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  • STRUCTURED SETTLEMENT BLOG AND SETTLEMENT PLANNING BLOG "STRUCTURED SETTLEMENTS 4REAL" IS A POPULAR SOURCE OF STRUCTURED SETTLEMENT AND SETTLEMENT PLANNING INDUSTRY NEWS AND INFORMATION
    This structured settlement blog has a stable and growing readership targeted to settlement professionals, financial professionals, lawyers, injured persons and their family members, guardians, survivors, judges, magistrates, special masters, mediators, administrators, trust companies, financial advisers, insurance regulators, government leaders, the media and other interested parties. Established in 2005, Structured Settlements 4Real provides fresh structured settlement, settlement planning and litigation recovery management content and commentary added virtually daily! (written by John Darer, President of 4structures.com, LLC, an author who IS actually IN the industry). You won't find scraped content or "pay per post" fluff here! WHAT YOU GET is the straight stuff with a touch of irreverence. Comments ARE welcome, but subject to our comment filtering and trackback policy (see below) You can subscribe to this blog through the blog reader associated with your Internet browser, or through the Feedburner or Feedblitz links on this page. John Darer's connections through Plaxo will receive an automatic feed through Plaxo Pulse. You should also consider "book marking" or "favoriting" Structured Settlements 4Real so that you can return later and use it as a reference. Come back soon or subscribe through your blog reader!

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  • The use of the NSSTA Financial Security Hand Out by Structured Settlement Brokers and Settlement Planners With Plaintiffs or Attorneys in New York May Violate The Law
    The New York State Insurance Department Office of General Counsel opined in January 2009 that the fact that the brochure generally discusses guaranty funds is irrelevant and where aimed at New York residents is unlawful. A number of other states have similar prohibitions.
  • New York Insurance Advertising law requires the full name of the Insurer to be listed along with the city and state of the principal office. Stating that you represent these fine companies using Insurance company logos without the preceding information are also illegal
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  • When it comes to settlement documents it is the ultimate responsibility of the lawyers or claims adjusters who receive input concerning the structured settlement aspects of the documents to actually read the entire document, exercise independent thought and advise their clients properly
  • If you advertise that you are "plaintiff exclusive" then you cannot logically be on the USDOJ list of annuity brokers. If YOU elect to proceed, choose your punishment...perjury or false advertising!
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August 11, 2008

NY Anti-Rebating Law Served Up As Part Of Broker Compensation Debate

Sally Roberts reports in August 4, 2008 Business Insurance on the recent producer compensation hearings that have been taking place in New York. According to Roberts, the New York State Insurance Law anti-rebating statute "had a supporting role in the discussions and could ultimately play a part in any future regulatory outcome.

Insurance anti rebating laws are based on the general premise that allowing inducements or rebating of commissions to insureds or prospective insureds can cause an unfair competition between agents and agencies of differing financial size resulting in a possible reduction in competition and opportunity for entry into a market even though the agents are marketing the same or similar products.The public is better served when competition is healthy and agents or agencies differentiate themselves based upon the quality and efficiency of service provided by the agent and a comparison of the benefits provided by the insurance policy rather than upon how much of the agent's commission will be returned to the purchaser.

One reason to take this seriously is that the first deputy superintendent of insurance in New York, Kermitt Brooks is quoted by Roberts as saying that he does not want the state's anti-rebate statute to be "used as a shield" by producers to preclude serious consideration about whether broker compensation should be disclosed to clients. More telling is the quote "If you ask yourself the question am i going to give the consumer information about broker compensation, the next logical question is what can she do with that information legally. And that gets you to the anti-rebate statute".

On the table in New York is whether or not the anti-rebating statute needs to be amended, changed or repealed in conjunction with the enforcement of new compensation disclosure regulations.

Structured settlement stakeholders need to watch these New York state developments very closely.

Dealing first with disclosure, the New York State General Obligations Law 5-1702 mandates a series requirements to be delivered by the defendant (or defendant's legal representative) concurrent with the creation of a structured settlement. In addition, there are certain courts, such as Bronx County, which have local rules of disclosure. Then there are a number of structured settlement consultant firms such as 4structures.com, LLC, Creative Capital, Inc. and EPS Settlements Group, which use a form of structured settlement affidavit or declaration to provide or supplement the state mandated disclosure.

I am fully in favor of full and complete disclosure of any compensation taken by a settlement consultant for counseling, advising or implementing a structured settlement factoring transaction or for receiving referral fees from a company or individual who performs such services.

Moving on to the rebating discussion, IF the rebating laws are repealed, who gets the rebate? Consider these points for discussion:

  1. While the plaintiff or annuitant may be perceived to be a consumer, he or she is not providing, and CANNOT provide the funds to purchase the structured settlement annuity. If they did attempt to do so then actual receipt would have already occurred and therefore no structured settlement is possible.
  2. If the plaintiff's financial adviser recommends a 468B qualified settlement fund as a work around, this does not solve the problem in the majority of cases which involve single claimants. This is because the QSF severely limits market choices, there has been no final ruling from Treasury, and/or where the small size of the case makes for an unpleasant cost/benefit ratio.
  3. If the property and casualty company or defendant gets a generous rebate on what are already thin margins then it is likely that the there will be little financial incentive for plaintiff advisers to do their business and tort victims will suffer as a result. It is also unlikely that a repeal would mean that the current system of commission sharing between brokers and settlement planners for plaintiff and defense (like real estate model) would survive.
  4. Casualty companies with structured settlement programs may not be able to achieve their goals. Many consultants on their panels,as well as those running them, will attest to the value of having a counterpart on the complex cases. Moreover, if as a result every significant case goes to a qualified settlement fund how is that helping your program?
  5. Would there be litigation over the rebate? What are the costs? Who suffers the most? I think ALL stakeholders
  6. If repealed, the New York State Trial Lawyer Association (NYSTLA) and The New York State Academy of Trial Lawyers could lose significant donations. Large contributions from "plaintiff exclusive" settlement companies to the NYSTLA Partnership For Justice and the Academy equivalent would undoubtedly be affected by decreased profitability on New York State business.
  7. If it happens in New York, does anyone believe it won't happen elsewhere?

There is no easy answer.

Members of The National Structured Settlement Trade Association, Society of Settlement Planners, New York State Trial Lawyer Association (NYSTLA) and The New York State Academy of Trial Lawyers and advocacy groups for the disabled such as AAPD and the Brain Injury Association of New York State must sit up NOW and take notice of the issues and the potential consequences to their constituents.

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