By: Ron Gabor, Florida
Underwriter, Florida
Surplus Lines
Association Special
Report
A discussion of the
history of insurance in
the U.S. always seems to
start with the
beginnings of Lloyd's of
London. Although Lloyd's
is a major factor in the
development of surplus
lines in our country,
for this article we
shall dispense with that
history and deal with
ours here in the
Sunshine State. However,
to understand surplus
lines in Florida, we
must first understand
the development of
surplus lines in the
U.S.
Insurance in the U.S.
began in 1752 with the
formation of the
Philadelphia
Contributorship, which
was created to insure
houses from the peril of
fire. There were no
insurance departments
and no licensing. It was
not until 1851 that New
Hampshire created the
first full-time Board of
Insurance Commissioners.
In 1871, what became the
National Association of
Insurance Commissioners
(NAIC) was formed,
initially with 17
members. Surplus lines,
however, began to
develop earlier than
that.
In 1835, the great New
York fire wiped out some
$28 million in insurance
capital; ten years later
another fire caused
approximately $4 million
more to disappear. The
Chicago fire of 1871
caused 60 insurance
companies to go under
with a loss of $40
million. In 1872, the
Boston fire took out
another 32 companies and
cost $38 million.
Up until that time,
companies could not do
business unless they
were chartered in that
state. However, these
disasters caused a
shortage of capacity and
there was need to write
with other companies
even if they were not
licensed. There were few
laws that prohibited
this or, for that
matter, allowed it to
happen. However, there
was a need. In 1875,
legislation was passed
in New York that allowed
citizens to obtain
insurance on their own
to protect their
property, but prohibited
anyone from acting for
another in procuring
insurance in an
unlicensed carrier.
Other states also passed
laws prohibiting
non-admitted placements.
As in all things, demand
created supply, and in
1884 the state of New
York created a
non-admitted insurance
statute that required
any foreign insurance
company to appoint the
New York Superintendent
of Insurance for service
of process if it wished
to do business in the
state. In 1890, this
same state passed the
first comprehensive
non-admitted insurance
act, which among other
things created a special
license for brokers to
transact non-admitted
business. This act also
provided that brokers
had to sign an affidavit
showing that they were
unable to obtain
coverage from licensed
companies in the state.
In 1894, it was amended
to permit Lloyd's to
write fire insurance
business. Thus, surplus
lines as we know it
today was born.
The 1940s and 1950s
From then until after
World War II, surplus
lines operated with
little real regulation
and even less
enforcement. To a great
degree, the laws that
did exist were meant to
prohibit non-admitted
writings rather than to
regulate it. After the
war it grew, but still
there were very few
comprehensive surplus
lines laws. In 1949,
Florida permitted
"Supervisory" General
Agents to place business
with a non-admitted
insurer under very
limited circumstances.
Chief amongst these was
that the risk must have
been turned down by all
admitted markets
available to the agent,
whether he was licensed
with them or not, and
that the insurance
commissioner may
prohibit placement with
carriers he deemed
unacceptable.
In 1957, the NAIC
developed a set of
guiding principles for
surplus lines that were
intended to regulate the
practice rather than
outlaw it. Following
this, in 1959, Florida,
under the leadership of
Gov. LeRoy Collins and
Insurance Commissioner
J. Edwin Larson, enacted
the most comprehensive
surplus lines law in the
country, and for the
first time created a
Surplus Lines Section
within the Department of
Insurance. Frederick D.
Crum served as the first
Administrator of Surplus
Lines, followed by
Charles Gray, John R.
Walker, George G. Love,
and Carolyn Daniels. The
Surplus Lines Division
ended in 1998 with the
formation of the Florida
Surplus Lines Service
Office.
The 1960s and Beyond
In 1960, one year after
the enactment of
Florida's surplus lines
law, the Florida Surplus
Lines Association was
born, founded by a group
of 37 individuals. In
its original form, the
group met once a year
for a luncheon, which
for many years was held
in conjunction with the
FAIA convention at the
Fontainebleau Hotel on
Miami Beach. The very
first meeting of the
association was held on
Dec. 5, 1960, at the
Hotel Roosevelt in
Jacksonville, where Hugh
Donovan of Jacksonville
was elected its first
president. Most of the
founding members were
not wholesalers, but
retail agents. Prior to
this time, most of the
wholesalers in Florida
were Managing General
Agents and almost all
were writing the bulk of
their business with the
admitted market. Some of
those Florida MGAs were
Southern Underwriters,
Frank R. MacNeil & Son,
Gabor & Co., Irvin B.
Green and Associates,
Home Underwriters,
Charles A Lenz &
Associates, and Shelly
Middlebrooks & O'Leary.
However, most of these
had little, if any,
surplus lines writings.
Some agencies, like
Gabor & Co., Inc., out
of Miami did, for they
had been writing some
specialized lines with
Lloyd's since 1950.
In 1960, there were 15
non-marine, non-admitted
insurers authorized to
accept surplus lines
business. Only three of
these were American
companies: Employers
Surplus Lines Insurance
Co., Interstate Fire and
Casualty Co., and the
Lexington Insurance Co.
The Lexington of 1960
was not the Lexington we
know today, an AIG
company. Then, Lexington
was broker-owned. In
1965, it sold all of its
business to a new
company owned by
National Union Fire,
which took on the name
Lexington. The original
Lexington changed its
name to the First State
Insurance Co. and later
became the surplus lines
arm of the Hartford
Insurance Co.
During the 1960s, many
things began to change.
Wholesalers emerged and
surplus lines became the
purview of the
wholesaler. New names
came on the Florida
scene - Coverall
Underwriters,
Southeastern Surplus
Lines, Hull & Co., and
others opened. More U.S.
domiciled surplus lines
carriers were formed.
Some were subsidiaries
of admitted carriers,
many were
broker-controlled, and
some new independent
carriers were created.
Carriers like Western
World, Jefferson,
Canadian Universal,
Ambassador, and many
others were formed
during this time,
dedicated to writing
through wholesale
brokers.
It is difficult to find
early figures of surplus
lines writings, but in
1976 the total surplus
lines writings in
Florida were
$57,224,154. In 2009, it
had reached
$4,000,000,000.
In 1965, Cameron Brown,
one of the true American
surplus lines pioneers,
wrote, "To many persons
within and outside of
the insurance industry
the most confusing and
mysterious subject in
insurance is the
non-admitted market."
Here we are 45 years
later and that statement
is just as true as it
was when it was written.
I suspect that it may
still be true 45 years
from now.
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