Cal. Code Regs. Tit. 10, § 2694 - Criteria for Determining Whether a Consumer Complaint is Justified
(a) A consumer
complaint shall be deemed justified within the meaning of California Insurance
Code section
12921.1(b)
where it meets any one or more of the following criteria:
(1) the Department determines that the
licensee's act, acts, omission or omissions were in noncompliance with a
specific provision or provisions of the California Insurance Code, California
Code of Regulations, or other applicable laws and/or regulations;
(2) the Department determines that the
licensee's act, acts, omission or omissions were in contravention of an
approved rate filing or filings;
(3) the Department determines that the
licensee's act, acts, omission or omissions were in contravention of the
licensee's rules, policies, procedures or guidelines as relates to sales,
marketing, advertising, underwriting, rating, claims and/or customer service,
including rate manual filings, underwriting guidelines and/or other filings,
statements or guidelines either submitted to the Department or to which the
Department would have access during a market conduct examination and the
Department determines that there was no substantial justification for deviation
from such rules, policies, procedures or guidelines on the facts presented. For
purposes of this subsection, all time restrictions or requirements for reply,
response, or other legally required insurer action, shall be measured as
against applicable time restrictions or parameters established in the
California Insurance Code, California Code of Regulations, or other applicable
laws and/or regulations.
(4) the
Department determines that the licensee's act, acts, omission or omissions were
in contravention of, or were otherwise inconsistent with, a provision or
provisions of the insurance policy, contract, bond, or other agreement entered
into by the relevant parties;
(5)
the Department determines that after receiving a written or documented oral
communication related to a claim, benefit underwriting or rating transaction,
from a policyholder, insured, applicant, third party claimant, beneficiary,
principal, or other party with a legitimate interest in the transaction, where
that communication reasonably suggests that a response is expected, the
licensee has failed to respond or did not provide a complete response, based on
the facts then known by the licensee, within the applicable time restrictions
established in the California Insurance Code, California Code of Regulations,
other applicable laws and/or regulations or, in the absence of such
restrictions, the licensee fails to respond within 15 days. A complete response
is defined as one that addresses all issues raised and includes copies of any
documentation needed to support the licensee's position.
(6) the Department determines that the
specific facts surrounding the complaint as against an insurer merit remedial
action within the authority of the Commissioner.
Notes
Note: Authority cited: Section 12921.1(b), California Insurance Code. Reference: Sections 12921, 12921.1, 12921.3 and 12921.4, California Insurance Code.
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.