Audrey Samers Formal Opinion Deputy Superintendent No. 2006-F2 General Counsel New York State Insurance Department 25 Beaver Street New York, NY 10004
Dear Ms. Samers:
You have asked whether General Business Law §
BACKGROUND
Insurers and insurance brokers have inquired of your Department whether they are permitted to charge a service fee to insureds who use a credit card to pay for insurance premiums. They seek to use the service fee to recover from the insureds credit card transactions fees imposed by credit card issuers. The Insurance Department has in the past opined that General Business Law §
ANALYSIS
The imposition of surcharges upon credit card holders for the use of a credit card in lieu of other methods of payment is prohibited by General Business Law §
No seller in any sales transaction may impose a surcharge on a holder2 who elects to use a credit card in lieu of payment by cash, check, or similar means.
Any seller who violates the provisions of this section shall be guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed five hundred dollars or a term of imprisonment up to one year, or both.
The issue presented here is whether a fee imposed by an insurer, insurance broker or similar entity upon an insured who uses a credit card to pay insurance premiums falls within the statutory prohibition. Insurance premiums are the consideration paid for coverage under an insurance policy. See N.Y. Jur. 2d, Insurance § 902 (1988); cf. Insurance Law §
The term "sales transaction" is not defined in the statute, and there are no reported decisions that address the types of transactions that fall within the ambit of the statute.3
Because section 518 prohibits the use of a credit card surcharge in "any sales transaction," the language of the statute indicates that it was intended to apply broadly. See General Business Law §
Nothing in General Business Law §
Analysis of a related federal statute further supports this construction of section 518. The state prohibition on credit card surcharges was enacted in 1984 to replace a federal ban on surcharges that had recently expired. See, e.g., Sponsor's Memorandum, reprinted in Bill Jacket to ch. 160 (1984), at 5. The prohibition under state law follows the wording of the former federal statute exactly. See Act of Feb. 27, 1976, Pub.L. No.
Nothing in the legislative history of the federal statute indicates that Congress intended to limit the types of sales transactions covered under that statute, the Truth in Lending Act ("TILA"). Moreover, although we were not able to locate any decisions construing the scope of the federal surcharge ban, cases involving another section of TILA are instructive. Specifically, a section of TILA that requires certain disclosures in "credit sales" has been applied to the sale of insurance.See Stefanski v. Mainway Budget Plan, Inc.,
CONCLUSION
Because General Business Law §
Very truly yours,
ELIOT SPITZER Attorney General
