(1) A
person, wherever located, may not act as a provider with an owner
who is a resident of this state or if there is more than one
owner on a single policy and one of the owners is a resident of
this state, without first having obtained a license from the
commissioner.
(2) An application for a provider license must be made to
the commissioner by the applicant on a form prescribed by the
commissioner, and the application must be accompanied by a
licensing fee in the amount of two hundred fifty dollars for
deposit into the general fund.
(3) All provider licenses continue in force until suspended,
revoked, or not renewed. A license is subject to renewal
annually on the first day of July upon application of the
provider and payment of a renewal fee of two hundred fifty
dollars for deposit into the general fund. If not so renewed,
the license automatically expires on the renewal date.
(a) If the renewal fee is not received by the commissioner
prior to the expiration date, the provider must pay to the
commissioner in addition to the renewal fee, a surcharge as
follows:
(i) For the first thirty days or part thereof delinquency
the surcharge is fifty percent of the renewal fee;
(ii) For the next thirty days or part thereof delinquency
the surcharge is one hundred percent of the renewal fee;
(b) If the renewal fee is not received by the commissioner
after sixty days but prior to twelve months after the expiration
date the payment of the renewal fee is for reinstatement of the
license and the provider must pay to the commissioner the renewal
fee and a surcharge of two hundred percent.
(4) Subsection (3)(a) and (b) of this section does not
exempt any person from any penalty provided by law for
transacting a life settlement business without a valid and
subsisting license.
(5) The applicant must provide information as the
commissioner may require on forms prescribed by the commissioner.
The commissioner has the authority, at any time, to require an
applicant to fully disclose the identity of its stockholders,
partners, officers, and employees, and the commissioner may, in
the exercise of the commissioner's sole discretion, refuse to
issue a license in the name of any person if not satisfied that
any officer, employee, stockholder, or partner thereof who may
materially influence the applicant's conduct meets the standards
of this chapter.
(6) A license issued to a partnership, corporation, or other
entity authorizes all members, officers, and designated employees
to act as a licensee under the license, if those persons are
named in the application and any supplements to the application.
(7) Upon the filing of an application for a provider's
license and the payment of the license fee, the commissioner must
make an investigation of each applicant and may issue a license
if the commissioner finds that the applicant:
(a) Has provided a detailed plan of operation;
(b) Is competent and trustworthy and intends to transact its
business in good faith;
(c) Has a good business reputation and has had experience,
training, or education so as to be qualified in the business for
which the license is applied;
(d)(i) Has demonstrated evidence of financial responsibility
in a form and in an amount prescribed by the commissioner by
rule.
(ii) The commissioner may ask for evidence of financial
responsibility at any time the commissioner deems necessary;
(e) If the applicant is a legal entity, is formed or
organized under the laws of this state, is a foreign legal entity
authorized to transact business in this state, or provides a
certificate of good standing from the state of its domicile; and
(f) Has provided to the commissioner an antifraud plan that
meets the requirements of RCW 48.102.140 and includes:
(i) A description of the procedures for detecting and
investigating possible fraudulent acts and procedures for
resolving material inconsistencies between medical records and
insurance applications;
(ii) A description of the procedures for reporting
fraudulent insurance acts to the commissioner;
(iii) A description of the plan for antifraud education and
training of its underwriters and other personnel; and
(iv) A written description or chart outlining the
arrangement of the antifraud personnel who are responsible for
the investigation and reporting of possible fraudulent insurance
acts and investigating unresolved material inconsistencies
between medical records and insurance applications.
(8)(a) A nonresident provider must appoint the commissioner
as its attorney to receive service of, and upon whom must be
served, all legal process issued against it in this state upon
causes of action arising within this state. Service upon the
commissioner as attorney constitutes service upon the provider.
Service of legal process against the provider can be had only by
service upon the commissioner.
(b) With the appointment the provider must designate the
person to whom the commissioner must forward legal process so
served upon him or her. The provider may change the person by
filing a new designation.
(c) The appointment of the commissioner as attorney is
irrevocable, binds any successor in interest or to the assets or
liabilities of the provider, and remains in effect as long as
there is in this state any contract made by the provider or
liabilities or duties arising therefrom.
(d) The service of process must be accomplished and
processed in the manner prescribed under RCW 48.02.200.
(9) A provider may not use any person to perform the
functions of a broker unless the person is authorized to act as a
broker under this chapter.
(10) A provider must provide to the commissioner new or
revised information about officers, stockholders, partners,
directors, members, or designated employees within thirty days of
the change.
[2011 c 47 § 14; 2010 c 27 § 5; 2009 c 104 § 3.]