The Commissioner is aware of the decision of the Mississippi Supreme Court in Tew vs. Dixieland Finance, Inc.,527 So. 2d 665 (Miss. 1988), in which the Court addressed certain issues concerning the licensing of agents to write credit life and credit disability insurance and payments made in connection with writing such insurance. The Court stated that it was delaying the effect of its decision with respect to those issues until July 1, 1989, in order to provide the executive and legislative branches of the government of the State of Mississippi with an opportunity to take measures to resolve what the Court considered to be inconsistencies in the statutes and regulations concerning the licensing of agents and payment of compensation with respect to credit life and credit disability insurance. The purpose of this Regulation is to clarify and regulate what persons or entities may receive compensation payments made in connection with the issuance of credit life and credit disability insurance and/or the manner in which such payments may be received by licensed agents, creditors, corporations or other persons or entities involved in credit transactions.
Mississippi Code Annotated, Section 83-17-105 states that "no insurer or agent doing business in this state shall pay, directly or indirectly, any commission or any other valuable consideration to any person for services as an agent within this state unless such person shall hold a currently valid license and certificate of authority to act as an agent, as required by the laws of this State (emphasis added)." Mississippi Code Annotated, Section 83-17-7 contains a similar prohibition. Mississippi Code Annotated, Section 83-17-101(a), however, states that "the possessor of an insurable interest in any risk or subject of insurance shall not be deemed an agent by reason of procuring or maintaining, or agreeing to procure or maintain, insurance extending to such interests, together with the interest or interests of others in such risk or subject of insurance, however the cost may be borne." The Mississippi Legislature clearly contemplated that creditors can receive compensation from the sale of credit insurance. Mississippi Code Annotated, Section 83-53-25 makes this fact clear. The Commissioner interprets these four sections together and has determined that the prohibitions contained in Mississippi Code Annotated, Sections 83-17-7 and 83-17-105 do not apply in certain contexts involving credit insurance.
Many creditors offer credit insurance in connection with sale or lease transactions in which the creditor to a purchaser or lessee of goods or in connection with transactions in which the creditor makes a loan to a borrower. Credit life insurance is designed to "pay off the loan obligation if the insured borrower or co-borrower dies. Credit disability insurance provides a monthly benefit equal to the loan's monthly payment if the primary borrower is disabled." Fagg, Credit Life and Disability Insurance, XIV (1986). These creditors are required by law to offer credit insurance only through employees or other agents of the creditor licensed to write such insurance. By its nature, credit insurance is designed to protect both the creditor and the borrower from the risk of the borrower's death or disability. The creditor's interest in the transaction is that the extension of credit be repaid. Therefore, the Commissioner finds that the creditor in a credit transaction is the possessor of an insurable interest. The Commissioner further finds that the purchase and sale of credit insurance in connection with such a credit transaction is designed to protect the creditor's insurable interest in the transaction as well as the insurable interest of the debtor in the credit transaction. The Commissioner also finds that payments of compensation by a licensed employee or other agent of a creditor in a credit transaction to the creditor are not payments made in violation of Mississippi Code Annotated, Sections 83-17-7 and 83-17-105; such payments are not made to the creditor for the creditor's "service as an agent" since the creditor is not acting as an agent when procuring or arranging to procure insurance to protect its own insurable interest as provided by Mississippi Code Annotated, Section 83-17-101(a). Many lending institutions and other entities covered by the Lending Institutions Act (Mississippi Code Annotated, Section 83-17-227 through 83-17-233) offer credit insurance in connection with loans and other credit transactions. Such an institution or entity is a creditor in a credit transaction and the possessor of an insurable interest. As noted above, Mississippi Code Annotated, Section 83-17-229 provides that "the employees or officers of a lending institution or holding company, may be licensed to sell credit life, health and accident insurance for and on behalf of his employer in accordance with regulations promulgated by the insurance commissioner." Pursuant to this regulatory authority, the Commissioner finds that the "for and on behalf" language authorizes a lending institution or holding company, to receive compensation in connection with the sale of credit insurance without being licensed to sell such insurance, provided an officer or employee of the lending institution or holding company or a subsidiary or affiliate of the lending institution or holding company is licensed to sell such insurance. The Commissioner also finds that the prohibitions contained in Mississippi Code Annotated, Sections 83-17-7 and 83-17-105 do not apply to such lending institutions, holding companies, subsidiaries or affiliates meeting the above standard.
19 Miss. Code. R. 2-10.02