fund from sources other than the company may be
provided for in the operation of the plan. No amount held in such fund
or account whether contributed by the company or from any other source
shall be considered an admitted asset as defined in this Code, nor
considered in determining the solvency of such company, nor be subject to
the provisions of this Code.
(Source: P.A. 91-549, eff. 8-14-99.)
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(215 ILCS 5/245.3) Sec. 245.3. Irrevocable assignment of life insurance to a funeral home. An insured or any other person who may be the owner of rights under a policy of life insurance may make an irrevocable assignment of all or a part of his or her rights under the policy to a funeral home in accordance with Section 2b of the Illinois Funeral or Burial Funds Act. Subject to the terms of the policy or a contract relating to the policy, including, but not limited to, a prepaid funeral or burial contract, an irrevocable assignment by an insured or other owner of rights under a policy made before or after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly is valid for the purpose of vesting in the assignee, in accordance with the policy or contract as to the time at which it is effective, all rights assigned. That irrevocable assignment is, however, without prejudice to the company on account of any payment it makes. The insurance company shall within 15 business days notify the funeral home and owner of the policy of its receipt of the form. A policy owner who executes a designation of beneficiary form pursuant to Section 2b of the Illinois Funeral or Burial Funds Act also irrevocably waives and cannot exercise the following rights: (1) The right to collect from the insurance company |
| the net proceeds of the policy when it becomes a claim by death.
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(2) The right to surrender the policy and receive the
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| cash surrender value of the policy.
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(3) The right to obtain a policy loan.
(4) The right to designate as primary beneficiary of
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| the policy anyone other than as provided in that Act.
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(5) The right to collect or receive income,
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| distributions, or shares of surplus, dividend deposits, refunds of premium, or additions to the policy.
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This amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly acknowledges, declares, and codifies the existing right of assignment of interests under life insurance policies.
(Source: P.A. 102-959, eff. 5-27-22.)
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(215 ILCS 5/245.21) (from Ch. 73, par. 857.21)
Sec. 245.21. Establishment of separate accounts by domestic companies
organized to do a life, annuity, or accident and health insurance business. A
domestic company, including for the purposes of this
Article all domestic fraternal benefit
societies, may, for authorized
classes of insurance, establish one or more
separate accounts, and may allocate thereto amounts (including without
limitation proceeds applied under optional modes of settlement or under
dividend options) to provide for life, annuity, or accident and health
insurance (and benefits
incidental thereto), payable in fixed or variable amounts or both, subject
to the following:
(1) The income, gains and losses, realized or |
| unrealized, from assets allocated to a separate account must be credited to or charged against the account, without regard to other income, gains or losses of the company.
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(2) Except as may be provided with respect to
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| reserves for guaranteed benefits and funds referred to in paragraph (3) of this Section (i) amounts allocated to any separate account and accumulations thereon may be invested and reinvested without regard to any requirements or limitations of Part 2 or Part 3 of Article VIII of this Code and (ii) the investments in any separate account or accounts may not be taken into account in applying the investment limitations otherwise applicable to the investments of the company.
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(3) Except with the approval of the Director and
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| under the conditions as to investments and other matters as the Director may prescribe, that must recognize the guaranteed nature of the benefits provided, reserves for (i) benefits guaranteed as to dollar amount and duration and (ii) funds guaranteed as to principal amount or stated rate of interest may not be maintained in a separate account.
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(4) Unless otherwise approved by the Director, assets
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| allocated to a separate account must be valued at their market value on the date of valuation, or if there is no readily available market, then as provided in the contract or the rules or other written agreement applicable to the separate account. Unless otherwise approved by the Director, the portion, if any, of the assets of the separate account equal to the company's reserve liability with regard to the guaranteed benefits and funds referred to in paragraph (3) of this Section must be valued in accordance with the rules otherwise applicable to the company's assets.
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(5) Amounts allocated to a separate account under
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| this Article are owned by the company, and the company may not be, nor hold itself out to be, a trustee with respect to those amounts. The assets of any separate account equal to the reserves and other contract liabilities with respect to the account may not be charged with liabilities arising out of any other business the company may conduct, unless the separate account is subject to guarantees, in which case the assets shall be charged with liabilities arising out of other business of the company, unless the contract specifies that the assets are insulated.
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(6) No sale, exchange or other transfer of assets may
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| be made by a company between any of its separate accounts or between any other investment account and one or more of its separate accounts unless, in case of a transfer into a separate account, the transfer is made solely to establish the account or to support the operation of the contracts with respect to the separate account to which the transfer is made, and unless the transfer, whether into or from a separate account, is made (i) by a transfer of cash, or (ii) by a transfer of securities having a readily determinable market value, if the transfer of securities is approved by the Director. The Director may approve other transfers among those accounts if, in his or her opinion, the transfers would not be inequitable.
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(7) To the extent a company considers it necessary to
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| comply with any applicable federal or state laws, the company, with respect to any separate account, including without limitation any separate account which is a management investment company or a unit investment trust, may provide for persons having an interest therein appropriate voting and other rights and special procedures for the conduct of the business of the account, including without limitation special rights and procedures relating to investment policy, investment advisory services, selection of independent public accountants, and the selection of a committee, the members of which need not be otherwise affiliated with the company, to manage the business of the account.
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(Source: P.A. 98-39, eff. 6-28-13.)
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(215 ILCS 5/245.25) (from Ch. 73, par. 857.25)
Sec. 245.25.
Except for subparagraphs (1)(a), (1)(f), (1)(g) and (3) of
Section
226 of the Illinois Insurance Code, in the case of a variable annuity
contract and subparagraphs (1)(b), (1)(f), (1)(g), (1)(h), (1)(i), and
(1)(k) of Section 224, subparagraph (1)(c) of Section 225, and
subparagraph (h) of Section 231 in the case of a variable life insurance
policy, except for Sections 357.4, 357.5, 367e, and 367e.1 in the
case of a variable
health insurance policy, and except as otherwise provided in this Article,
all pertinent
provisions of the Illinois Insurance Code which are appropriate to those
contracts apply to separate accounts and
contracts relating thereto. Any individual variable life insurance
contract, delivered or issued for delivery in this State, must contain
grace, reinstatement and non-forfeiture provisions appropriate to such a
contract. Any individual variable annuity contract, delivered or issued for
delivery in this State, must contain grace and reinstatement provisions
appropriate to such a contract. Any group variable life insurance contract,
delivered or issued for delivery in this State, must contain a grace
provision appropriate to such a contract. A group variable health insurance
contract delivered or issued for delivery in this State must contain a
continuation of group coverage provision appropriate to the contract. The
reserve liability for
variable contracts must be established in accordance with actuarial
procedures that recognize the variable nature of the benefits provided and
any mortality guarantees.
(Source: P.A. 93-477, eff. 1-1-04.)
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