Securities Issued by Insurance Companies

55 Pa. D. & C.2d 157
CourtPennsylvania Department of Justice
DecidedJanuary 31, 1972
StatusPublished

This text of 55 Pa. D. & C.2d 157 (Securities Issued by Insurance Companies) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Department of Justice primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Securities Issued by Insurance Companies, 55 Pa. D. & C.2d 157 (Pa. 1972).

Opinion

CREAMER, Attorney General,

You have both requested our opinion as to whether securities issued by insurance companies need be registered with and approved by the Pennsylvania [158]*158Securities Commission. The Insurance Department takes the position that since it regulates, in certain respects, the issuance of stock by insurance companies, the Securities Commission has no right to regulate such issues. The Securities Commission takes the position that since the Securities Act does not exempt such securities, they are subject to its regulation. The pertinent statutory provisions follow, all emphases are supplied:

The Insurance Company Law of May 17, 1921, P.L. 682, 40 PS §361, et seq., contains the following provisions:

1. §215(a), 40 PS §405(a):
“As soon as the entire amount of the authorized capital of a stock insurance company, incorporated under this act, has been paid in, certificates shall be issued therefor to the persons entitled to receive the same, which certificates shall be transferable upon the books of the company; and the president or secretary of the company shall notify the Insurance Commissioner that the entire capital and paid in surplus of the company has been paid in, and that it is ready to commence business.” (Italics supplied.)
2. §§323 through 325, 40 PS §§446-448, give a stock insurance company the power to increase its capital stock under certain circumstances and provide the procedure. §326,40 PS §449, then provides:
“Any increase of capital stock made by any stock insurance company may be issued at such price not less than par as the stockholders may direct, or as the board of directors may direct under authority conferred at any time by the stockholders . . . Unless otherwise provided, in the charter or articles of agreement, each stockholder shall have the right to first subscribe for the new shares in proportion to his interest in the company; Provided, That in any case no [159]*159stockholder shall have such right to first subscribe for new shares if the stockholders holding the larger amount in value of the stock of the company direct, subject to such equitable regulations as the directors may prescribe, that such new shares shall be issued in exchange for one or more bona fide outstanding shares of another insurance company in which the issuing company is authorized to invest, or partly in such exchange and partly in cash . . . and such exchange shall be approved by the Insurance Commissioner, as hereinafter provided.
“The Insurance Commissioner shall examine the terms and conditions of such exchange and after holding a hearing at which all persons or parties to whom it is proposed to issue shares in such exchange shall have the right to appear, shall either approve or disapprove the fairness of such terms and conditions.
“Except when such an exchange is to be effected, notice to the stockholders to exercise their rights to subscribe for and to take the stock at the price so fixed or waive such right, shall be mailed to each stockholder, at the last address of such stockholder, appearing on the books or records of the company, thirty days previous to the date fixed by the board of directors for the expiration of the right to subscribe, and shall also be given by publication, once a week for three (3) weeks in a newspaper of general circulation published in the city or county in which the company has its principal office.
“Any stock not subscribed for and taken by the stockholders may be sold and disposed of by the board of directors, in such manner as the stockholders may direct, but no such stock shall be sold or disposed of at a price less than that originally fixed by the stockholders.
“Anything in this section to the contrary notwith[160]*160standing, any stock insurance company may issue to its officers or employes or to the officers or employes of any subsidiary corporation or to a trustee on their behalf, such number of its authorized but unissued shares as shall be prescribed by the stockholders having the majority interest. Such shares shall be issued at such times and upon such terms and conditions and in such manner as shall be determined by the board of directors.
“Any such stock authorized to be issued to officers or employes and not taken by those entitled thereto may be sold and disposed of in such manner as the board of directors may determine.” (Italics supplied.)

The Insurance Department points to §215, which empowers the representatives of the Insurance Commissioner to examine the company and require that it be possessed of funds as claimed before it may begin to write insurance, and to the requirements of §§323-326, which allow sale of stock after certain approvals by the Insurance Department; it also correctly observes that nothing in the Insurance Company Act requires additional approval by the Securities Commission. The Insurance Department further states that it makes a careful examination of the financial position of an insurance company before it will allow it to operate.

3. The Insurance Department might also point to the Act of July 11, 1917, P.L. 804, 40 PS §§390-399, which regulates the sale of stock of an insurance company and provides in §8, 40 PS §397:
“No person shall issue, deliver, circulate, or publish in this State any advertisement in any newspaper or periodical published in this State, or any circular or prospectus, for the sale of stock of any insurance corporation, whether organized or proposed to be organized within or without this State, for the purpose [161]*161of soliciting or securing applications or subscriptions to, or contract for the purchasing of stock in, any such corporation unless—
“(a) A copy of such circular, prospectus, or other advertisement shall first have been filed in the office of the Commissioner of Insurance:
“(b) The same shall contain the name and address of the person issuing, delivering, circulating, or publishing the same, with a consecutive serial number for each separate form of such circular, prospectus or other advertisement.” (Italics supplied.)

The Pennsylvania Securities Act of June 24, 1939, P. L. 748, as amended, 70 PS §31, et seq., on the other hand, provides that no “dealer” who is not registered under the act may sell any “security.”

The act defines “dealer” as “any person other than a salesman who engages in this State, either for all or part of his time, directly, or through an agent who is not registered hereunder as a dealer, in selling securities issued by another person,” or in “selling securities issued by such person”: 70 PS §32(f). “Person” includes “a company,” (70 PS §32(c)) and “company” means “a corporation, joint stock company, partnership, association, company, syndicate, trust, or unincorporated organizátion”: 70 PS §32(e).

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Bluebook (online)
55 Pa. D. & C.2d 157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/securities-issued-by-insurance-companies-padeptjust-1972.