State Codes and Statutes

Statutes > New-york > Isc > Article-21 > 2108

§  2108.  Adjusters;  licensing and duties. (a) (1) Adjusters shall be  licensed as independent adjusters or as public adjusters.    (2)  The  superintendent  may  prescribe  the  types  of   independent  adjusters'  licenses  according to the kind or kinds of insurance claims  which the licensee is to be authorized to investigate and adjust.    (3) No adjuster shall act on behalf of an insurer unless  licensed  as  an  independent  adjuster,  and  no  adjuster  shall act on behalf of an  insured unless licensed as a public adjuster.    (4) No insurer, agent or other representative of an insurer shall  pay  any  fees  or  other  compensation  to  any person, firm, association or  corporation for acting as an independent adjuster except to  a  licensed  independent  adjuster  or  to  a  person  excepted  from  the  licensing  requirement pursuant to subsection  (g)  of  section  two  thousand  one  hundred one of this article.    (b)  The holder of a license under this section may act as an adjuster  without any other or additional license.    (c) (1) The superintendent may issue an independent adjuster's license  or a public adjuster's license  to  any  person,  firm,  association  or  corporation,  hereinafter  designated  as  licensee,  who,  or which, is  trustworthy and competent to act as an adjuster in  such  manner  as  to  safeguard  the  interests of the people of this state and who, or which,  has complied with the prerequisites herein prescribed.    (2) A license issued to a corporation may name as  sub-licensees  only  the  officers and directors of such corporation, and a license issued to  a firm or association may name  as  sub-licensees  only  the  individual  members  of such firm or association. Each sub-licensee named as such in  the license issued  to  a  firm,  association  or  corporation  must  be  qualified  to obtain a license as an independent adjuster or as a public  adjuster, as the case may be, and for each such sub-licensee a fee  must  be  paid  at  the times and at the rate hereinafter specified. Each such  sub-licensee shall be authorized, pursuant to such license, to act as an  independent adjuster or as a public adjuster, as the case may  be,  only  on behalf of the licensee.    (3)  Every  individual  applicant for a license under this section and  every proposed sub-licensee shall be eighteen years of age  or  over  at  the time of the issuance of such license.    (d) (1) Before any such license or any renewal thereof shall be issued  by  the  superintendent  there  shall  be  filed in his office a written  application therefor. Such application shall be in the form or forms and  supplements and contain information the superintendent prescribes.    (2) Each person or individual signing  such  application  shall,  with  such  application,  submit to the superintendent fingerprints of his two  hands recorded in such manner as may be specified by the  superintendent  or  his  authorized representative. Before approving such application it  shall be the duty of the superintendent or his authorized representative  to compare such fingerprints with fingerprints filed with  the  division  of criminal justice services. Such fingerprints may also be submitted to  the  federal  bureau  of  investigation  for a national criminal history  record check.    (3) No such license shall be issued to any person who  has  ever  been  convicted  of  a felony, or of any crime or offense involving fraudulent  or dishonest practices; nor shall a licensee under this  section  employ  any  person  who  has ever been convicted of a felony or such a crime or  offense.    (4) This subsection  shall  not  prevent  the  employment  of  or  the  issuance  of  a license to any person who, subsequent to his conviction,  shall have received executive pardon therefor removing this  disability,  or  who  has  received  a  certificate  of relief from disabilities or acertificate of good conduct pursuant  to  article  twenty-three  of  the  correction  law  to  remove the disability under this section because of  such conviction or previous license revocation occasioned thereby.    (5)  Such  application  shall  be  approved,  as  to  each  person  or  individual so signing the same, by not less than five reputable citizens  of the community in which such applicant resides or transacts  business,  each  of  whom  shall certify that he has personally known the person or  individual for a period of at least five years prior to  the  filing  of  such application, that he has read such application and believes each of  the  statements  made therein to be true, that such person is honest, of  good character and competent, and not related or connected to the person  so certifying by blood or marriage. The certificate of approval shall be  subscribed by such reputable citizens and affirmed by them as true under  the penalties of perjury.    (e)  (1)  The  superintendent  shall,  in  order  to   determine   the  trustworthiness  and  competency  to  act  as  a public adjuster of each  individual  applicant  for  such   license,   and   of   each   proposed  sub-licensee,  except  in  the  case of a renewal license, require every  such  individual  to  take  and  pass,  to  the  satisfaction   of   the  superintendent,  a  personal written examination. No individual shall be  deemed qualified to take the examination without having demonstrated  by  evidence  satisfactory  to  the  superintendent  that  (A) the applicant  possesses a minimum of one year experience in  the  insurance  business,  with  involvement  in  sales, underwriting or claims or other experience  considered sufficient  by  the  superintendent,  or  (B)  the  applicant  successfully  completed  forty  hours  of  formal  training in a course,  program of instruction or seminars approved by the superintendent.    (2) The superintendent may, in his discretion and on such terms as  he  prescribes, dispense with such examination in the case of any individual  applicant  or  proposed  sub-licensee  who  shall previously have held a  public adjuster's license issued subsequent to January  first,  nineteen  hundred thirty-six.    (f)   (1)   The  superintendent  shall,  in  order  to  determine  the  trustworthiness and competency to act as an independent adjuster of each  individual  applicant  for  such   license,   and   of   each   proposed  sub-licensee,  except  in  the  case of a renewal license, require every  such  individual  to  take  and  pass,  to  the  satisfaction   of   the  superintendent,  a  personal written examination. The superintendent may  prescribe the types of written examinations according  to  the  kind  or  kinds  of  insurance  claims  which  the  applicant is to be licensed to  investigate and adjust.    (2) Any person who at any time served with the  armed  forces  of  the  United  States,  and  who  immediately  prior  to entering such military  service had been continuously engaged in bona  fide  operation  in  this  state  as an independent adjuster for a period of five years, may within  one year after the termination of such military service  file  with  the  superintendent  an  application  in such form as he prescribes, and upon  the payment of  the  requisite  license  fee  may  be  licensed  by  the  superintendent as an independent adjuster without being required to take  and pass such examination.    (3)  The  superintendent  may also, in the superintendent's discretion  and on such terms the  superintendent  prescribes,  dispense  with  such  examination  in  the  case  of  any  individual  applicant  or  proposed  sub-licensee who shall previously have held  an  independent  adjuster's  license  provided  the  applicant applies within two years following the  date of termination of such license.    (g) The superintendent may, in his discretion require an applicant for  a license under this section to present evidence, in  such  form  as  heprescribes, that such applicant has been employed, for a period which he  deems  reasonable,  by  an  insurer, an independent adjuster or a public  adjuster, in the performance  of  duties  which  in  his  opinion  would  provide  the  applicant with a satisfactory preliminary training for the  duties and responsibilities which would devolve upon him as  a  licensee  under this section.    (h)  (1)  Any  person  who  has  had at least five years experience in  adjusting claims as an employee of an authorized insurer  and  has  made  application  for  a  license  as  an independent adjuster, or any person  holding a valid estimator's license issued by the commissioner of  motor  vehicles  and  has  made  application  for  a  license as an independent  adjuster within  ninety  days  of  the  expiration  of  the  estimator's  license,  may  file  with  the  superintendent,  in  such  form  as  the  superintendent prescribes, a written application for a temporary  permit  to  adjust  claims, during the pendency of the application for a license  as an independent adjuster, as:    (i) an employee of a licensed independent adjuster; or    (ii) in the case of an auto body repair estimator, an employee  of  an  authorized  insurer  or  any  adjustment bureau or association owned and  maintained by insurers to  adjust  or  investigate  motor  vehicle  body  damage losses.    (2)  Notwithstanding the requirement of subsection (f) of this section  that each individual applicant for an independent adjuster's license  or  sub-license  shall take and pass a personal written examination in order  to satisfy the superintendent as to trustworthiness and competency,  the  superintendent may in the superintendent's discretion, if satisfied that  the  person applying for such temporary permit has in all other respects  met the requirements of this section with respect to  the  licensing  of  independent  adjusters  and  is  qualified by training and experience to  adjust claims  as  an  employee  of  a  licensed  independent  adjuster,  authorized  insurer,  or  any adjustment bureau or association owned and  maintained by insurers to  adjust  or  investigate  motor  vehicle  body  damage  losses,  issue  such  temporary  permit to be effective for such  period of time as the superintendent may  specify  therein  but,  in  no  event,  for  a  period  in  excess  of  one  hundred  twenty  days.  The  superintendent may summarily suspend  or  revoke  any  temporary  permit  issued  pursuant  to  this subsection upon ten days notice in writing to  the permittee of the superintendent's intention to do so,  which  notice  shall   be  given  in  accordance  with  the  applicable  provisions  of  subsections (a) and (d) of section three hundred three of this chapter.    (i) (1) At the time of application for every  adjuster's  license  and  for  every renewal thereof, there shall be paid to the superintendent by  each individual applicant and by each proposed  sub-licensee  a  fee  of  fifty  dollars  for  each  year or fraction of a year in which a license  shall be valid; except that amounts paid to the  commissioner  of  motor  vehicles   pursuant   to  subdivision  five  of  section  three  hundred  ninety-eight-d of the vehicle and traffic law, by any person who held an  auto body repair estimator license  prior  to  January  first,  nineteen  hundred ninety-six shall be considered by the superintendent.    (2)  No  license  fee  shall be required of any person who served as a  member of the armed forces of the United States  at  any  time  and  who  shall have been discharged, under conditions other than dishonorable, in  a current licensing period, for the duration of such period.    (3) A license fee of fifty dollars for each year or fraction of a year  in  which a license shall be valid for an independent adjuster's license  shall cover any  one  or  more  of  the  various  types  of  independent  adjusters' licenses issued by the department.(4) Every individual applying to take any written examination shall at  the  time  of  applying  therefor  pay  to the superintendent, or at the  discretion of the superintendent, directly to any organization  that  is  under contract to provide examination services, an examination fee of an  amount  which is the actual documented administrative cost of conducting  said qualifying examination as certified by the superintendent from time  to time. An examination fee represents an administrative expense and  is  not  refundable.  If,  however, the applicant or a proposed sub-licensee  should withdraw his or its application or the superintendent should deny  his or its application before the license applied  for  is  issued,  the  superintendent  may refund the fee paid by the applicant for the license  applied for, excepting any examination fees required  pursuant  to  this  subsection.    (j) (1) Every adjuster's license issued pursuant to this section shall  be  for  a  term  expiring  on  the thirty-first day of December of even  numbered years, and may be renewed for the ensuing  two  calendar  years  upon  the  filing  of  an  application in conformity with subsection (d)  hereof.    (2) If an application for a renewal license shall have been filed with  the superintendent by December thirty-first of the year  of  expiration,  the license sought to be renewed shall continue in full force and effect  either  until  the issuance by the superintendent of the renewal license  applied for or until five  days  after  the  superintendent  shall  have  refused  to  issue  such  renewal license and shall have given notice of  such refusal to the applicant and to all proposed sub-licensees named in  such application.    (3) If such refusal is based on any grounds other than failure to pass  a written examination and if the applicant or any proposed  sub-licensee  shall  within  thirty  days  after  such  notice  is  given  notify  the  superintendent of his or its request for a hearing on such refusal,  the  superintendent  shall  within  a  reasonable  time after receipt of such  notice grant such a hearing, and he may, in  his  discretion,  reinstate  such license.    (k) Any firm, association or corporation licensed as an adjuster under  this  section  may at any time make an application to the superintendent  for the  issuance  of  a  supplemental  license  authorizing  additional  officers  or directors of such corporation or additional members of such  firm or association, as the case may be, to act as  sub-licensees,  and,  if  the  requirements of this section are fully complied with as to each  of such proposed sub-licensees, the superintendent may  thereupon  issue  to  such  licensee a supplemental license naming such additional person,  or persons, as sub-licensees.    (l) (1) No adjuster's license or renewal license shall  be  issued  to  any  applicant  unless  there shall be on file with the superintendent a  bond, executed by such the applicant and by approved  sureties,  in  the  penal   sum   of  one  thousand  dollars  conditioned  on  the  faithful  performance by such licensee and by  all  sub-licensees  named  in  such  license, of their duties as such adjusters.    (2) Such bond shall be approved as to form by the attorney general and  as to sufficiency of security by the superintendent.    (3)  Such  bond  shall  be  made  to  the  state of New York and shall  specifically authorize recovery by the state of the penal  sum  provided  therein  in case the adjuster or any sub-licensee shall have been guilty  of fraudulent or dishonest practices in connection with the  transaction  of  his  or  its  business as such adjuster or shall have been convicted  under any of the sections contained in article one hundred fifty of  the  penal law.(m)  If an application for a license under this section be rejected by  the superintendent, he shall forthwith give notice to the applicant,  or  to the licensee, as the case may be.    (n)    Notwithstanding   the   provisions   of   this   section,   the  superintendent, in order to facilitate the settlement  of  claims  under  insurance  contracts involving widespread property losses arising out of  a conflagration or catastrophe common to all such losses,  may  issue  a  temporary permit for a term not exceeding one hundred twenty days to any  person, whether he be a resident of this state or a non-resident, to act  as  an  independent  adjuster  on  behalf  of  an  authorized insurer or  insurers, provided any such insurer shall execute and file in the office  of the superintendent a written application for the permit in  the  form  prescribed  by  the superintendent, which application shall contain such  information as he may require and shall certify that  the  person  named  therein  to  be  designated  in  the  temporary  permit  is qualified by  experience  and  training  to  adjust  claims  arising  under  insurance  contracts   issued  by  any  insurer.  The  superintendent  may  in  his  discretion renew such permit for an additional term or terms as  may  be  necessary to adjust such claims.    (o)  No  licensee  shall  in  connection  with  the transaction of his  business as an adjuster make any misrepresentation of  facts  or  advise  any person on questions of law.    (p)  No adjuster shall have any right to compensation from any insured  for or on account of services rendered  to  such  insured  as  a  public  adjuster  unless  such  right  to  compensation  is based upon a written  memorandum, signed by the party to be charged, and specifying or clearly  defining the amount or extent of such compensation.  The  superintendent  shall establish and prescribe regulations:    (1)  to  provide  for  a  standard  form  and  terms  of  said written  memorandum for compensation, including the maximum amount to be charged;    (2) to provide for compliance  with  article  ten-A  of  the  personal  property law relating to door to door sales; however, for the purpose of  this  section, "door to door sale" in addition to the definition thereof  contained in subdivision one of section four hundred twenty-six  of  the  personal  property  law,  shall  include  any contract entered into by a  public adjuster to adjust losses;    (3) to provide for maintenance of appropriate books and records to  be  maintained by public adjusters which shall be kept subject to inspection  and examination by the superintendent; and    (4) to provide for such other regulations that are deemed necessary by  the  superintendent  for  the  proper and adequate supervision of public  adjusters.    (q) The superintendent may issue a  replacement  for  a  currently  in  force  license which has been lost or destroyed. Before such replacement  license shall be issued, there shall be on file in  the  office  of  the  superintendent  a  written  application  for  such  replacement license,  affirming under penalty of perjury that the original  license  has  been  lost or destroyed, together with a fee of fifteen dollars.    (r) (1) The following continuing education requirements shall apply to  resident and non-resident persons licensed as public adjusters.    (2) Resident and non-resident persons licensed as public adjusters and  any person previously so licensed whose license was not in effect on the  effective  date  of  this  subsection  and  who  has  subsequently  been  relicensed pursuant to the provisions of this article, shall  biennially  satisfactorily  complete  such courses or programs as may be approved by  the superintendent, as follows:    (A) Any person holding a license as a public  adjuster  shall,  during  each  full biennial licensing period, satisfactorily complete courses orprograms of instruction or attend seminars as may  be  approved  by  the  superintendent equivalent to fifteen credit hours of instruction.    (B)  During  the  same  calendar  year  biennial  licensing  period, a  licensee may use accumulated continuing education credits  to  meet  the  requirements  of  similar classes of licenses including those authorized  by subsection (b) of section two thousand one hundred three, section two  thousand one hundred four, section two thousand  one  hundred  seven  of  this  article with respect to general insurance consultants, and section  two thousand one hundred eight of this article with  respect  to  public  adjusters.    (C)  Excess  credit  hours  accumulated  during any biennial licensing  period shall not carry forward to the next biennial licensing period for  that same class of license.    (3) (A) The courses or programs of instruction successfully completed,  which shall  be  deemed  to  meet  the  superintendent's  standards  for  continuing education shall be:    (i)  Courses,  programs  of  instruction  or  seminars, approved as to  method and content by  the  superintendent,  covering  portions  of  the  principal  branches  of  insurance  related  to  the  kinds of insurance  covered  by  the  public  adjusting  license,  and  given  by  a  degree  conferring college or university whose curriculum is registered with the  state  education  department  at  the  time the person takes the course,  whether such course be given as part of such curriculum  or  separately,  or  by any other institution, association, trade association or insurer,  which maintains equivalent standards of instruction and which shall have  been approved for such purpose by the superintendent.    (ii) Continuing  education  as  required  by  the  state  in  which  a  non-resident  licensee  resides  and  maintains  an office, provided the  superintendent deems them equivalent to New  York  continuing  education  requirements.  If  the  state in which the non-resident licensee resides  and maintains an office has no continuing education requirements, or the  superintendent does not deem them equivalent, the licensee must  satisfy  New York continuing education requirements.    (B)  The  number  of  credit  hours assigned to each of the courses or  programs of instruction set forth in paragraph one  of  this  subsection  shall be determined by the superintendent.    (4)  A  person  who  teaches any approved course of instruction or who  lectures at any approved seminar, and who is subject to these continuing  education requirements shall be granted the same number of credit  hours  as  would be granted to a person taking and successfully completing such  course, seminar or program, provided that such  credit  hours  shall  be  credited  only  once  per  approved course during any biennial licensing  period.    (5) Every person subject to these  continuing  education  requirements  shall  furnish,  in  a  form satisfactory to the superintendent, written  certification attesting to the course or programs of  instruction  taken  and   successfully  completed  by  such  person,  and  executed  by  the  sponsoring organization or its authorizing representative.    (6) (A) Any person failing to  meet  applicable  continuing  education  requirements shall not be eligible to renew the license.    (B)  Any person whose license was not renewed shall not be eligible to  become relicensed during the next biennial licensing period  until  that  person  has  demonstrated to the satisfaction of the superintendent that  continuing education requirements for the last biennial licensing period  were met.    (C) Any person whose license was not renewed pursuant to  subparagraph  (A)  of  this paragraph, who accumulates sufficient credit hours for the  prior licensing period to qualify for relicensing in the biennial periodfollowing such non-renewal, may not apply those same credit hours toward  the continuing education requirements for the current biennial licensing  period.    (7)  (A)  Any entity eligible to provide continuing education courses,  programs of instruction, or seminars shall  file  for  approval  by  the  superintendent  on  a  biennial  basis,  to  conform  with  its areas of  instruction, a provider organization application and a course submission  application for each course, program, and seminar.    (B) The provider organization application shall include the  names  of  all  instructors  to be used during the contract period, and instructors  may be added during the  period  by  notifying  the  superintendent  and  paying the appropriate filing fee.    (C)  The  completed applications shall be returned in a timely manner,  as specified by the superintendent with a non-refundable filing  fee  of  two hundred dollars per organization, fifty dollars per course, program,  and seminar, and fifty dollars per instructor.    (D)  Approval  of  the  application  shall be at the discretion of the  superintendent.    (8) Each licensee shall pay a biennial fee of ten dollars per license,  for continuing education certificate filing and  recording  charges,  to  the superintendent, or, at the direction of the superintendent, directly  to  an  organization  under  contract  to  provide  continuing education  administrative services.

State Codes and Statutes

Statutes > New-york > Isc > Article-21 > 2108

§  2108.  Adjusters;  licensing and duties. (a) (1) Adjusters shall be  licensed as independent adjusters or as public adjusters.    (2)  The  superintendent  may  prescribe  the  types  of   independent  adjusters'  licenses  according to the kind or kinds of insurance claims  which the licensee is to be authorized to investigate and adjust.    (3) No adjuster shall act on behalf of an insurer unless  licensed  as  an  independent  adjuster,  and  no  adjuster  shall act on behalf of an  insured unless licensed as a public adjuster.    (4) No insurer, agent or other representative of an insurer shall  pay  any  fees  or  other  compensation  to  any person, firm, association or  corporation for acting as an independent adjuster except to  a  licensed  independent  adjuster  or  to  a  person  excepted  from  the  licensing  requirement pursuant to subsection  (g)  of  section  two  thousand  one  hundred one of this article.    (b)  The holder of a license under this section may act as an adjuster  without any other or additional license.    (c) (1) The superintendent may issue an independent adjuster's license  or a public adjuster's license  to  any  person,  firm,  association  or  corporation,  hereinafter  designated  as  licensee,  who,  or which, is  trustworthy and competent to act as an adjuster in  such  manner  as  to  safeguard  the  interests of the people of this state and who, or which,  has complied with the prerequisites herein prescribed.    (2) A license issued to a corporation may name as  sub-licensees  only  the  officers and directors of such corporation, and a license issued to  a firm or association may name  as  sub-licensees  only  the  individual  members  of such firm or association. Each sub-licensee named as such in  the license issued  to  a  firm,  association  or  corporation  must  be  qualified  to obtain a license as an independent adjuster or as a public  adjuster, as the case may be, and for each such sub-licensee a fee  must  be  paid  at  the times and at the rate hereinafter specified. Each such  sub-licensee shall be authorized, pursuant to such license, to act as an  independent adjuster or as a public adjuster, as the case may  be,  only  on behalf of the licensee.    (3)  Every  individual  applicant for a license under this section and  every proposed sub-licensee shall be eighteen years of age  or  over  at  the time of the issuance of such license.    (d) (1) Before any such license or any renewal thereof shall be issued  by  the  superintendent  there  shall  be  filed in his office a written  application therefor. Such application shall be in the form or forms and  supplements and contain information the superintendent prescribes.    (2) Each person or individual signing  such  application  shall,  with  such  application,  submit to the superintendent fingerprints of his two  hands recorded in such manner as may be specified by the  superintendent  or  his  authorized representative. Before approving such application it  shall be the duty of the superintendent or his authorized representative  to compare such fingerprints with fingerprints filed with  the  division  of criminal justice services. Such fingerprints may also be submitted to  the  federal  bureau  of  investigation  for a national criminal history  record check.    (3) No such license shall be issued to any person who  has  ever  been  convicted  of  a felony, or of any crime or offense involving fraudulent  or dishonest practices; nor shall a licensee under this  section  employ  any  person  who  has ever been convicted of a felony or such a crime or  offense.    (4) This subsection  shall  not  prevent  the  employment  of  or  the  issuance  of  a license to any person who, subsequent to his conviction,  shall have received executive pardon therefor removing this  disability,  or  who  has  received  a  certificate  of relief from disabilities or acertificate of good conduct pursuant  to  article  twenty-three  of  the  correction  law  to  remove the disability under this section because of  such conviction or previous license revocation occasioned thereby.    (5)  Such  application  shall  be  approved,  as  to  each  person  or  individual so signing the same, by not less than five reputable citizens  of the community in which such applicant resides or transacts  business,  each  of  whom  shall certify that he has personally known the person or  individual for a period of at least five years prior to  the  filing  of  such application, that he has read such application and believes each of  the  statements  made therein to be true, that such person is honest, of  good character and competent, and not related or connected to the person  so certifying by blood or marriage. The certificate of approval shall be  subscribed by such reputable citizens and affirmed by them as true under  the penalties of perjury.    (e)  (1)  The  superintendent  shall,  in  order  to   determine   the  trustworthiness  and  competency  to  act  as  a public adjuster of each  individual  applicant  for  such   license,   and   of   each   proposed  sub-licensee,  except  in  the  case of a renewal license, require every  such  individual  to  take  and  pass,  to  the  satisfaction   of   the  superintendent,  a  personal written examination. No individual shall be  deemed qualified to take the examination without having demonstrated  by  evidence  satisfactory  to  the  superintendent  that  (A) the applicant  possesses a minimum of one year experience in  the  insurance  business,  with  involvement  in  sales, underwriting or claims or other experience  considered sufficient  by  the  superintendent,  or  (B)  the  applicant  successfully  completed  forty  hours  of  formal  training in a course,  program of instruction or seminars approved by the superintendent.    (2) The superintendent may, in his discretion and on such terms as  he  prescribes, dispense with such examination in the case of any individual  applicant  or  proposed  sub-licensee  who  shall previously have held a  public adjuster's license issued subsequent to January  first,  nineteen  hundred thirty-six.    (f)   (1)   The  superintendent  shall,  in  order  to  determine  the  trustworthiness and competency to act as an independent adjuster of each  individual  applicant  for  such   license,   and   of   each   proposed  sub-licensee,  except  in  the  case of a renewal license, require every  such  individual  to  take  and  pass,  to  the  satisfaction   of   the  superintendent,  a  personal written examination. The superintendent may  prescribe the types of written examinations according  to  the  kind  or  kinds  of  insurance  claims  which  the  applicant is to be licensed to  investigate and adjust.    (2) Any person who at any time served with the  armed  forces  of  the  United  States,  and  who  immediately  prior  to entering such military  service had been continuously engaged in bona  fide  operation  in  this  state  as an independent adjuster for a period of five years, may within  one year after the termination of such military service  file  with  the  superintendent  an  application  in such form as he prescribes, and upon  the payment of  the  requisite  license  fee  may  be  licensed  by  the  superintendent as an independent adjuster without being required to take  and pass such examination.    (3)  The  superintendent  may also, in the superintendent's discretion  and on such terms the  superintendent  prescribes,  dispense  with  such  examination  in  the  case  of  any  individual  applicant  or  proposed  sub-licensee who shall previously have held  an  independent  adjuster's  license  provided  the  applicant applies within two years following the  date of termination of such license.    (g) The superintendent may, in his discretion require an applicant for  a license under this section to present evidence, in  such  form  as  heprescribes, that such applicant has been employed, for a period which he  deems  reasonable,  by  an  insurer, an independent adjuster or a public  adjuster, in the performance  of  duties  which  in  his  opinion  would  provide  the  applicant with a satisfactory preliminary training for the  duties and responsibilities which would devolve upon him as  a  licensee  under this section.    (h)  (1)  Any  person  who  has  had at least five years experience in  adjusting claims as an employee of an authorized insurer  and  has  made  application  for  a  license  as  an independent adjuster, or any person  holding a valid estimator's license issued by the commissioner of  motor  vehicles  and  has  made  application  for  a  license as an independent  adjuster within  ninety  days  of  the  expiration  of  the  estimator's  license,  may  file  with  the  superintendent,  in  such  form  as  the  superintendent prescribes, a written application for a temporary  permit  to  adjust  claims, during the pendency of the application for a license  as an independent adjuster, as:    (i) an employee of a licensed independent adjuster; or    (ii) in the case of an auto body repair estimator, an employee  of  an  authorized  insurer  or  any  adjustment bureau or association owned and  maintained by insurers to  adjust  or  investigate  motor  vehicle  body  damage losses.    (2)  Notwithstanding the requirement of subsection (f) of this section  that each individual applicant for an independent adjuster's license  or  sub-license  shall take and pass a personal written examination in order  to satisfy the superintendent as to trustworthiness and competency,  the  superintendent may in the superintendent's discretion, if satisfied that  the  person applying for such temporary permit has in all other respects  met the requirements of this section with respect to  the  licensing  of  independent  adjusters  and  is  qualified by training and experience to  adjust claims  as  an  employee  of  a  licensed  independent  adjuster,  authorized  insurer,  or  any adjustment bureau or association owned and  maintained by insurers to  adjust  or  investigate  motor  vehicle  body  damage  losses,  issue  such  temporary  permit to be effective for such  period of time as the superintendent may  specify  therein  but,  in  no  event,  for  a  period  in  excess  of  one  hundred  twenty  days.  The  superintendent may summarily suspend  or  revoke  any  temporary  permit  issued  pursuant  to  this subsection upon ten days notice in writing to  the permittee of the superintendent's intention to do so,  which  notice  shall   be  given  in  accordance  with  the  applicable  provisions  of  subsections (a) and (d) of section three hundred three of this chapter.    (i) (1) At the time of application for every  adjuster's  license  and  for  every renewal thereof, there shall be paid to the superintendent by  each individual applicant and by each proposed  sub-licensee  a  fee  of  fifty  dollars  for  each  year or fraction of a year in which a license  shall be valid; except that amounts paid to the  commissioner  of  motor  vehicles   pursuant   to  subdivision  five  of  section  three  hundred  ninety-eight-d of the vehicle and traffic law, by any person who held an  auto body repair estimator license  prior  to  January  first,  nineteen  hundred ninety-six shall be considered by the superintendent.    (2)  No  license  fee  shall be required of any person who served as a  member of the armed forces of the United States  at  any  time  and  who  shall have been discharged, under conditions other than dishonorable, in  a current licensing period, for the duration of such period.    (3) A license fee of fifty dollars for each year or fraction of a year  in  which a license shall be valid for an independent adjuster's license  shall cover any  one  or  more  of  the  various  types  of  independent  adjusters' licenses issued by the department.(4) Every individual applying to take any written examination shall at  the  time  of  applying  therefor  pay  to the superintendent, or at the  discretion of the superintendent, directly to any organization  that  is  under contract to provide examination services, an examination fee of an  amount  which is the actual documented administrative cost of conducting  said qualifying examination as certified by the superintendent from time  to time. An examination fee represents an administrative expense and  is  not  refundable.  If,  however, the applicant or a proposed sub-licensee  should withdraw his or its application or the superintendent should deny  his or its application before the license applied  for  is  issued,  the  superintendent  may refund the fee paid by the applicant for the license  applied for, excepting any examination fees required  pursuant  to  this  subsection.    (j) (1) Every adjuster's license issued pursuant to this section shall  be  for  a  term  expiring  on  the thirty-first day of December of even  numbered years, and may be renewed for the ensuing  two  calendar  years  upon  the  filing  of  an  application in conformity with subsection (d)  hereof.    (2) If an application for a renewal license shall have been filed with  the superintendent by December thirty-first of the year  of  expiration,  the license sought to be renewed shall continue in full force and effect  either  until  the issuance by the superintendent of the renewal license  applied for or until five  days  after  the  superintendent  shall  have  refused  to  issue  such  renewal license and shall have given notice of  such refusal to the applicant and to all proposed sub-licensees named in  such application.    (3) If such refusal is based on any grounds other than failure to pass  a written examination and if the applicant or any proposed  sub-licensee  shall  within  thirty  days  after  such  notice  is  given  notify  the  superintendent of his or its request for a hearing on such refusal,  the  superintendent  shall  within  a  reasonable  time after receipt of such  notice grant such a hearing, and he may, in  his  discretion,  reinstate  such license.    (k) Any firm, association or corporation licensed as an adjuster under  this  section  may at any time make an application to the superintendent  for the  issuance  of  a  supplemental  license  authorizing  additional  officers  or directors of such corporation or additional members of such  firm or association, as the case may be, to act as  sub-licensees,  and,  if  the  requirements of this section are fully complied with as to each  of such proposed sub-licensees, the superintendent may  thereupon  issue  to  such  licensee a supplemental license naming such additional person,  or persons, as sub-licensees.    (l) (1) No adjuster's license or renewal license shall  be  issued  to  any  applicant  unless  there shall be on file with the superintendent a  bond, executed by such the applicant and by approved  sureties,  in  the  penal   sum   of  one  thousand  dollars  conditioned  on  the  faithful  performance by such licensee and by  all  sub-licensees  named  in  such  license, of their duties as such adjusters.    (2) Such bond shall be approved as to form by the attorney general and  as to sufficiency of security by the superintendent.    (3)  Such  bond  shall  be  made  to  the  state of New York and shall  specifically authorize recovery by the state of the penal  sum  provided  therein  in case the adjuster or any sub-licensee shall have been guilty  of fraudulent or dishonest practices in connection with the  transaction  of  his  or  its  business as such adjuster or shall have been convicted  under any of the sections contained in article one hundred fifty of  the  penal law.(m)  If an application for a license under this section be rejected by  the superintendent, he shall forthwith give notice to the applicant,  or  to the licensee, as the case may be.    (n)    Notwithstanding   the   provisions   of   this   section,   the  superintendent, in order to facilitate the settlement  of  claims  under  insurance  contracts involving widespread property losses arising out of  a conflagration or catastrophe common to all such losses,  may  issue  a  temporary permit for a term not exceeding one hundred twenty days to any  person, whether he be a resident of this state or a non-resident, to act  as  an  independent  adjuster  on  behalf  of  an  authorized insurer or  insurers, provided any such insurer shall execute and file in the office  of the superintendent a written application for the permit in  the  form  prescribed  by  the superintendent, which application shall contain such  information as he may require and shall certify that  the  person  named  therein  to  be  designated  in  the  temporary  permit  is qualified by  experience  and  training  to  adjust  claims  arising  under  insurance  contracts   issued  by  any  insurer.  The  superintendent  may  in  his  discretion renew such permit for an additional term or terms as  may  be  necessary to adjust such claims.    (o)  No  licensee  shall  in  connection  with  the transaction of his  business as an adjuster make any misrepresentation of  facts  or  advise  any person on questions of law.    (p)  No adjuster shall have any right to compensation from any insured  for or on account of services rendered  to  such  insured  as  a  public  adjuster  unless  such  right  to  compensation  is based upon a written  memorandum, signed by the party to be charged, and specifying or clearly  defining the amount or extent of such compensation.  The  superintendent  shall establish and prescribe regulations:    (1)  to  provide  for  a  standard  form  and  terms  of  said written  memorandum for compensation, including the maximum amount to be charged;    (2) to provide for compliance  with  article  ten-A  of  the  personal  property law relating to door to door sales; however, for the purpose of  this  section, "door to door sale" in addition to the definition thereof  contained in subdivision one of section four hundred twenty-six  of  the  personal  property  law,  shall  include  any contract entered into by a  public adjuster to adjust losses;    (3) to provide for maintenance of appropriate books and records to  be  maintained by public adjusters which shall be kept subject to inspection  and examination by the superintendent; and    (4) to provide for such other regulations that are deemed necessary by  the  superintendent  for  the  proper and adequate supervision of public  adjusters.    (q) The superintendent may issue a  replacement  for  a  currently  in  force  license which has been lost or destroyed. Before such replacement  license shall be issued, there shall be on file in  the  office  of  the  superintendent  a  written  application  for  such  replacement license,  affirming under penalty of perjury that the original  license  has  been  lost or destroyed, together with a fee of fifteen dollars.    (r) (1) The following continuing education requirements shall apply to  resident and non-resident persons licensed as public adjusters.    (2) Resident and non-resident persons licensed as public adjusters and  any person previously so licensed whose license was not in effect on the  effective  date  of  this  subsection  and  who  has  subsequently  been  relicensed pursuant to the provisions of this article, shall  biennially  satisfactorily  complete  such courses or programs as may be approved by  the superintendent, as follows:    (A) Any person holding a license as a public  adjuster  shall,  during  each  full biennial licensing period, satisfactorily complete courses orprograms of instruction or attend seminars as may  be  approved  by  the  superintendent equivalent to fifteen credit hours of instruction.    (B)  During  the  same  calendar  year  biennial  licensing  period, a  licensee may use accumulated continuing education credits  to  meet  the  requirements  of  similar classes of licenses including those authorized  by subsection (b) of section two thousand one hundred three, section two  thousand one hundred four, section two thousand  one  hundred  seven  of  this  article with respect to general insurance consultants, and section  two thousand one hundred eight of this article with  respect  to  public  adjusters.    (C)  Excess  credit  hours  accumulated  during any biennial licensing  period shall not carry forward to the next biennial licensing period for  that same class of license.    (3) (A) The courses or programs of instruction successfully completed,  which shall  be  deemed  to  meet  the  superintendent's  standards  for  continuing education shall be:    (i)  Courses,  programs  of  instruction  or  seminars, approved as to  method and content by  the  superintendent,  covering  portions  of  the  principal  branches  of  insurance  related  to  the  kinds of insurance  covered  by  the  public  adjusting  license,  and  given  by  a  degree  conferring college or university whose curriculum is registered with the  state  education  department  at  the  time the person takes the course,  whether such course be given as part of such curriculum  or  separately,  or  by any other institution, association, trade association or insurer,  which maintains equivalent standards of instruction and which shall have  been approved for such purpose by the superintendent.    (ii) Continuing  education  as  required  by  the  state  in  which  a  non-resident  licensee  resides  and  maintains  an office, provided the  superintendent deems them equivalent to New  York  continuing  education  requirements.  If  the  state in which the non-resident licensee resides  and maintains an office has no continuing education requirements, or the  superintendent does not deem them equivalent, the licensee must  satisfy  New York continuing education requirements.    (B)  The  number  of  credit  hours assigned to each of the courses or  programs of instruction set forth in paragraph one  of  this  subsection  shall be determined by the superintendent.    (4)  A  person  who  teaches any approved course of instruction or who  lectures at any approved seminar, and who is subject to these continuing  education requirements shall be granted the same number of credit  hours  as  would be granted to a person taking and successfully completing such  course, seminar or program, provided that such  credit  hours  shall  be  credited  only  once  per  approved course during any biennial licensing  period.    (5) Every person subject to these  continuing  education  requirements  shall  furnish,  in  a  form satisfactory to the superintendent, written  certification attesting to the course or programs of  instruction  taken  and   successfully  completed  by  such  person,  and  executed  by  the  sponsoring organization or its authorizing representative.    (6) (A) Any person failing to  meet  applicable  continuing  education  requirements shall not be eligible to renew the license.    (B)  Any person whose license was not renewed shall not be eligible to  become relicensed during the next biennial licensing period  until  that  person  has  demonstrated to the satisfaction of the superintendent that  continuing education requirements for the last biennial licensing period  were met.    (C) Any person whose license was not renewed pursuant to  subparagraph  (A)  of  this paragraph, who accumulates sufficient credit hours for the  prior licensing period to qualify for relicensing in the biennial periodfollowing such non-renewal, may not apply those same credit hours toward  the continuing education requirements for the current biennial licensing  period.    (7)  (A)  Any entity eligible to provide continuing education courses,  programs of instruction, or seminars shall  file  for  approval  by  the  superintendent  on  a  biennial  basis,  to  conform  with  its areas of  instruction, a provider organization application and a course submission  application for each course, program, and seminar.    (B) The provider organization application shall include the  names  of  all  instructors  to be used during the contract period, and instructors  may be added during the  period  by  notifying  the  superintendent  and  paying the appropriate filing fee.    (C)  The  completed applications shall be returned in a timely manner,  as specified by the superintendent with a non-refundable filing  fee  of  two hundred dollars per organization, fifty dollars per course, program,  and seminar, and fifty dollars per instructor.    (D)  Approval  of  the  application  shall be at the discretion of the  superintendent.    (8) Each licensee shall pay a biennial fee of ten dollars per license,  for continuing education certificate filing and  recording  charges,  to  the superintendent, or, at the direction of the superintendent, directly  to  an  organization  under  contract  to  provide  continuing education  administrative services.

State Codes and Statutes

State Codes and Statutes

Statutes > New-york > Isc > Article-21 > 2108

§  2108.  Adjusters;  licensing and duties. (a) (1) Adjusters shall be  licensed as independent adjusters or as public adjusters.    (2)  The  superintendent  may  prescribe  the  types  of   independent  adjusters'  licenses  according to the kind or kinds of insurance claims  which the licensee is to be authorized to investigate and adjust.    (3) No adjuster shall act on behalf of an insurer unless  licensed  as  an  independent  adjuster,  and  no  adjuster  shall act on behalf of an  insured unless licensed as a public adjuster.    (4) No insurer, agent or other representative of an insurer shall  pay  any  fees  or  other  compensation  to  any person, firm, association or  corporation for acting as an independent adjuster except to  a  licensed  independent  adjuster  or  to  a  person  excepted  from  the  licensing  requirement pursuant to subsection  (g)  of  section  two  thousand  one  hundred one of this article.    (b)  The holder of a license under this section may act as an adjuster  without any other or additional license.    (c) (1) The superintendent may issue an independent adjuster's license  or a public adjuster's license  to  any  person,  firm,  association  or  corporation,  hereinafter  designated  as  licensee,  who,  or which, is  trustworthy and competent to act as an adjuster in  such  manner  as  to  safeguard  the  interests of the people of this state and who, or which,  has complied with the prerequisites herein prescribed.    (2) A license issued to a corporation may name as  sub-licensees  only  the  officers and directors of such corporation, and a license issued to  a firm or association may name  as  sub-licensees  only  the  individual  members  of such firm or association. Each sub-licensee named as such in  the license issued  to  a  firm,  association  or  corporation  must  be  qualified  to obtain a license as an independent adjuster or as a public  adjuster, as the case may be, and for each such sub-licensee a fee  must  be  paid  at  the times and at the rate hereinafter specified. Each such  sub-licensee shall be authorized, pursuant to such license, to act as an  independent adjuster or as a public adjuster, as the case may  be,  only  on behalf of the licensee.    (3)  Every  individual  applicant for a license under this section and  every proposed sub-licensee shall be eighteen years of age  or  over  at  the time of the issuance of such license.    (d) (1) Before any such license or any renewal thereof shall be issued  by  the  superintendent  there  shall  be  filed in his office a written  application therefor. Such application shall be in the form or forms and  supplements and contain information the superintendent prescribes.    (2) Each person or individual signing  such  application  shall,  with  such  application,  submit to the superintendent fingerprints of his two  hands recorded in such manner as may be specified by the  superintendent  or  his  authorized representative. Before approving such application it  shall be the duty of the superintendent or his authorized representative  to compare such fingerprints with fingerprints filed with  the  division  of criminal justice services. Such fingerprints may also be submitted to  the  federal  bureau  of  investigation  for a national criminal history  record check.    (3) No such license shall be issued to any person who  has  ever  been  convicted  of  a felony, or of any crime or offense involving fraudulent  or dishonest practices; nor shall a licensee under this  section  employ  any  person  who  has ever been convicted of a felony or such a crime or  offense.    (4) This subsection  shall  not  prevent  the  employment  of  or  the  issuance  of  a license to any person who, subsequent to his conviction,  shall have received executive pardon therefor removing this  disability,  or  who  has  received  a  certificate  of relief from disabilities or acertificate of good conduct pursuant  to  article  twenty-three  of  the  correction  law  to  remove the disability under this section because of  such conviction or previous license revocation occasioned thereby.    (5)  Such  application  shall  be  approved,  as  to  each  person  or  individual so signing the same, by not less than five reputable citizens  of the community in which such applicant resides or transacts  business,  each  of  whom  shall certify that he has personally known the person or  individual for a period of at least five years prior to  the  filing  of  such application, that he has read such application and believes each of  the  statements  made therein to be true, that such person is honest, of  good character and competent, and not related or connected to the person  so certifying by blood or marriage. The certificate of approval shall be  subscribed by such reputable citizens and affirmed by them as true under  the penalties of perjury.    (e)  (1)  The  superintendent  shall,  in  order  to   determine   the  trustworthiness  and  competency  to  act  as  a public adjuster of each  individual  applicant  for  such   license,   and   of   each   proposed  sub-licensee,  except  in  the  case of a renewal license, require every  such  individual  to  take  and  pass,  to  the  satisfaction   of   the  superintendent,  a  personal written examination. No individual shall be  deemed qualified to take the examination without having demonstrated  by  evidence  satisfactory  to  the  superintendent  that  (A) the applicant  possesses a minimum of one year experience in  the  insurance  business,  with  involvement  in  sales, underwriting or claims or other experience  considered sufficient  by  the  superintendent,  or  (B)  the  applicant  successfully  completed  forty  hours  of  formal  training in a course,  program of instruction or seminars approved by the superintendent.    (2) The superintendent may, in his discretion and on such terms as  he  prescribes, dispense with such examination in the case of any individual  applicant  or  proposed  sub-licensee  who  shall previously have held a  public adjuster's license issued subsequent to January  first,  nineteen  hundred thirty-six.    (f)   (1)   The  superintendent  shall,  in  order  to  determine  the  trustworthiness and competency to act as an independent adjuster of each  individual  applicant  for  such   license,   and   of   each   proposed  sub-licensee,  except  in  the  case of a renewal license, require every  such  individual  to  take  and  pass,  to  the  satisfaction   of   the  superintendent,  a  personal written examination. The superintendent may  prescribe the types of written examinations according  to  the  kind  or  kinds  of  insurance  claims  which  the  applicant is to be licensed to  investigate and adjust.    (2) Any person who at any time served with the  armed  forces  of  the  United  States,  and  who  immediately  prior  to entering such military  service had been continuously engaged in bona  fide  operation  in  this  state  as an independent adjuster for a period of five years, may within  one year after the termination of such military service  file  with  the  superintendent  an  application  in such form as he prescribes, and upon  the payment of  the  requisite  license  fee  may  be  licensed  by  the  superintendent as an independent adjuster without being required to take  and pass such examination.    (3)  The  superintendent  may also, in the superintendent's discretion  and on such terms the  superintendent  prescribes,  dispense  with  such  examination  in  the  case  of  any  individual  applicant  or  proposed  sub-licensee who shall previously have held  an  independent  adjuster's  license  provided  the  applicant applies within two years following the  date of termination of such license.    (g) The superintendent may, in his discretion require an applicant for  a license under this section to present evidence, in  such  form  as  heprescribes, that such applicant has been employed, for a period which he  deems  reasonable,  by  an  insurer, an independent adjuster or a public  adjuster, in the performance  of  duties  which  in  his  opinion  would  provide  the  applicant with a satisfactory preliminary training for the  duties and responsibilities which would devolve upon him as  a  licensee  under this section.    (h)  (1)  Any  person  who  has  had at least five years experience in  adjusting claims as an employee of an authorized insurer  and  has  made  application  for  a  license  as  an independent adjuster, or any person  holding a valid estimator's license issued by the commissioner of  motor  vehicles  and  has  made  application  for  a  license as an independent  adjuster within  ninety  days  of  the  expiration  of  the  estimator's  license,  may  file  with  the  superintendent,  in  such  form  as  the  superintendent prescribes, a written application for a temporary  permit  to  adjust  claims, during the pendency of the application for a license  as an independent adjuster, as:    (i) an employee of a licensed independent adjuster; or    (ii) in the case of an auto body repair estimator, an employee  of  an  authorized  insurer  or  any  adjustment bureau or association owned and  maintained by insurers to  adjust  or  investigate  motor  vehicle  body  damage losses.    (2)  Notwithstanding the requirement of subsection (f) of this section  that each individual applicant for an independent adjuster's license  or  sub-license  shall take and pass a personal written examination in order  to satisfy the superintendent as to trustworthiness and competency,  the  superintendent may in the superintendent's discretion, if satisfied that  the  person applying for such temporary permit has in all other respects  met the requirements of this section with respect to  the  licensing  of  independent  adjusters  and  is  qualified by training and experience to  adjust claims  as  an  employee  of  a  licensed  independent  adjuster,  authorized  insurer,  or  any adjustment bureau or association owned and  maintained by insurers to  adjust  or  investigate  motor  vehicle  body  damage  losses,  issue  such  temporary  permit to be effective for such  period of time as the superintendent may  specify  therein  but,  in  no  event,  for  a  period  in  excess  of  one  hundred  twenty  days.  The  superintendent may summarily suspend  or  revoke  any  temporary  permit  issued  pursuant  to  this subsection upon ten days notice in writing to  the permittee of the superintendent's intention to do so,  which  notice  shall   be  given  in  accordance  with  the  applicable  provisions  of  subsections (a) and (d) of section three hundred three of this chapter.    (i) (1) At the time of application for every  adjuster's  license  and  for  every renewal thereof, there shall be paid to the superintendent by  each individual applicant and by each proposed  sub-licensee  a  fee  of  fifty  dollars  for  each  year or fraction of a year in which a license  shall be valid; except that amounts paid to the  commissioner  of  motor  vehicles   pursuant   to  subdivision  five  of  section  three  hundred  ninety-eight-d of the vehicle and traffic law, by any person who held an  auto body repair estimator license  prior  to  January  first,  nineteen  hundred ninety-six shall be considered by the superintendent.    (2)  No  license  fee  shall be required of any person who served as a  member of the armed forces of the United States  at  any  time  and  who  shall have been discharged, under conditions other than dishonorable, in  a current licensing period, for the duration of such period.    (3) A license fee of fifty dollars for each year or fraction of a year  in  which a license shall be valid for an independent adjuster's license  shall cover any  one  or  more  of  the  various  types  of  independent  adjusters' licenses issued by the department.(4) Every individual applying to take any written examination shall at  the  time  of  applying  therefor  pay  to the superintendent, or at the  discretion of the superintendent, directly to any organization  that  is  under contract to provide examination services, an examination fee of an  amount  which is the actual documented administrative cost of conducting  said qualifying examination as certified by the superintendent from time  to time. An examination fee represents an administrative expense and  is  not  refundable.  If,  however, the applicant or a proposed sub-licensee  should withdraw his or its application or the superintendent should deny  his or its application before the license applied  for  is  issued,  the  superintendent  may refund the fee paid by the applicant for the license  applied for, excepting any examination fees required  pursuant  to  this  subsection.    (j) (1) Every adjuster's license issued pursuant to this section shall  be  for  a  term  expiring  on  the thirty-first day of December of even  numbered years, and may be renewed for the ensuing  two  calendar  years  upon  the  filing  of  an  application in conformity with subsection (d)  hereof.    (2) If an application for a renewal license shall have been filed with  the superintendent by December thirty-first of the year  of  expiration,  the license sought to be renewed shall continue in full force and effect  either  until  the issuance by the superintendent of the renewal license  applied for or until five  days  after  the  superintendent  shall  have  refused  to  issue  such  renewal license and shall have given notice of  such refusal to the applicant and to all proposed sub-licensees named in  such application.    (3) If such refusal is based on any grounds other than failure to pass  a written examination and if the applicant or any proposed  sub-licensee  shall  within  thirty  days  after  such  notice  is  given  notify  the  superintendent of his or its request for a hearing on such refusal,  the  superintendent  shall  within  a  reasonable  time after receipt of such  notice grant such a hearing, and he may, in  his  discretion,  reinstate  such license.    (k) Any firm, association or corporation licensed as an adjuster under  this  section  may at any time make an application to the superintendent  for the  issuance  of  a  supplemental  license  authorizing  additional  officers  or directors of such corporation or additional members of such  firm or association, as the case may be, to act as  sub-licensees,  and,  if  the  requirements of this section are fully complied with as to each  of such proposed sub-licensees, the superintendent may  thereupon  issue  to  such  licensee a supplemental license naming such additional person,  or persons, as sub-licensees.    (l) (1) No adjuster's license or renewal license shall  be  issued  to  any  applicant  unless  there shall be on file with the superintendent a  bond, executed by such the applicant and by approved  sureties,  in  the  penal   sum   of  one  thousand  dollars  conditioned  on  the  faithful  performance by such licensee and by  all  sub-licensees  named  in  such  license, of their duties as such adjusters.    (2) Such bond shall be approved as to form by the attorney general and  as to sufficiency of security by the superintendent.    (3)  Such  bond  shall  be  made  to  the  state of New York and shall  specifically authorize recovery by the state of the penal  sum  provided  therein  in case the adjuster or any sub-licensee shall have been guilty  of fraudulent or dishonest practices in connection with the  transaction  of  his  or  its  business as such adjuster or shall have been convicted  under any of the sections contained in article one hundred fifty of  the  penal law.(m)  If an application for a license under this section be rejected by  the superintendent, he shall forthwith give notice to the applicant,  or  to the licensee, as the case may be.    (n)    Notwithstanding   the   provisions   of   this   section,   the  superintendent, in order to facilitate the settlement  of  claims  under  insurance  contracts involving widespread property losses arising out of  a conflagration or catastrophe common to all such losses,  may  issue  a  temporary permit for a term not exceeding one hundred twenty days to any  person, whether he be a resident of this state or a non-resident, to act  as  an  independent  adjuster  on  behalf  of  an  authorized insurer or  insurers, provided any such insurer shall execute and file in the office  of the superintendent a written application for the permit in  the  form  prescribed  by  the superintendent, which application shall contain such  information as he may require and shall certify that  the  person  named  therein  to  be  designated  in  the  temporary  permit  is qualified by  experience  and  training  to  adjust  claims  arising  under  insurance  contracts   issued  by  any  insurer.  The  superintendent  may  in  his  discretion renew such permit for an additional term or terms as  may  be  necessary to adjust such claims.    (o)  No  licensee  shall  in  connection  with  the transaction of his  business as an adjuster make any misrepresentation of  facts  or  advise  any person on questions of law.    (p)  No adjuster shall have any right to compensation from any insured  for or on account of services rendered  to  such  insured  as  a  public  adjuster  unless  such  right  to  compensation  is based upon a written  memorandum, signed by the party to be charged, and specifying or clearly  defining the amount or extent of such compensation.  The  superintendent  shall establish and prescribe regulations:    (1)  to  provide  for  a  standard  form  and  terms  of  said written  memorandum for compensation, including the maximum amount to be charged;    (2) to provide for compliance  with  article  ten-A  of  the  personal  property law relating to door to door sales; however, for the purpose of  this  section, "door to door sale" in addition to the definition thereof  contained in subdivision one of section four hundred twenty-six  of  the  personal  property  law,  shall  include  any contract entered into by a  public adjuster to adjust losses;    (3) to provide for maintenance of appropriate books and records to  be  maintained by public adjusters which shall be kept subject to inspection  and examination by the superintendent; and    (4) to provide for such other regulations that are deemed necessary by  the  superintendent  for  the  proper and adequate supervision of public  adjusters.    (q) The superintendent may issue a  replacement  for  a  currently  in  force  license which has been lost or destroyed. Before such replacement  license shall be issued, there shall be on file in  the  office  of  the  superintendent  a  written  application  for  such  replacement license,  affirming under penalty of perjury that the original  license  has  been  lost or destroyed, together with a fee of fifteen dollars.    (r) (1) The following continuing education requirements shall apply to  resident and non-resident persons licensed as public adjusters.    (2) Resident and non-resident persons licensed as public adjusters and  any person previously so licensed whose license was not in effect on the  effective  date  of  this  subsection  and  who  has  subsequently  been  relicensed pursuant to the provisions of this article, shall  biennially  satisfactorily  complete  such courses or programs as may be approved by  the superintendent, as follows:    (A) Any person holding a license as a public  adjuster  shall,  during  each  full biennial licensing period, satisfactorily complete courses orprograms of instruction or attend seminars as may  be  approved  by  the  superintendent equivalent to fifteen credit hours of instruction.    (B)  During  the  same  calendar  year  biennial  licensing  period, a  licensee may use accumulated continuing education credits  to  meet  the  requirements  of  similar classes of licenses including those authorized  by subsection (b) of section two thousand one hundred three, section two  thousand one hundred four, section two thousand  one  hundred  seven  of  this  article with respect to general insurance consultants, and section  two thousand one hundred eight of this article with  respect  to  public  adjusters.    (C)  Excess  credit  hours  accumulated  during any biennial licensing  period shall not carry forward to the next biennial licensing period for  that same class of license.    (3) (A) The courses or programs of instruction successfully completed,  which shall  be  deemed  to  meet  the  superintendent's  standards  for  continuing education shall be:    (i)  Courses,  programs  of  instruction  or  seminars, approved as to  method and content by  the  superintendent,  covering  portions  of  the  principal  branches  of  insurance  related  to  the  kinds of insurance  covered  by  the  public  adjusting  license,  and  given  by  a  degree  conferring college or university whose curriculum is registered with the  state  education  department  at  the  time the person takes the course,  whether such course be given as part of such curriculum  or  separately,  or  by any other institution, association, trade association or insurer,  which maintains equivalent standards of instruction and which shall have  been approved for such purpose by the superintendent.    (ii) Continuing  education  as  required  by  the  state  in  which  a  non-resident  licensee  resides  and  maintains  an office, provided the  superintendent deems them equivalent to New  York  continuing  education  requirements.  If  the  state in which the non-resident licensee resides  and maintains an office has no continuing education requirements, or the  superintendent does not deem them equivalent, the licensee must  satisfy  New York continuing education requirements.    (B)  The  number  of  credit  hours assigned to each of the courses or  programs of instruction set forth in paragraph one  of  this  subsection  shall be determined by the superintendent.    (4)  A  person  who  teaches any approved course of instruction or who  lectures at any approved seminar, and who is subject to these continuing  education requirements shall be granted the same number of credit  hours  as  would be granted to a person taking and successfully completing such  course, seminar or program, provided that such  credit  hours  shall  be  credited  only  once  per  approved course during any biennial licensing  period.    (5) Every person subject to these  continuing  education  requirements  shall  furnish,  in  a  form satisfactory to the superintendent, written  certification attesting to the course or programs of  instruction  taken  and   successfully  completed  by  such  person,  and  executed  by  the  sponsoring organization or its authorizing representative.    (6) (A) Any person failing to  meet  applicable  continuing  education  requirements shall not be eligible to renew the license.    (B)  Any person whose license was not renewed shall not be eligible to  become relicensed during the next biennial licensing period  until  that  person  has  demonstrated to the satisfaction of the superintendent that  continuing education requirements for the last biennial licensing period  were met.    (C) Any person whose license was not renewed pursuant to  subparagraph  (A)  of  this paragraph, who accumulates sufficient credit hours for the  prior licensing period to qualify for relicensing in the biennial periodfollowing such non-renewal, may not apply those same credit hours toward  the continuing education requirements for the current biennial licensing  period.    (7)  (A)  Any entity eligible to provide continuing education courses,  programs of instruction, or seminars shall  file  for  approval  by  the  superintendent  on  a  biennial  basis,  to  conform  with  its areas of  instruction, a provider organization application and a course submission  application for each course, program, and seminar.    (B) The provider organization application shall include the  names  of  all  instructors  to be used during the contract period, and instructors  may be added during the  period  by  notifying  the  superintendent  and  paying the appropriate filing fee.    (C)  The  completed applications shall be returned in a timely manner,  as specified by the superintendent with a non-refundable filing  fee  of  two hundred dollars per organization, fifty dollars per course, program,  and seminar, and fifty dollars per instructor.    (D)  Approval  of  the  application  shall be at the discretion of the  superintendent.    (8) Each licensee shall pay a biennial fee of ten dollars per license,  for continuing education certificate filing and  recording  charges,  to  the superintendent, or, at the direction of the superintendent, directly  to  an  organization  under  contract  to  provide  continuing education  administrative services.