Public Act 0481 104TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY

 


 
Public Act 104-0481
 
HB4206 EnrolledLRB104 16254 JRC 29638 b

    AN ACT concerning civil law.
 
    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:
 
    Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the
Charitable Organization Beneficiary Act.
 
    Section 5. Definitions. As used in this Act:
    "Beneficiary designation" means the provision in an
instrument designating a beneficiary, other than in a will or
an instrument creating a trust, and may also mean the
instrument itself, including, but not limited to, any of the
following:
        (1) a demand deposit, savings deposit, time deposit or
    other account or instrument on which the holder is
    directly liable with a designation for payment upon death
    or other nonprobate designation making it transferable on
    death;
        (2) a security registered in beneficiary form; or
        (3) a pension, profit-sharing plan, retirement account
    such as an IRA, 401(k), 403(b), or other
    employment-related benefit plan.
    "Beneficiary designation" does not include designation of
a beneficiary made as part of an annuity or an insurance
policy.
    "Charitable organization" means an entity that is exempt
from taxation under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue
Code.
    "Holder of property" means any entity that has possession
of or is responsible for property subject to a beneficiary
designation.
 
    Section 10. Notice of death of owner of property. If the
holder of the property has verified the death of the owner of
the property, the holder of the property must, within 45
business days of the verification: provide notice to each
charitable organization listed under the beneficiary
designation that the charitable organization may have a right
to the property; provide the charitable organization with the
name of the owner of the property, contact information of the
holder of the property; and provide a general description of
the property held for the benefit of the charitable
organization; and provide the exact language of the
beneficiary designation, except that the names of any other
beneficiaries that are not charitable organizations may be
redacted.
 
    Section 15. Charitable organization affidavit of interest
in property.
    (a) If a charitable organization is a beneficiary of an
interest in property created by beneficiary designation, that
charitable organization may present an affidavit to the holder
of the property or to any person with information about the
property to obtain the property or information regarding the
property. The affidavit must state all of the following:
        (1) the decedent's name and last known address to the
    extent known;
        (2) a general description of the property to the
    extent known;
        (3) the charitable organization's name, address, and
    primary contact information;
        (4) the charitable organization is a charitable
    organization;
        (5) a request that the property be paid, delivered, or
    transferred to the charitable organization or that
    information about the property be given to the charitable
    organization;
        (6) the charitable organization has a right to the
    interest in the property listed in the affidavit to the
    extent known;
        (7) the affidavit has been signed by an authorized
    representative of the charitable organization under
    penalty of perjury before a notary public as provided in
    the Notary Public Act; and
        (8) the information in the affidavit is true and
    correct to the best of the affiant's knowledge or belief.
    (b) The affidavit must be accompanied by all of the
following:
        (1) a copy of the charitable organization's
    determination letter from the Internal Revenue Service
    recognizing its tax-exempt status;
        (2) a copy of the charitable organization's
    Certificate of Good Standing issued by the Secretary of
    State;
        (3) a death certificate of the decedent, probate
    notice published by the personal representative of the
    decedent's estate, proof of payment of the decedent's
    funeral expenses, the decedent's obituary as verification
    of the decedent's death, or any other reliable source or
    record that verifies the decedent's death;
        (4) a corporate resolution or similar statement of
    authority of the affiant to act on behalf of the
    charitable organization; and
        (5) Internal Revenue Service Form W-9 completed by an
    authorized representative of the charitable organization.
 
    Section 20. Duties of the holder of the property.
    (a) Unless a court has ordered otherwise, the holder of
the property may not do any of the following:
        (1) require the charitable organization to establish
    an account with the holder of the property or otherwise
    become a customer of the holder of the property;
        (2) require co-beneficiaries to submit claims
    simultaneously or impose coordination deadlines among
    co-beneficiaries; or
        (3) delay payment to any co-beneficiary if other
    co-beneficiaries have not submitted their claim
    documentation, except where a security registered in
    beneficiary form is not readily divisible among multiple
    beneficiaries and a co-beneficiary has not waived the
    co-beneficiary's right to a partial share. In such a case,
    the holder of the property and the charitable organization
    shall make reasonable efforts to resolve divisibility
    concerns.
    (b) The holder of the property may not request any
additional personal information from any individual employed
by or serving on the board of the charitable organization,
including, but not limited to, any of the following:
        (1) social security number;
        (2) personal contact information, including home
    address;
        (3) personal financial information;
        (4) date of birth;
        (5) annual income;
        (6) value of personal assets;
        (7) credit checks;
        (8) criminal background checks;
        (9) marital status;
        (10) number of dependents;
        (11) spouse's maiden name; or
        (12) government-issued identification card, such as a
    passport, state identification card, or driver's license,
    provided that if an individual delivers or presents an
    affidavit under Section 15 for the purpose of claiming or
    receiving property, the holder of the property may request
    presentation of an unexpired government-issued
    identification bearing a photograph or similar safeguard
    solely to verify the identity of the individual presenting
    the affidavit and the individual's authority to act on
    behalf of the charitable organization.
    (c) Nothing in this Section prohibits a charitable
organization from affirmatively requesting the establishment
of a new account with the holder of the property; only upon
such affirmative request may the holder of the property
require the minimum necessary information contained in
subsection (b) and as required by federal law or regulation
and the holder's internal account opening policies and
procedures to facilitate account establishment.
    (d) If the holder of property maintains it is prohibited
from paying, delivering, or transferring the property listed
under a beneficiary designation to a charitable organization
in compliance with this Act due to requirements under federal
law, the holder of the property shall:
        (1) explain in writing the reason why the property
    cannot be paid, delivered, or transferred to the
    charitable organization; and
        (2) make good faith efforts in order to facilitate
    payment, delivery, or transfer of the property in
    compliance with this Act.
    (e) Nothing in this Act alters the responsibilities or
duties of the beneficiary or holder of the property under the
Revised Uniform Unclaimed Property Act or the Illinois Trust
and Payable on Death Accounts Act or federal law or
regulation.
 
    Section 25. Transfer of property. If the requirements of
this Act are satisfied by a charitable organization, and there
are no conflicting claims to the same shares or portion of a
property, the holder of the property must do either or both of
the following within 60 business days:
        (1) pay, deliver, or transfer the property to or for
    the benefit of the charitable organization if the
    affidavit has requested the transfer, payment, or delivery
    of the property to the charitable organization, complying
    with the charitable organization's preference as to
    whether the property is paid, delivered, or transferred,
    to the extent that complying with such preference is
    reasonably practicable for the holder; or
        (2) deliver the information requested in the affidavit
    to the charitable organization.
 
    Section 30. Good faith reliance on information given to
the holder. The holder of the property and any person who in
good faith delivers the property or information requested in
reliance on the information a charitable organization provides
under this Act, who has no knowledge that representations
contained in the affidavit are incorrect, is not liable to any
person for so acting and may assume without inquiry the
existence of the facts contained in the affidavit.
 
    Section 35. Release. Any payments, deliveries, or
transfers made by the holder of property in compliance with
this Act prior to the receipt of notice of an adverse claim or
a restraining order shall be a complete discharge of the
holder of property's obligations as to the payment, delivery,
or transfer, and the holder of property shall, to the extent of
each such payment, delivery, or transfer, be released from all
claims of any person, charitable organization, or entity
claiming an interest in the property for such payment,
delivery, or transfer so made.
 
    Section 40. Failure or refusal of holder of the property
to act. If the holder of the property fails or refuses to
provide the requested property or information within 60
business days after receiving the affidavit, the charitable
organization may bring an action against the holder of the
property to receive the information about the property or
recover the property or compel the delivery of the property.
An action brought under this Act must be brought within one
year after the date of the act or failure to act. If the court
finds that the holder of the property acted unreasonably in
failing to provide the requested information or to pay,
deliver, or transfer the property in compliance with this Act,
the court may award to the charitable organization any or all
of the following:
        (1) immediate delivery of the requested information or
    delivery or recovery of the property or value of the
    property;
        (2) damages sustained by the charitable organization;
        (3) costs of the action;
        (4) a penalty in an amount determined by the court up
    to $10,000 only if the court finds that the holder of the
    property engaged in bad faith or willful misconduct; or
        (5) reasonable attorney's fees based on the time
    expended by the attorney to obtain the requested
    information or payment, delivery, or transfer of the
    property without regard to the amount of the recovery on
    behalf of the charitable organization.
 
    Section 45. The Illinois Insurance Code is amended by
changing Section 224 as follows:
 
    (215 ILCS 5/224)  (from Ch. 73, par. 836)
    Sec. 224. Standard provisions for life policies.
    (1) After the first day of July, 1937, no policy of life
insurance other than industrial, group or annuities and pure
endowments with or without return of premiums or of premiums
and interest, may be issued or delivered in this State, unless
such policy contains in substance the following provisions:
        (a) A provision that all premiums after the first
    shall be payable in advance either at the home office of
    the company or to an agent of the company, upon delivery of
    a receipt signed by one or more of the officers who shall
    be designated in the policy, when such receipt is
    requested by the policyholder.
        (b) A provision that the insured is entitled to a
    grace period either of 30 days or of one month within which
    the payment of any premium after the first may be made,
    subject at the option of the company to an interest charge
    not in excess of 6% per annum for the number of days of
    grace elapsing before the payment of the premium, during
    which period of grace the policy shall continue in force,
    but in case the policy becomes a claim during the grace
    period before the overdue premium is paid, or the deferred
    premiums of the current policy year, if any, are paid, the
    amount of such premium or premiums with interest thereon
    may be deducted in any settlement under the policy.
        (c) A provision that the policy, together with the
    application therefor, a copy of which shall be endorsed
    upon or attached to the policy and made a part thereof,
    shall constitute the entire contract between the parties
    and that after it has been in force during the lifetime of
    the insured a specified time, not later than 2 years from
    its date, it shall be incontestable except for nonpayment
    of premiums and except at the option of the company, with
    respect to provisions relative to benefits in the event of
    total and permanent disability, and provisions which grant
    additional insurance specifically against death by
    accident and except for violations of the conditions of
    the policy relating to naval or military service in time
    of war or for violation of an express condition, if any,
    relating to aviation, (except riding as a fare-paying
    passenger of a commercial air line flying on regularly
    scheduled routes between definitely established airports)
    in which case the liability of the company shall be fixed
    at a definitely determined amount not less than the full
    reserve for the policy and any dividend additions;
    provided that the application therefor need not be
    attached to or made a part of any policy containing a
    clause making the policy incontestable from date of issue.
        (d) A provision that if it is found at any time before
    final settlement under the policy that the age of the
    insured (or the age of the beneficiary, if considered in
    determining the premium) has been misstated, the amount
    payable under the policy shall be such as the premium
    would have purchased at the correct age or ages, according
    to the company's published rate at date of issue.
        (e) A provision that the policy shall participate
    annually in the surplus of the company beginning not later
    than the end of the third policy year; and any policy
    containing a provision for annual participation beginning
    at the end of the first policy year, may also provide that
    each dividend be paid subject to the payment of the
    premiums for the next ensuing year; and the insured under
    any annual dividend policy shall have the right each year
    to have the dividend arising from such participation
    either paid in cash, or applied in reduction of premiums,
    or applied to the purchase of paid-up additional
    insurance, or be left to accumulate to the credit of the
    policy, with interest at such rate as may be determined
    from time to time by the company, but not less than a
    guaranteed minimum rate specified in the policy, and
    payable at the maturity of the policy, but withdrawable on
    any anniversary date, subject to such further provisions
    as the policy may provide regarding the application of
    dividends toward the payment of any premiums unpaid at the
    end of the grace period; and if the insured fails to notify
    the company in writing of his election within the period
    of grace allowed for the payment of premium, the policy
    shall further provide which of such options are effective.
        (f) A provision that after the policy has been in
    force 3 full years the company at any time, while the
    policy is in force, will advance, on proper assignment or
    pledge of the policy and on the sole security thereof, at a
    specified maximum fixed or adjusted rate of interest in
    accordance with Section 229.5, a sum equal to, or at the
    option of the insured less than the amount required by
    Section 229.3 under the conditions specified thereby and
    with notification as required by Section 229.5; and that
    the company will deduct from such loan value any
    indebtedness not already deducted in determining such
    value and any unpaid balance of the premium for the
    current policy year, and may collect interest in advance
    on the loan to the end of the current policy year; and any
    policy may also provide that if the interest on the loan is
    not paid when due it shall be added to the existing loan
    and shall bear interest at the same rate. No condition
    other than as provided herein or in Sections 229.3 and
    229.5 shall be exacted as a prerequisite to any such loan.
    This clause shall not apply to term insurance.
        (g) A provision for nonforfeiture benefits and cash
    surrender values in accordance with the requirements of
    paragraph (1) of Section 229.1 or, Section 229.2.
        (h) A table showing in figures the loan values and the
    options available under the policy each year, upon default
    in premium payments, during at least the first 20 years of
    the policy; the policy to contain a provision that the
    company will furnish upon request an extension of such
    table beyond the years shown in the policy.
        (i) A provision that in event of default in premium
    payments the value of the policy is applied to the
    purchase of other insurance as provided in this Section,
    and if such insurance is in force and the original policy
    is not surrendered to the company and cancelled, the
    policy may be reinstated within 3 years from such default,
    upon evidence of insurability satisfactory to the company
    and payment of arrears of premiums and the payment or
    reinstatement of any other indebtedness to the company
    upon the policy, with interest on the premiums at a rate
    not exceeding 6% per annum payable annually and with
    interest on the indebtedness at a rate not exceeding the
    rate prescribed by Section 229.5.
        (j) A provision that when a policy is a claim by the
    death of the insured settlement shall be made upon receipt
    of due proof of death and not later than 2 months after the
    receipt of such proof. The policy may require that due
    proof of the death of the insured shall consist of a
    certified copy of the death certificate of the insured, or
    other lawful evidence providing equivalent information,
    and proof of the claimant's interest in the proceeds. If
    due proof of death requires a certified copy of the death
    certificate, then no more than one beneficiary shall be
    required to submit a certified copy of the death
    certificate.
        (k) If the policy provides for payment of its proceeds
    in installments, a table showing the amount and period of
    such installments shall be included in the policy.
        (l) Interest shall accrue on the proceeds payable
    because of the death of the insured, from date of death, at
    the rate of 10% annually on the total amount payable or the
    face amount if payments are to be made in installments
    until the total payment or first installment is paid,
    unless payment is made within 31 days from the latest of
    the following to occur:
            (1) the date that due proof of death is received by
        the company;
            (2) the date that the company receives sufficient
        information to determine its liability, the extent of
        the liability, and the appropriate payee legally
        entitled to the proceeds; or
            (3) the date that legal impediments to payment of
        proceeds that depend on the action of parties other
        than the company are resolved and sufficient evidence
        of the same is provided to the company; legal
        impediments to payment include, but are not limited
        to, (A) the establishment of guardianships and
        conservatorships, (B) the appointment and
        qualification of trustees, executors, and
        administrators, and (C) the submission of information
        required to satisfy State and federal reporting
        requirements.
    This provision need not appear in the policy, however, the
    company shall notify the beneficiary at the time of claim
    of this provision. The payment of interest shall apply to
    all policies now in force, as well as those written after
    the effective date of this amendment.
        (m) Title on the face and on the back of the policy
    briefly describing its form.
        (n) A provision, or a notice attached to the policy,
    to the effect that during a period of ten days from the
    date the policy is delivered to the policy owner, it may be
    surrendered to the insurer together with a written request
    for cancellation of the policy and in such event, the
    insurer will refund any premium paid therefor, including
    any policy fees or other charges. The Director may by rule
    exempt specific types of policies from the requirements of
    this subsection.
    (2) In the case of the replacement of life insurance, as
defined in the rule promulgated by the Director, the replacing
insurer shall either (1) delay the issuance of its policy for
not less than 20 days from the date it has transmitted a policy
summary to the existing insurer, or (2) provide in a form
titled "Notice Regarding Replacement of Life Insurance", as
well as in its policy, or in a separate notice delivered with
the policy, that the insured has the right to an unconditional
refund of all premiums paid, and that such right may be
exercised within a period of 20 days commencing from the date
of delivery of such policy. Where option (2) is exercised, the
replacing insurer shall also transmit a policy summary to the
existing insurer within 3 working days after the date the
replacement policy is issued.
    (3) Any of the foregoing provisions or portions thereof
not applicable to single premium or nonparticipating or term
policies shall to that extent not be incorporated therein.
This Section shall not apply to policies of reinsurance nor to
policies issued or granted pursuant to the nonforfeiture
provisions prescribed in subparagraph (g) of paragraph (1) of
this Section.
(Source: P.A. 97-527, eff. 8-23-11.)
 
    Section 50. The Unclaimed Life Insurance Benefits Act is
amended by changing Section 15 as follows:
 
    (215 ILCS 185/15)
    Sec. 15. Insurer conduct.
    (a) An insurer shall initially perform a comparison of its
insureds', annuitants', and retained asset account holders'
in-force policies, annuity contracts, and retained asset
accounts in force on or after January 1, 2017 by using the full
Death Master File. The initial comparison shall be completed
on or before December 31, 2017. An insurer required to perform
a comparison of its insureds', annuitants', and retained asset
account holders' in-force policies, annuity contracts, and
retained asset accounts in force on or after January 1, 2012
shall perform a comparison of policies, annuity contracts, and
retained asset accounts in force between January 1, 2012 and
December 31, 2016 on or before December 31, 2018 by using the
full Death Master File. An insurer required to perform a
comparison of electronic searchable files concerning its
insureds', annuitants', and retained asset account holders'
in-force policies, annuity contracts, and retained asset
accounts in force on or after January 1, 2000 shall perform a
comparison of policies, annuity contracts, and retained asset
accounts in force between January 1, 2000 and December 31,
2016 on or before December 31, 2018 by using the full Death
Master File. Thereafter, an insurer shall perform a comparison
on at least a semi-annual basis using the Death Master File
update files for comparisons to identify potential matches of
its insureds, annuitants, and retained asset account holders.
In the event that one of the insurer's lines of business
conducts a search for matches of its insureds, annuitants, and
retained asset account holders against the Death Master File
at intervals more frequently than semi-annually, then all
lines of the insurer's business shall conduct searches for
matches against the Death Master File with the same frequency.
Within 6 months after acquisition of policies, annuity
contracts, or retained asset accounts from another insurer,
the acquiring insurer shall compare all newly acquired
policies, annuity contracts, and retained asset accounts that
were not searched by the previous insurer in compliance with
this Act against the complete Death Master File to identify
potential matches of its insureds, annuitants, and retained
asset account holders. Upon any subsequent acquisition of
policies, annuity contracts, or retained asset accounts from
another insurer, when the previous insurer has already
conducted a search of the newly acquired policies, annuity
contracts, and retained asset accounts using the complete
Death Master File, the acquiring insurer shall compare all
newly acquired policies, annuity contracts, and retained asset
accounts using all of the Death Master File updates since the
time the previous insurer conducted the complete search to
identify potential matches of its insureds, annuitants, and
retained asset account holders.
    An insured, an annuitant, or a retained asset account
holder is presumed dead if the date of his or her death is
indicated by the comparison required in this subsection (a),
unless the insurer has competent and substantial evidence that
the person is living, including, but not limited to, a contact
made by the insurer with the person or his or her legal
representative.
    For those potential matches identified as a result of a
Death Master File match, the insurer shall within 120 days
after the date of death notice, if the insurer has not been
contacted by a beneficiary, determine whether benefits are due
in accordance with the applicable policy or contract and, if
benefits are due in accordance with the applicable policy or
contract:
        (1) use good faith efforts, which shall be documented
    by the insurer, to locate the beneficiary or
    beneficiaries; the Department shall establish by
    administrative rule minimum standards for what constitutes
    good faith efforts to locate a beneficiary, which shall
    include: (A) searching insurer records; (B) the
    appropriate use of First Class United States mail, e-mail
    addresses, and telephone calls; and (C) reasonable efforts
    by insurers to obtain updated contact information for the
    beneficiary or beneficiaries; good faith efforts shall not
    include additional attempts to contact the beneficiary at
    an address already confirmed not to be current;
        If the beneficiary is a charitable organization as
    defined in Section 5 of the Charitable Organization
    Beneficiary Act, but excluding not-for-profit
    organizations that are the irrevocable sole beneficiary of
    a life insurance policy covered by Section 245.2 of the
    Illinois Insurance Code, the insurer shall, within 120
    days, including if the insurer has been contacted by the
    charitable beneficiary:
            (A) determine whether the charitable organization
        has a right to the proceeds of the policy, annuity
        contract, or a retained asset account;
            (B) provide a general description of the policy,
        annuity contract, or a retained asset account that may
        be held for the benefit of the charitable
        organization, and the exact language of the
        beneficiary designation, in accordance with subsection
        (c);
            (C) include information that verifies whether the
        insurer has already obtained the official death
        certificate or documentation needed to verify the
        death of the insured, annuitant, or retained asset
        account holder; and
        (2) provide the appropriate claims forms or
    instructions to the beneficiary or beneficiaries to make a
    claim, including the need to provide an official death
    certificate if applicable under the policy or annuity
    contract.
        If the beneficiary is a charitable organization as
    defined in Section 5 of the Charitable Organization
    Beneficiary Act, the insurer shall, within 120 days,
    provide the forms and instructions pursuant to subsection
    (a)(2), and the insurer has the same duties as a holder of
    property under Section 20 of the Charitable Organization
    Beneficiary Act, including if the insurer has been
    contacted by the charitable beneficiary.
    (b) Insurers shall implement procedures to account for the
following when conducting searches of the Death Master File:
        (1) common nicknames, initials used in lieu of a first
    or middle name, use of a middle name, compound first and
    middle names, and interchanged first and middle names;
        (2) compound last names, maiden or married names, and
    hyphens, blank spaces, or apostrophes in last names;
        (3) transposition of the "month" and "date" portions
    of the date of birth; and
        (4) incomplete social security numbers.
    (c) To the extent permitted by law, an insurer may
disclose the minimum necessary personal information about the
insured, annuity owner, retained asset account holder, or
beneficiary to a person whom the insurer reasonably believes
may be able to assist the insurer with locating the
beneficiary or a person otherwise entitled to payment of the
claims proceeds.
    (d) An insurer or its service provider shall not charge
any beneficiary or other authorized representative for any
fees or costs associated with a Death Master File search or
verification of a Death Master File match conducted pursuant
to this Act.
    (e) The benefits from a policy, annuity contract, or a
retained asset account, plus any applicable accrued interest,
shall first be payable to the designated beneficiaries or
owners and, in the event the beneficiaries or owners cannot be
found, shall be reported and delivered to the State Treasurer
pursuant to the Revised Uniform Unclaimed Property Act.
Nothing in this subsection (e) is intended to alter the
amounts reportable under the existing provisions of the
Revised Uniform Unclaimed Property Act or to allow the
imposition of additional statutory interest under Article XIV
of the Illinois Insurance Code.
    (f) Failure to meet any requirement of this Section with
such frequency as to constitute a general business practice is
a violation of Section 424 of the Illinois Insurance Code.
Nothing in this Section shall be construed to create or imply a
private cause of action for a violation of this Section.
(Source: P.A. 99-893, eff. 1-1-17; 100-22, eff. 1-1-18;
100-543, eff. 1-1-18; 100-863, eff. 8-14-18.)