Chapter 084
2019 -- S 0849
Enacted 07/02/2019

A N   A C T
RELATING TO INSURANCE -- UNFAIR CLAIMS SETTLEMENT PRACTICES ACT

Introduced By: Senators Goodwin, Ruggerio, and McCaffrey
Date Introduced: May 01, 2019

It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows:
     SECTION 1. Section 27-9.1-4 of the General Laws in Chapter 27-9.1 entitled "Unfair
Claims Settlement Practices Act" is hereby amended to read as follows:
     27-9.1-4. "Unfair claims practices" defined.
     (a) Any of the following acts by an insurer, if committed in violation of § 27-9.1-3,
constitutes an unfair claims practice:
     (1) Misrepresenting to claimants and insured relevant facts or policy provisions relating
to coverage at issue;
     (2) Failing to acknowledge and act with reasonable promptness upon pertinent
communications with respect to claims arising under its policies;
     (3) Failing to adopt and implement reasonable standards for the prompt investigation and
settlement of claims arising under its policies;
     (4) Not attempting in good faith to effectuate prompt, fair, and equitable settlement of
claims submitted in which liability has become reasonably clear;
     (5) Compelling insured, beneficiaries, or claimants to institute suits to recover amounts
due under its policies by offering substantially less than the amounts ultimately recovered in suits
brought by them;
     (6) Refusing to pay claims without conducting a reasonable investigation;
     (7) Failing to affirm or deny coverage of claims within a reasonable time after having
completed its investigation related to the claim or claims;
     (8) Attempting to settle or settling claims for less than the amount that a reasonable
person would believe the insured or beneficiary was entitled by reference to written or printed
advertising material accompanying or made part of an application;
     (9) Attempting to settle or settling claims on the basis of an application that was
materially altered without notice to, or knowledge or consent of, the insured;
     (10) Making claims payments to an insured or beneficiary without indicating the
coverage under which each payment is being made;
     (11) Unreasonably delaying the investigation or payment of claims by requiring both a
formal proof of loss form and subsequent verification that would result in duplication of
information and verification appearing in the formal proof of loss form;
     (12) Failing in the case of claims denials or offers of compromise settlement to promptly
provide a reasonable and accurate explanation of the basis of those actions;
     (13) Failing to provide forms necessary to present claims within ten (10) calendar days of
a request with reasonable explanations regarding their use;
     (14) Failing to adopt and implement reasonable standards to assure that the repairs of a
repairer owned by or required to be used by the insurer are performed in a workmanlike manner;
     (15) Misleading a claimant as to the applicable statute of limitations;
     (16) Failing to respond to a claim within thirty (30) days, unless the insured shall agree to
a longer period;
     (17) Engaging in any act or practice of intimidation, coercion, threat, or
misrepresentation of consumers rights, for or against any insured person, claimant, or entity to
use a particular rental car company for motor vehicle replacement services or products; provided,
however, nothing shall prohibit any insurance company, agent, or adjuster from providing to such
insured person, claimant, or entity the names of a rental car company with which arrangements
have been made with respect to motor vehicle replacement services; provided, that the rental car
company is licensed pursuant to § 31-5-33;
     (18) Refusing to honor a "direction to pay" executed by an insured, claimant, indicating
that the insured or claimant wishes to have the insurance company directly pay his or her motor
vehicle replacement vehicle rental benefit to the rental car company of the consumer's choice;
provided, that the rental car company is licensed pursuant to § 31-5-33. Nothing in this section
shall be construed to prevent the insurance company's ability to question or challenge the amount
charged, in accordance with its policy provisions, and the requirements of the department of
business regulation;
     (19) Modifying any published manual, (i.e., motors, Motor’s Auto Repair Manual,
mitchells Mitchells, or any automated appraisal system), relating to auto body repair without
prior agreement between the parties;
     (20) Failing to use a manual or system in its entirety in the appraisal of a motor vehicle;
     (21) Refusing to compensate an auto body shop for documented charges as identified
through industry-recognized software programs or systems for paint, body and refinishing
materials in auto body repair claims;
     (22) Failing to comply with the requirements of § 31-47-12.1;
     (23) Failure to have an appraisal performed by a licensed appraiser where the motor
vehicle has sustained damage estimated to exceed two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500).
Said The licensed appraiser referred to herein must be unaffiliated with the repair facility
repairing the subject motor vehicle; must perform a physical inspection of the damaged motor
vehicle; and may not perform an appraisal based upon pictures of the damaged motor vehicle;
     (24) Failure to perform an initial appraisal within three (3) business days after a request is
received from an auto body repair shop, provided the damaged motor vehicle is on the premises
of the repair shop when the request is made;, and failure to perform a supplemental appraisal
inspection of a vehicle within four (4) business days after a request is received from an auto body
repair shop;. The time limitations set forth in this subsection may be extended by mutual
agreement between the auto body repair shop and the insurer;
     (25) Designating a motor vehicle a total loss if the cost to rebuild or reconstruct the motor
vehicle to its pre-accident condition is less than seventy-five percent (75%) of the "fair-market
value" of the motor vehicle immediately preceding the time it was damaged:
     (i) For the purposes of this subdivision, "fair-market value" means the retail value of a
motor vehicle as set forth in a current edition of a nationally recognized compilation of retail
values commonly used by the automotive industry to establish values of motor vehicles;
     (ii) Nothing herein shall be construed to require a vehicle be deemed a total loss if the
total cost to rebuild or reconstruct the motor vehicle to its pre-accident condition is greater than
seventy-five percent (75%) of the fair-market value of the motor vehicle immediately preceding
the time it was damaged; and
     (iii) Nothing herein shall prohibit an insurance company from agreeing to deem a vehicle
a total loss at the vehicle owner's request and with the vehicle owner's express written
authorization, if the cost to rebuild or reconstruct the motor vehicle to its pre-accident condition is
less than seventy-five percent (75%) of the "fair-market value" of the motor vehicle immediately
preceding the time it was damaged.;
     (iv) If condition adjustments are made to the retail value of a motor vehicle designated a
total loss, all such adjustments must be in accordance with the standards set forth in the current
edition of a nationally recognized compilation of retail values, commonly used by the automotive
industry, used by the insurer to determine the retail value of the vehicle; and all such adjustments,
including prior damage deductions, must be itemized, fair, and reasonable; and
     (v) When a vehicle is deemed a total loss, if the insurer is not retaining the salvage, the
insurer must notify the owner of the vehicle in writing of the requirements of obtaining both a
salvage title and a reconstructed title from the department of motor vehicles pursuant to chapter 1
of title 31.;
     (26) Negotiating, or effecting the settlement of, a claim for loss or damage covered by an
insurance contract with an unlicensed public adjuster acting on behalf of an insured. Nothing
contained in this section shall be construed to preclude an insurer from dealing with any
individual or entity that is not required to be licensed under chapter 10 of title 27.
     (b)(1) Nothing contained in subsections (a)(19), (a)(20), and (a)(21) of this section shall
be construed to interfere with an auto body repair facility's contract with an insurance company.
     (2) If an insurance company and auto body repair facility have contracted under a direct
repair program or any similar program thereto, the provisions of subsections (a)(19), (a)(20), and
(a)(21) of this section shall not apply.
     (3) If the insured or claimant elects to have the vehicle repaired at a shop of his or her
choice, the insurer shall not limit or discount the reasonable repair costs based upon the charges
that would have been incurred had the vehicle been repaired by the insurer's chosen shop(s).
     SECTION 2. This act shall take effect upon passage.
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LC002541
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