Portable Electronic Device Insurance
"Portable Electronic Device Insurance" means insurance which may be offered on a month to month or other periodic basis as a group or master property and casualty insurance policy coverage for portable electronic devices against any one or more of the following causes of loss: Portable electronic device insurance does not include a service contract.
ABOUT
Statutes
authorizing portable electronics insurance have either been enacted, are
pending, or have been proposed, in over 45 states and in Washington D.C.
This type of insurance is similar to traditional inland marine insurance and
covers a wide variety of electronic devices from a wide variety of causes of
loss. The definition of an included device is typically broad; it
certainly includes a digital camera, a laptop, a tablet computer, a smart
phone, and a handheld GPS unit.
The majority of
states have passed these portable electronics insurance statutes in the last
several years. North Carolina’s version was passed in 2011 and is
codified at N.C.G.S. § 58-44A-1, et seq. The goal of such legislation was
to balance consumer protection with insurance regulatory burden. The
statutes provide a layer of consumer protection and oversight to the selling of
these specialty consumer contracts – typically add-ons for an additional
monthly fee at the point of purchase – without subjecting the manufacturers and
retailers to the full burdens of becoming admitted insurance carriers or fully
licensed insurance producers.
North Carolina defines portable electronics insurance to be insurance
coverage for the repair or replacement of portable electronics which may include
coverage for loss, theft, and inoperability due to mechanical failure,
malfunction, damage, and other similar causes of loss. N.C.G.S. §
58-44A-1(5). This definition is similar to the definition adopted in many
other states. The statutes passed across the country clarify the
relationship between the seller of the insurance and the insurer issuing the
policy. See, e.g., N.C.G.S. §
58-44A-15. This includes which party will collect the premiums, what
disclosures must be made, how to file a claim, and what the termination
conditions are. See, e.g., N.C.G.S. §
58-44A-10(a)(1)-(5).
The legislation,
both in North Carolina and in all other states which have passed similar
statutes, was designed to rein in the “Wild West” atmosphere that included both
manufacturer-supplied contracts, retailer-supplied contracts, and third-party
contracts purporting to cover loss or damage to devices. Under nearly all
versions of the statute, sellers of portable electronics insurance are required
to have a limited lines insurance license, certain written materials must be
available to consumers, vendor employees must be trained according to certain
guidelines but are not required to each hold insurance producer licenses, and
requirements for billing, cancellation, and refunds are established. The
process for a business to obtain the limited lines insurance license in order
to sell portable electronics insurance is relatively simple and only requires
the payment of a fee, the submission of an application to the Commissioner of Insurance,
and a certification from the issuer of the insurance. N.C.G.S. §
58-44A-25.
North Carolina’s statute, like those in other states, require particular
types of written materials to be available where portable electronics insurance
is sold. N.C.G.S. § 58-44A-10. Additionally, the seller must
disclose that purchase of the insurance is not required to activate service on
the device and must summarize the coverage (including the identity of the
insurer, whether there is any deductible amount and what that amount is, what
are the benefits of coverage are, and the key terms and conditions of coverage
including whether it includes repair or replacement with either new or
remanufactured parts. N.C.G.S. § 58-44A-10(a)(3)-(5). The claims
process must also be explained to the customer. N.C.G.S. §
58-44A-10(b). The statute does not state anywhere that there are
limitations on remedies for aggrieved consumers. Unlike most states,
North Carolina does not include special termination requirements in the
statute. The adverse action terms – such as termination or modification of
coverage – are only required to be set forth in the policy but are not
established by statute. See, e.g., N.C.G.S. § 58-44A-10(d).
Providers or
sellers of portable electronics insurance are not exempt from either N.C.G.S. §
58-63-15 or N.C.G.S. § 75-1.1.
IT HELPS TO:
Nearly every
American consumer who has purchased a portable electronic device has been
offered an extended warranty or insurance plan, either from the manufacturer,
the retailer, or an aftermarket third-party seller. One purpose of the
portable electronics insurance regulations is to clarify that the purchase of
such a policy may duplicate existing coverage that the consumer already
has.
Among the mandatory disclosures, the seller is required to state that the
coverage offered may be a duplication of coverage which the insured already has
under a homeowner’s or renter’s policy or service contract. Prior to this
disclosure requirement, many purchasers of these contracts were paying
additional charges each month for insurance on their portable devices and may
not have realized that the device was already covered under their existing
policies.
Of course, there
are numerous valid reasons to purchase specific portable electronics insurance
even if those items are already covered under a policyholder’s homeowners or
renters policy. Among them, the deductible on a homeowner’s policy may be
higher than the value of the portable device and a separate policy avoids
having to file a small personal property claim against a homeowner’s
policy.
An additional point to consider is that while the legal definition of
portable electronics insurance includes coverage for theft or simply losing the
item ,many of the popular manufacturer-provided policies only provide coverage
for physical damage. In order to obtain coverage as broad as
legally-allowed -coverage that includes losing the device itself or having it
stolen - the consumer would have to consider either retailer or third-party
provided policies.
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