Current through August, 2024
Section 1 Purpose
The purpose of this regulation is to provide rules for life
insurance policy illustrations that will protect consumers and foster consumer
education. The regulation provides illustration formats, prescribes standards
to be followed when illustrations are used, and specifies the disclosures that
are required in connection with illustrations. The goals of this regulation are
to ensure that illustrations do not mislead purchasers of life insurance and to
make illustrations more understandable. Insurers will, as far as possible,
eliminate the use of footnotes and caveats and define terms used in the
illustration in language that would be understood by a typical person within
the segment of the public to which the illustration is
directed.
Section 2
Authority
This regulation is issued based upon the authority granted
the commissioner under Title 8 V.S.A., Sections 75 and
4724.
Section 3 Applicability and Scope
This regulation applies to all group and individual life
insurance policies and certificates except:
A. Variable life insurance;
B. Individual and group annuity
contracts;
C. Credit life
insurance; or
D. Life insurance
policies with no illustrated death benefits on any individual exceeding $
10,000.
Section 4
Definitions
For the purposes of this regulation:
A. "Actuarial Standards Board" means the
board established by the American Academy of Actuaries to develop and
promulgate standards of actuarial practice.
B. "Contract premium" means the gross premium
that is required to be paid under a fixed premium policy, including the premium
for a rider for which benefits are shown in the illustration.
C. "Currently payable scale" means a scale of
non-guaranteed elements in effect for a policy form as of the preparation date
of the illustration or declared to become effective within the next ninety-five
(95) days.
D. "Disciplined current
scale" means a scale of non-guaranteed elements constituting a limit on
illustrations currently being illustrated by an insurer that is reasonably
based on actual recent historical experience, as certified annually by an
illustration actuary designated by the insurer. Further guidance in determining
the disciplined current scale as contained in standards established by the
Actuarial Standards Board may be relied upon if the standards:
(1) Are consistent with all provisions of
this regulation;
(2) Limit a
disciplined current scale to reflect only actions that have already been taken
or events that have already occurred;
(3) Do not permit a disciplined current scale
to include any projected trends of improvements in experience or any assumed
improvements in experience beyond the illustration date; and
(4) Do not permit assumed expenses to be less
than minimum assumed expenses.
E. "Generic name" means a short title
descriptive of the policy being illustrated such as "whole life," "term life"
or "flexible premium adjustable life."
F. "Guaranteed elements" and "non-guaranteed
elements"
(1) "Guaranteed elements" means the
premiums, benefits, values, credits or charges under a policy of life insurance
that are guaranteed and determined at issue.
(2) "Non-guaranteed elements" means the
premiums, benefits, values, credits or charges under a policy of life insurance
that are not guaranteed or not determined at issue.
G. "Illustrated scale" means a scale of
non-guaranteed elements currently being illustrated that is not more favorable
to the policy owner than the lesser of:
(1)
The disciplined current scale; or
(2) The currently payable scale.
H. "Illustration" means a
presentation or depiction that includes non-guaranteed elements of a policy of
life insurance over a period of years and that is one of the three (3) types
defined below:
(1) "Basic illustration" means
a ledger or proposal used in the sale of a life insurance policy that shows
both guaranteed and non-guaranteed elements.
(2) "Supplemental illustration" means an
illustration furnished in addition to a basic illustration that meets the
applicable requirements of this regulation, and that may be presented in a
format differing from the basic illustration, but may only depict a scale of
non-guaranteed elements that is permitted in a basic illustration.
(3) "In force illustration" means an
illustration furnished at any time after the policy that it depicts has been in
force for one year or more.
I. "Illustration actuary" means an actuary
meeting the requirements of Section 11 who certifies to illustrations based on
the standard of practice promulgated by the Actuarial Standards
Board.
J. "Lapse-supported
illustration" means an illustration of a policy form failing the test of
self-supporting as defined in this regulation, under a modified persistency
rate assumption using persistency rates underlying the disciplined current
scale for the first five (5) years and 100 percent policy persistency
thereafter.
K.
(1) "Minimum assumed expenses" means the
minimum expenses that may be used in the calculation of the disciplined current
scale for a policy form. The insurer may choose to designate each year the
method of determining assumed expenses for all policy forms from the following:
(a) Fully allocated expenses;
(b) Marginal expenses; and
(c) A generally recognized expense table
based on fully allocated expenses representing a significant portion of
insurance companies and approved by the National Association of Insurance
Commissioners.
(2)
Marginal expenses may be used only if greater than a generally recognized
expense table. If no generally recognized expense table is approved, fully
allocated expenses must be used.
L. "Non-term group life" means a group policy
or individual policies of life insurance issued to members of an employer group
or other permitted group where:
(1) Every
plan of coverage was selected by the employer or other group
representative;
(2) Some portion of
the premium is paid by the group or through payroll deduction; and
(3) Group underwriting or simplified
underwriting is used.
M.
"Policy owner" means the owner named in the policy or the certificate holder in
the case of a group policy.
N.
"Premium outlay" means the amount of premium assumed to be paid by the policy
owner or other premium payer out-of-pocket.
O. "Self-supporting illustration" means an
illustration of a policy form for which it can be demonstrated that, when using
experience assumptions underlying the disciplined current scale, for all
illustrated points in time on or after the fifteenth policy anniversary or the
twentieth policy anniversary for second-or-later-to-die policies (or upon
policy expiration if sooner), the accumulated value of all policy cash flows
equals or exceeds the total policy owner value available. For this purpose,
policy owner value will include cash surrender vaiues and any other illustrated
benefit amounts available at the policy owner's election.
Section 5 Policies to Be Illustrated
A. Each insurer marketing policies to which
this regulation is applicable shall notify the commissioner whether a policy
form is to be marketed with or without an illustration. For all policy forms
being actively marketed on the effective date of this regulation, the insurer
shall identify in writing those forms and whether or not an illustration will
be used with them. For policy forms filed after the effective date of this
regulation, the identification shall be made at the time of filing. Any
previous identification may be changed by notice to the commissioner.
B. If the insurer identifies a policy form as
one to be marketed without an illustration, any use of an illustration for any
policy using that form prior to the first policy anniversary is
prohibited.
C. If a policy form is
identified by the insurer as one to be marketed with an illustration, a basic
illustration prepared and delivered in accordance with this regulation is
required, except that a basic illustration need not be provided to individual
members of a group or to individuals insured under multiple lives coverage
issued to a single applicant unless the coverage is marketed to these
individuals. The illustration furnished an applicant for a group life insurance
policy or policies issued to a single applicant on multiple lives may be either
an individual or composite illustration representative of the coverage on the
lives of members of the group or the multiple lives covered.
D. Potential enrollees of non-term group life
subject to this regulation shall be furnished a quotation with the enrollment
materials. The quotation shall show potential policy values for sample ages and
policy years on a guaranteed and non-guaranteed basis appropriate to the group
and the coverage. This quotation shall not be considered an illustration for
purposes of this regulation, but all information provided shall be consistent
with the illustrated scale. A basic illustration shall be provided at delivery
of the certificate to enrollees for non-term group life who enroll for more
than the minimum premium necessary to provide pure death benefit protection. In
addition, the insurer shall make a basic illustration available to any non-term
group life enrollee who requests it.
Section 6 General Rules and Prohibitions
A. An illustration used in the sale of a life
insurance policy shall satisfy the applicable requirements of this regulation,
be clearly labeled "life insurance illustration" and contain the following
basic information:
(1) Name of
insurer;
(2) Name and business
address of producer or insurer's authorized representative, if any;
(3) Name, age and sex of proposed insured,
except where a composite illustration is permitted under this
regulation;
(4) Underwriting or
rating classification upon which the illustration is based;
(5) Generic name of policy, the company
product name, if different, and form number;
(6) Initial death benefit; and
(7) Dividend option election or application
of non-guaranteed elements, if applicable.
B. When using an illustration in the sale of
a life insurance policy, an insurer or its producers or other authorized
representatives shall not:
(1) Represent the
policy as anything other than a life insurance policy;
(2) Use or describe non-guaranteed elements
in a manner that is misleading or has the capacity or tendency to
mislead;
(3) State or imply that
the payment or amount of non-guaranteed elements is guaranteed;
(4) Use an illustration that does not comply
with the requirements of this regulation;
(5) Use an illustration that at any policy
duration depicts policy performance more favorable to the policy owner than
that produced by the illustrated scale of the insurer whose policy is being
illustrated;
(6) Provide an
applicant with an incomplete illustration;
(7) Represent in any way that premium
payments will not be required for each year of the policy in order to maintain
the illustrated death benefits, unless that is the fact;
(8) Use the term "vanish" or "vanishing
premium," or a similar term that implies the policy becomes paid up, to
describe a plan for using non-guaranteed elements to pay a portion of future
premiums;
(9) Except for policies
that can never develop nonforfeiture values, use an illustration that is
"lapse-supported"; or
(10) Use an
illustration that is not "self-supporting."
C. If an interest rate used to determine the
illustrated non-guaranteed elements is shown, it shall not be greater than the
earned interest rate underlying the disciplined current scale.
Section 7 Standards for Basic
Illustrations
A. Format. A basic illustration
shall conform with the following requirements:
(1) The illustration shall be labeled with
the date on which it was prepared.
(2) Each page, including any explanatory
notes or pages, shall be numbered and show its relationship to the total number
of pages in the illustration (e.g., the fourth page of a seven-page
illustration shall be labeled "page 4 of 7 pages").
(3) The narrative summary described in
subsection B of this section shall be the first page(s) of any basic
illustration. Each page of any illustration of non-guaranteed elements shall be
accompanied by a statement indicating that:
(a) The benefits and values are not
guaranteed;
(b) The assumptions on
which they are based are subject to change by the insurer; and
(c) Actual results may be more or less
favorable.
(4) The
assumed dates of payment receipt and benefit pay-out within a policy year shall
be clearly identified.
(5) If the
age of the proposed insured is shown as a component of the tabular detail, it
shall be issue age plus the numbers of years the policy is assumed to have been
in force.
(6) The assumed payments
on which the illustrated benefits and values are based shall be identified as
premium outlay or contract premium, as applicable. For policies that do not
require a specific contract premium, the illustrated payments shall be
identified as premium outlay.
(7)
Guaranteed death benefits and values available upon surrender, if any, for the
illustrated premium outlay or contract premium shall be shown and clearly
labeled guaranteed.
(8) If the
illustration shows any non-guaranteed elements, they cannot be based on a scale
more favorable to the policy owner than the insurer's illustrated scale at any
duration. These elements shall be clearly labeled non-guaranteed.
(9) The guaranteed elements, if any, shall be
shown before corresponding non-guaranteed elements and shall be specifically
referred to on any page of an illustration that shows or describes only the
non-guaranteed elements (e.g., "see page one for guaranteed
elements.")
(10) The account or
accumulation value of a policy, if shown, shall be identified by the name this
value is given in the policy being illustrated and shown in close proximity to
the corresponding value available upon surrender.
(11) The value available upon surrender shall
be identified by the name this value is given in the policy being illustrated
and shall be the amount available to the policy owner in a lump sum after
deduction of surrender charges, policy loans and policy loan interest, as
applicable.
(12) Illustrations may
show policy benefits and values in graphic or chart form in addition to the
tabular form.
(13) If the
illustration shows that the premium payer may have the option to allow policy
charges to be paid using non-guaranteed values, the illustration must clearly
disclose that a charge continues to be required and that, depending on actual
results, the premium payer may need to continue or resume premium outlays.
Similar disclosure shall be made for premium outlay of lesser amounts or
shorter durations than the contract premium. If a contract premium is due, the
premium outlay display shall not be left blank or show zero unless accompanied
by an asterisk or similar mark to draw attention to the fact that the policy is
not paid up.
(14) If the applicant
plans to use dividends or policy values, guaranteed or non-guaranteed, to pay
all or a portion of the contract premium or policy charges, or for any other
purpose, the illustration may reflect those plans and the impact on future
policy benefits and values.
B. Narrative Summary. A basic illustration
shall include the following information in the order set forth below:
(1) A brief description of the policy being
illustrated, including a statement that it is a life insurance
policy;
(2) A statement containing
in substance the following: "This illustration assumes that the currently
illustrated non-guaranteed elements will continue unchanged for all years
shown. This is not likely to occur, and actual results may be more or less
favorable than those shown."
(3) A
brief description of the premium outlay or contract premium, as applicable, for
the policy. For a policy that does not require payment of a specific contract
premium, the illustration shall show the premium outlay that must be paid to
guarantee coverage for the term of the contract, subject to maximum premiums
allowable to qualify as a life insurance policy under the applicable provisions
of the Internal Revenue Code;
(4) A
brief description of any policy features, riders or options, guaranteed or
non-guaranteed, shown in the basic illustration and the impact they may have on
the benefits and values of the policy; and
(5) Identification and a brief definition of
column headings and key terms used in the illustration.
C. Numeric Summary.
(1) Following the narrative summary, a basic
illustration shall include a numeric summary of the death benefits and values
and the premium outlay and contract premium, as applicable. For a policy that
provides for a contract premium, the guaranteed death benefits and values shall
be based on the contract premium. This summary shall be shown for at least
policy years five (5), ten (10) and twenty (20) and at age 70, if applicable,
on the three bases shown below. For multiple life policies the summary shall
show policy years five (5), ten (10), twenty (20) and thirty (30).
(a) Policy guarantees;
(b) Insurer's illustrated scale;
(c) Insurer's illustrated scale used but with
the non-guaranteed elements reduced as follows:
(i) Dividends at fifty percent (50%) of the
dividends contained in the illustrated scale used;
(ii) Non-guaranteed credited interest at
rates that are the average of the guaranteed rates and the rates contained in
the illustrated scale used; and
(iii) All non-guaranteed charges, including
but not limited to, term insurance charges, mortality and expense charges, at
rates that are the average of the guaranteed rates and the rates contained in
the illustrated scale used.
(2) In addition, if coverage would cease
prior to policy maturity or age 100, the year in which coverage ceases shall be
identified for each of the three (3) bases.
D. Statements. Statements substantially
similar to the following shall be included on the same page as the numeric
summary and signed by the applicant, or the policy owner in the case of an
illustration provided at time of delivery, as required in this regulation.
(1) A statement to be signed and dated by the
applicant or policy owner reading as follows: "I have received a copy of this
illustration and understand that any non-guaranteed elements illustrated are
subject to change and could be either higher or lower. The agent has told me
they are not guaranteed."
(2) A
statement to be signed and dated by the insurance producer or other authorized
representative of the insurer reading as follows: "I certify that this
illustration has been presented to the applicant and that I have explained that
any non-guaranteed elements illustrated are subject to change. I have made no
statements that are inconsistent with the illustration."
E. Tabular Detail.
(1) A basic illustration shall include the
following for at least each policy year from one (1) to ten (10) and for every
fifth policy year thereafter ending at age 100, policy maturity or final
expiration; and except for term insurance beyond the 20th year, for any year in
which the premium outlay and contract premium, if applicable, is to change:
(a) The premium outlay and mode the applicant
plans to pay and the contract premium, as applicable;
(b) The corresponding guaranteed death
benefit, as provided in the policy; and
(c) The corresponding guaranteed value
available upon surrender, as provided in the policy.
(2) For a policy that provides for a contract
premium, the guaranteed death benefit and value available upon surrender shall
correspond to the contract premium.
(3) Non-guaranteed elements may be shown if
described in the contract. In the case of an illustration for a policy on which
the insurer intends to credit terminal dividends, they may be shown if the
insurer's current practice is to pay terminal dividends. If any non-guaranteed
elements are shown they must be shown at the same durations as the
corresponding guaranteed elements, if any. If no guaranteed benefit or value is
available at any duration for which a non-guaranteed benefit or value is shown,
a zero shall be displayed in the guaranteed column.
Section 8 Standards for
Supplemental Illustrations
A. A supplemental
illustration may be provided so long as:
(1)
It is appended to, accompanied by or preceded by a basic illustration that
complies with this regulation;
(2)
The non-guaranteed elements shown are not more favorable to the policy owner
than the corresponding elements based on the scale used in the basic
illustration;
(3) It contains the
same statement required of a basic illustration that non-guaranteed elements
are not guaranteed; and
(4) For a
policy that has a contract premium, the contract premium underlying the
supplemental illustration is equal to the contract premium shown in the basic
illustration. For policies that do not require a contract premium, the premium
outlay underlying the supplemental illustration shall be equal to the premium
outlay shown in the basic illustration.
B. The supplemental illustration shall
include a notice referring to the basic illustration for guaranteed elements
and other important information.
Section 9 Delivery of Illustration and Record
Retention
A.
(1) If a basic illustration is used by an
insurance producer or other authorized representative of the insurer in the
sale of a life insurance policy and the policy is applied for as illustrated, a
copy of that illustration, signed in accordance with this regulation, shall be
submitted to the insurer at the time of policy application. A copy also shall
be provided to the applicant.
(2)
If the policy is issued other than as applied for, a revised basic illustration
conforming to the policy as issued shall be sent with the policy. The revised
illustration shall conform to the requirements of this regulation, shall be
labeled "Revised Illustration" and shall be signed and dated by the applicant
or policy owner and producer or other authorized representative of the insurer
no later than the time the policy is delivered. A copy shall be provided to the
insurer and the policy owner.
B.
(1) If
no illustration is used by an insurance producer or other authorized
representative in the sale of a life insurance policy or if the policy is
applied for other than as illustrated, the producer or representative shall
certify to that effect in writing on a form provided by the insurer. On the
same form the applicant shall acknowledge that no illustration conforming to
the policy applied for was provided and shall further acknowledge an
understanding that an illustration conforming to the policy as issued will be
provided no later than at the time of policy delivery. This form shall be
submitted to the insurer at the time of policy application.
(2) If the policy is issued, a basic
illustration conforming to the policy as issued shall be sent with the policy
and signed no later than the time the policy is delivered. A copy shall be
provided to the insurer and the policy owner.
C. If the basic illustration or revised
illustration is sent to the applicant or policy owner by mail from the insurer,
it shall include instructions for the applicant or policy owner to sign the
duplicate copy of the numeric summary page of the illustration for the policy
issued and return the signed copy to the insurer. The insurer's obligation
under this subsection shall be satisfied if it can demonstrate that it has made
a diligent effort to secure a signed copy of the numeric summary page. The
requirement to make a diligent effort shall be deemed satisfied if the insurer
includes in the mailing a self-addressed postage prepaid envelope with
instructions for the return of the signed numeric summary page.
D. A copy of the basic illustration and a
revised basic illustration, if any, signed as applicable, along with any
certification that either no illustration was used or that the policy was
applied for other than as illustrated, shall be retained by the insurer until
three (3) years after the policy is no longer in force. A copy need not be
retained if no policy is issued.
Section 10 Annual Report; Notice to Policy
Owners
A. In the case of a policy designated
as one for which illustrations will be used, the insurer shall provide each
policy owner with an annual report on the status of the policy that shall
contain at least the following information:
(1) For universal life policies, the report
shall include the following:
(a) The
beginning and end date of the current report period;
(b) The policy value at the end of the
previous report period and at the end of the current report period;
(c) The total amounts that have been credited
or debited to the policy value during the current report period, identifying
each by type (e.g., interest, mortality, expense and riders);
(d) The current death benefit at the end of
the current report period on each life covered by the policy;
(e) The net cash surrender value of the
policy as of the end of the current report period;
(f) The amount of outstanding loans, if any,
as of the end of the current report period; and
(g) For fixed premium policies:
If, assuming guaranteed interest, mortality and expense loads
and continued scheduled premium payments, the policy's net cash surrender value
is such that it would not maintain insurance in force until the end of the next
reporting period, a notice to this effect shall be included in the report;
or
(h) For flexible premium
policies:
If, assuming guaranteed interest, mortality and expense
loads, the policy's net cash surrender value will not maintain insurance in
force until the end of the next reporting period unless further premium
payments are made, a notice to this effect shall be included in the
report.
(2) For
all other policies, where applicable:
(a)
Current death benefit;
(b) Annual
contract premium;
(c) Current cash
surrender value;
(d) Current
dividend;
(e) Application of
current dividend; and
(f) Amount of
outstanding loan.
(3)
Insurers writing life insurance policies that do not build nonforfeiture values
shall only be required to provide an annual report with respect to these
policies for those years when a change has been made to non-guaranteed policy
elements by the insurer."
B. If the annual report does not include an
in force illustration, it shall contain the following notice displayed
prominently: "IMPORTANT POLICY OWNER NOTICE: You should consider requesting
more detailed information about your policy to understand how it may perform in
the future. You should not consider replacement of your policy or make changes
in your coverage without requesting a current illustration. You may annually
request, without charge, such an illustration by calling [insurer's phone
number], writing to [insurer's name] at [insurer's address] or contacting your
agent. If you do not receive a current illustration of your policy within 30
days from your request, you should contact your state insurance department."
The insurer may vary the sequential order of the methods for obtaining an in
force illustration.
C. Upon the
request of the policy owner, the insurer shall furnish an in force illustration
of current and future benefits and values based on the insurer's present
illustrated scale. This illustration shall comply with the requirements of
Section 6A, 6B, 7A and 7E. No signature or other acknowledgment of receipt of
this illustration shall be required.
D. If an adverse change in non-guaranteed
elements that could affect the policy has been made by the insurer since the
last annual report, the annual report shall contain a notice of that fact and
the nature of the change prominently displayed.
Section 11 Annual Certifications
A. The board of directors of each insurer
shall appoint one or more illustration actuaries.
B. The illustration actuary shall certify
that the disciplined current scale used in illustrations is in conformity with
the Actuarial Standard of Practice for Compliance with the NAIC Model
Regulation on Life Insurance Illustrations promulgated by the Actuarial
Standards Board, and that the illustrated scales used in insurer-authorized
illustrations meet the requirements of this regulation.
C. The illustration actuary shall:
(1) Be a member in good standing of the
American Academy of Actuaries;
(2)
Be familiar with the standard of practice regarding life insurance policy
illustrations;
(3) Not have been
found by the commissioner, following appropriate notice and hearing to have:
(a) Violated any provision of, or any
obligation imposed by, the insurance law or other law in the course of his or
her dealings as an illustration actuary;
(b) Been found guilty of fraudulent or
dishonest practices;
(c)
Demonstrated his or her incompetence, lack of cooperation, or untrustworthiness
to act as an illustration actuary; or
(d) Resigned or been removed as an
illustration actuary within the past five (5) years as a result of acts or
omissions indicated in any adverse report on examination or as a result of a
failure to adhere to generally acceptable actuarial standards;
(4) Not fail to notify the
commissioner of any action taken by a commissioner of another state similar to
that under Paragraph (3) above;
(5)
Disclose in the annual certification whether, since the last certification, a
currently payable scale applicable for business issued within the previous five
(5) years and within the scope of the certification has been reduced for
reasons other than changes in the experience factors underlying the disciplined
current scale. If non-guaranteed elements illustrated for new policies are not
consistent with those illustrated for similar in force policies, this must be
disclosed in the annual certification. If non-guaranteed elements illustrated
for both new and in force policies are not consistent with the non-guaranteed
elements actually being paid, charged or credited to the same or similar forms,
this must be disclosed in the annual certification; and
(6) Disclose in the annual certification the
method used to allocate overhead expenses for all illustrations:
(a) Fully allocated expenses;
(b) Marginal expenses; or
(c) A generally recognized expense table
based on fully allocated expenses representing a significant portion of
insurance companies and approved by the National Association of Insurance
Commissioners.
D.
(1) The
illustration actuary shall file a certification with the board and with the
commissioner:
(a) Annually for all policy
forms for which illustrations are used; and
(b) Before a new policy form is
illustrated.
(2) If an
error in a previous certification is discovered, the illustration actuary shall
notify the board of directors of the insurer and the commissioner
promptly.
E. If an
illustration actuary is unable to certify the scale for any policy form
illustration the insurer intends to use, the actuary shall notify the board of
directors of the insurer and the commissioner promptly of his or her inability
to certify.
F. A responsible
officer of the insurer, other than the illustration actuary, shall certify
annually:
(1) That the illustration formats
meet the requirements of this regulation and that the scales used in
insurer-authorized illustrations are those scales certified by the illustration
actuary; and
(2) That the company
has provided its agents with information about the expense allocation method
used by the company in its illustrations and disclosed as required in
Subsection C(6) of this section.
G. The annual certifications shall be
provided to the commissioner each year by a date determined by the
insurer.
H. If an insurer changes
the illustration actuary responsible for all or a portion of the company's
policy forms, the insurer shall notify the commissioner of that fact promptly
and disclose the reason for the change.
Section 12 Penalties
In addition to any other penalties provided by the laws of
this state, an insurer or producer that violates a requirement of this
regulation shall be guilty of a violation of Title
8
V.S.A., Sections 4724 and
4726.
Section 13 Separability
If any provision of this regulation or its application to any
person or circumstance is for any reason held to be invalid by any court of
law, the remainder of the regulation and its application to other persons or
circumstances shall not be affected.
Section 14 Effective Date
This regulation shall become effective March 1, 1999, and
shall apply to policies sold on or after the effective date.
Statutory Authority: 8 V.S.A. §§ 75
and
4724