Business News
State Controller John Chiang on Thursday announced a multi-state settlement with Nationwide Insurance Co. that requires the company to pay an estimated $3 million owed to California beneficiaries of life insurance policies.
Controller Chiang began auditing insurance company practices in 2008, revealing an industrywide practice of companies failing to pay death benefits to the beneficiaries of life insurance policies, despite having access to federal records indicating that policyholders had died, or direct confirmation from relatives of the deceased.
Instead, some companies would continue collecting premium payments from the deceased by drawing down the policies’ cash reserves.
Once the cash reserves were depleted, the company would cancel the policy.
However, since the audits of national companies began, Nationwide has been diligently contacting Californians who are owed benefits.
To date, Nationwide has paid more than $11 million in unclaimed death benefits on annuity contracts to at least 346 California beneficiaries.
The company has also paid more than $1.5 million in life insurance benefits to 131 California beneficiaries.
“I commend Nationwide for stepping up and doing right by its customers,” Chiang said. “People purchase life insurance policies for a reason: they want to make sure their loved ones are taken care of after they are gone, and it is deplorable that these companies refuse to pay beneficiaries by pretending they don’t know the policy holder has died.”
Unclaimed property laws are in place to protect private property from being drawn down by service or storage fees, lost during mergers or bankruptcies, or horded unlawfully by the business to use for its own purposes.
Administered by the controller, the California unclaimed property program generally provides that businesses send financial property and accounts to the state after three years of inactivity.
The controller maintains an unclaimed property database accessible by any California resident to identify all unclaimed property the state has collected on their behalf. The database is available at www.claimit.ca.gov .
Since the controller’s audits began, Nationwide is the fifth insurance company to settle with the state, resulting in approximately $108 million being returned to California beneficiaries.
Earlier this week, the controller signed a multi-state settlement with Forethought Group Inc., a company that sells end-of-life policies through funeral planners, which will return $25 million to California beneficiaries.
Thursday’s settlement requires Nationwide and its subsidiaries to do the following:
• Restore the full value of impacted accounts;
• Fully comply with California’s unclaimed property laws and cooperate with the Controller's efforts to reunite millions of dollars in death benefits and matured annuities and other policies with their owners or, in many cases, the owners' heirs;
• Use the date of death as reflected in the Social Security Administration’s Death Master File to establish the start of the three-year unclaimed property dormancy period.
• Pay the State of California three percent compounded interest on the value of the held amounts from 1995, or from the date of the owner’s death, whichever is later, for failure to comply with unclaimed property laws.
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SACRAMENTO – State Controller John Chiang this week released his monthly report covering California’s cash balance, receipts and disbursements in September 2012, showing that total revenues were $162.5 million below (2.2 percent) projections contained in the 2012-13 State budget.
“September’s numbers narrowly missed estimates in the State budget,” said Chiang. “Overall, revenues in the first quarter were 1 percent off projections, which indicates that the State’s cash position – its ability to pay bills in full and on time – is stable.”
Personal income taxes in the month of September rose $112.3 million above (2.6 percent) projections, while sales taxes were $87.5 million below (5.6 percent) projections.
Corporate taxes were also down for the month, coming in $74.8 million below (8.8 percent) projections.
September’s disbursements were $1.8 billion below projections. However, $1.5 billion of that number is attributable to an education payment that was released in July rather than on its originally-slated date last month.
The state ended the last fiscal year with a cash deficit of $9.6 billion.
As of Sept. 30, that cash deficit totaled $22.3 billion, and is being covered with $12.3 billion of internal borrowing (temporary loans from special funds), and $10 billion of external borrowing.
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