§ 3791q. Confidentiality
(a) As used in this subchapter, “confidential information” means:
(1) a memorandum in support of an opinion submitted under section 3791c of this subchapter and any other documents, materials, and information including all working papers and copies thereof, created, produced, or obtained by or disclosed to the Commissioner or any other person in connection with such memorandum;
(2) all documents, materials, and other information including all working papers, and copies thereof, created, produced, or obtained by or disclosed to the Commissioner or any other person in the course of an examination made under subsection 3791n(f) of this subchapter; provided, however, that if an examination report or other material prepared in connection with an examination made under chapter 101, subchapter 7 of this title is not held as private and confidential information under such subchapter, an examination report or other material prepared in connection with an examination made under subsection 3791n(f) of this subchapter shall not be “confidential information” to the same extent as if such examination report or other material had been prepared under chapter 101, subchapter 7 of this title;
(3) any reports, documents, materials, and other information developed by a company in support of, or in connection with, an annual certification by the company under subdivision 3791o(b)(2) of this subchapter evaluating the effectiveness of the company’s internal controls with respect to a principle-based valuation and any other documents, materials, and other information including all working papers, and copies thereof, created, produced, or obtained by or disclosed to the Commissioner or any other person in connection with such reports, documents, materials, and other information;
(4) any principle-based valuation report developed under subdivision 3791o(b)(3) of this subchapter and any other documents, materials, and other information including all working papers and copies thereof, created, produced, or obtained by or disclosed to the Commissioner or any other person in connection with such report; and
(5) any documents, materials, data, and other information submitted by a company under section 3791p of this subchapter ‐collectively, “experience data” ‐and any other documents, materials, data, and other information, including all working papers and copies thereof, created or produced in connection with such experience data, in each case that include any potentially company-identifying or personally identifiable information, that is provided to or obtained by the Commissioner, together with any experience data, and other experience materials, and any other documents, materials, data, and other information including all working papers and copies thereof, created, produced, or obtained by or disclosed to the Commissioner or any other person in connection with such experience materials.
(b) Except as provided in this section, a company’s confidential information is confidential by law and privileged, and shall be exempt from public inspection and copying under the Public Records Act, shall not be subject to subpoena and shall not be subject to discovery or admissible in evidence in any private civil action; provided, however, that the Commissioner is authorized to use the confidential information in the furtherance of any regulatory or legal action brought against the company as a part of the Commissioner’s official duties.
(c) Neither the Commissioner nor any person who received confidential information while acting under the authority of the Commissioner shall be permitted or required to testify in any private civil action concerning any confidential information.
(d) In order to assist in the performance of the Commissioner’s duties, the Commissioner may share confidential information:
(1) with other state, federal, and international regulatory agencies and with the NAIC and its affiliates and subsidiaries; and
(2) in the case of confidential information specified in subdivisions (a)(1) and (a)(4) of this section only, with the Actuarial Board for Counseling and Discipline or its successor upon request stating that the confidential information is required for the purpose of professional disciplinary proceedings and with State, federal, and international law enforcement officials; in the case of this subdivision and subdivision (1) of this subsection (d), provided that such recipient agrees, and has the legal authority to agree, to maintain the confidentiality and privileged status of such documents, materials, data, and other information in the same manner and to the same extent as required for the Commissioner.
(e) The Commissioner may receive documents, materials, data, and other information, including otherwise confidential and privileged documents, materials, data, or information, from the NAIC and its affiliates and subsidiaries, from regulatory or law enforcement officials of other foreign or domestic jurisdictions and from the Actuarial Board for Counseling and Discipline, or its successor, and shall maintain as confidential or privileged any document, material, data, or other 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 other information.
(f) The Commissioner may enter into agreements governing sharing and use of information consistent with subsection (b) of this section.
(g) No waiver of any applicable privilege or claim of confidentiality in the confidential information shall occur as a result of disclosure to the Commissioner under this section or as a result of sharing as authorized in subdivision (b)(3) of this section.
(h) A privilege established under the law of any state or jurisdiction that is substantially similar to the privilege established under this subsection (b) of this section shall be available and enforced in any proceeding in, and in any court of, this State.
(i) As used in this section, “regulatory agency,” “law enforcement agency,” and the NAIC include their employees, agents, consultants, and contractors.
(j) Notwithstanding any provision in this section to the contrary, any confidential information specified in subdivision (a)(1) or (a)(4) of this section:
(1) may be subject to subpoena for the purpose of defending an action seeking damages from the appointed actuary submitting the related memorandum in support of an opinion submitted under section 3791c of this subchapter or principle-based valuation report developed under subdivision 3791o(b)(3) of this subchapter by reason of an action required by this subchapter or by rules adopted hereunder;
(2) may otherwise be released by the Commissioner with the written consent of the company; and
(3) once any portion of a memorandum in support of an opinion submitted under section 3791c of this subchapter or a principle-based valuation report developed under subdivision 3791o(b)(3) of this subchapter is cited by the company in its marketing or is publicly volunteered to or before a governmental agency other than a state insurance department or is released by the company to the news media, all portions of such memorandum or report shall no longer be confidential. (Added 2015, No. 63, § 1, eff. June 17, 2015.)
Structure Vermont Statutes
Title 8 - Banking and Insurance
Chapter 103 - Life Insurance Policies and Annuity Contracts
§ 3701. Discriminations prohibited
§ 3702. Other prohibited practices
§ 3705. Spendthrift provisions; creditors of beneficiary
§ 3706. Exemption of proceeds—Life insurance
§ 3709. Annuity contracts—Assignability of rights
§ 3710. Power to contract—Purchase of annuities or insurance by minors
§ 3712. Payment discharges insurer
§ 3713. Assignment of insurance policies or annuity contracts
§ 3714. Life policy as separate property of married woman
§ 3715. Forms for proof of loss to be furnished
§ 3716. Claims administration not waiver
§ 3718. Annuity considerations
§ 3718a. Charitable gift annuities
§ 3719. Valuation of bonds, etc
§ 3731. Standard provisions required
§ 3732. “Industrial life insurance” defined
§ 3733. Excluded or restricted coverage in life insurance policies
§ 3734. Incontestability and limitation of liability after reinstatement
§ 3735. Application as evidence
§ 3736. Representations in applications
§ 3750. Standard nonforfeiture law for individual deferred annuities
§ 3762. Nonforfeiture benefits
§ 3763. Computation of cash surrender value
§ 3764. Computation of paid-up nonforfeiture benefits
§ 3765. Calculation of adjusted premiums
§ 3766. Calculation of adjusted premiums; ordinary policies
§ 3767. Calculation of adjusted premiums; industrial policies
§ 3768. Calculations of adjusted premiums by the nonforfeiture net level premium method
§ 3769. Nonforfeiture benefits for indeterminate premium plans
§ 3770. Proration of values; net value of paid-up additions
§ 3771. Consistency of progression of cash surrender values with increasing policy duration
§ 3773. Effective date; applicability
§ 3791c. Actuarial opinion of reserves
§ 3791d. Computation of minimum standard
§ 3791e. Computation of minimum standard for annuities
§ 3791f. Computation of minimum standard by calendar year of issue
§ 3791g. Reserve valuation method—life insurance and endowment benefits
§ 3791h. Reserve valuation method—annuity and pure endowment benefits
§ 3791j. Optional reserve calculation
§ 3791k. Reserve calculation—valuation net premium exceeding the gross premium charged
§ 3791l. Reserve calculation—indeterminate premium plans
§ 3791m. Minimum standard for accident and health insurance contracts
§ 3791n. Valuation manual for policies issued on or after the operative date of the valuation manual
§ 3791o. Requirements of a principle-based valuation
§ 3791r. Single state exemption
§ 3801. Scope of subchapter—Short title
§ 3802. Group contracts must meet group requirements
§ 3806. Licensed lenders; charges for insurance
§ 3807. Public employee groups
§ 3809. Association of employers groups
§ 3810a. Associations and discretionary groups
§ 3812. Provisions required in group contracts
§ 3815. Application; statements deemed representations
§ 3820. Conversion on termination of eligibility
§ 3821. Conversion on termination of policy
§ 3822. Death pending conversion
§ 3823. Notice as to conversion right
§ 3824. Readjustment of premium
§ 3825. Application of dividends, rate reductions
§ 3836. License and bond requirements
§ 3837. License revocation and denial
§ 3838. Approval of life settlement contracts, disclosure statements, and related forms
§ 3839. Reporting requirements and privacy
§ 3840. Investigations and examinations
§ 3841. Disclosure to policy owner
§ 3845. Prohibited practices and conflicts of interest
§ 3846. Advertising for life settlements
§ 3847. Fraud prevention and control
§ 3848. Civil remedies, penalties, and enforcement
§ 3855. Establishment of accounts
§ 3856. Required contents of policy