The Honorable Mike Stafford Harris County Attorney 1019 Congress, 15th Floor Houston, Texas 77002-1700
Re: Whether a county's self-funded medical insurance plan is subject to certain provisions of the Texas Insurance Code (RQ-0296-GA)
Dear Mr. Stafford:
Of the several you pose,1 your primary question is "[w]hether a self-funded benefits plan established by a county commissioners court pursuant to section
Your remaining questions relate to specific provisions of the Insurance Code that you assert apply if the Plan is a "health benefit plan" or the County is a "health benefit plan issuer." In the event we determine that the Plan is not a health benefit plan and the County is not a health benefit plan issuer, you ask whether certain Insurance Code provisions would otherwise apply to the Plan. Specifically, you inquire:
Whether provisions of the Texas Insurance Code, which require an insurance company to provide medical benefits to dependents of a covered person when the dependent is younger than 25 years of age, also apply to the self-funded County Plan.
Whether [the] Commissioners Court may amend the self-funded County Plan to require that children, including natural and adopted children, stepchildren, and grandchildren, who are 19 years of age or older be enrolled as full-time students at an educational institution in order to be covered under the self-funded County Plan.
Whether the self-funded County Plan must provide coverage for grandchildren who are not tax dependents of a covered County employee or retiree and, if so, whether the self-funded County Plan can end coverage before age 25, set a different premium for grandchildren than for children, and require that grandchildren be enrolled in an educational institution.
Whether the self-funded County Plan must provide coverage for stepchildren and/or grandchildren who do not live in the home of a covered County employee or retiree, and whether the self-funded County Plan may require a different premium for such stepchildren and/or grandchildren than for the natural or adopted children of a covered County employee or retiree.
Harris County Brief, supra note 1, at 1.
You inform us that the Plan originally began on March 1, 2004 and that the new Plan year commenced on March 1, 2005. See Request Letter, supra note 1, at 1. In 2003, the legislature repealed many of the insurance provisions contained in the Revised Civil Statutes (hereinafter "civil statutes"), see Act of May 30, 2003, 78th Leg., R.S., ch. 1274, § 26, 2003 Tex. Gen. Laws 3611, 4138, and enacted additional titles to the codified Insurance Code. See Tex. Ins. Code Ann. §
You inform us that the Plan is self funded. See Request Letter, supra note 1, at 1. In order to properly address your questions, a general discussion of insurance and self-funded insurance is warranted. The word insurance has "comprehensive and varied" meanings, see SouthwestNat'l Bank v. Employers' Indem. Corp.,
An entity that self insures does not shift any risk, but instead retains the risk of loss. See Hertz Corp. v.Robineau,
We examine the enumerated policy types and organizations in the definition to see if the Plan is a "health benefit plan." First, a group insurance policy involves coverage of associations, labor unions or organizations of labor unions, membership corporations pursuant to the Texas Non-Profit Corporation Act, cooperatives or corporations under the control of the Farm Credit Administration. See id. §§ 1251.001(2), 1251.051-.056. Blanket insurance policies involve large groups of people such as passengers of common carriers; renters from vehicle leasing companies; students, teachers and employees of educational institutions; and participants at religious, charitable, recreational, educational or civic organizations. See id. §§ 1251.001(1), 1251.351-.359. A franchise insurance policy is an "individual health benefit plan under which a number of individual policies are offered to a selected group."
Second, a certificate issued under a group policy relates to a group policy. The Insurance Code does not define the term "group policy," but a court of appeals has characterized a group policy as a "contract of insurance covering and insuring more than one person."Houston Bank Trust Co. v. Great S. Life Ins. Co.,
Third, a group hospital and service contract involves a contract with a "group hospital service corporation," which is a "corporation organized . . . to establish and operate a nonprofit hospital service plan, under which hospital care may be provided by the corporation through one or more hospitals . . . with which the corporation has contracted for the provision of that care." Tex. Ins. Code Ann. §
Fourth, and finally, a group subscriber contract or evidence of coverage issued by a health maintenance organization pertains to health maintenance organizations which are defined singularly as a "person who arranges for or provides to enrollees on a prepaid basis a health care plan, a limited health care service plan, or a single health care service plan." Tex. Ins. Code Ann. §
We received briefing from the Texas Department of Insurance ("TDI") that summarized the definition of "health benefit plan" as pertaining to "contracts of coverage issued by insurers and HMOs."3 Moreover, you inform us that the Plan "is not an insurance policy, not a group hospital service contract, and not a group subscriber contract or evidence of coverage." Harris County Brief, supra note 1, at 3. We do not believe that the Plan as you have described it falls within these enumerated entities and policy types. Therefore we conclude, based on your characterization of the Plan and the language of the definition of "health benefit plan," that the Plan is not a health benefit plan.
We note that in the former civil statutes the term "health benefit plan" was defined differently in different articles.4 In the Insurance Code, at least with respect to chapter 1501, the term "health benefit plan" is defined only once in a definition section that applies to all provisions in chapter 1501. See Tex. Ins. Code Ann. §
To determine whether section 157.101 is "another insurance law of this state" under section 1501.002(6), the language of section 1501.002(6) and section 157.101 must be examined. The cardinal rule of statutory construction is to ascertain the legislature's intent and to give effect to that intent. See Union BankersIns. Co. v. Shelton,
Pursuant to these principles, we begin with the language of section 1501.002(6), which defines a health benefit plan issuer as:
an entity authorized under this code or another insurance law of this state that provides health insurance or health benefits in this state, including:
(A) an insurance company;
(B) a group hospital service corporation operating under Chapter 842;
(C) a health maintenance organization operating under Chapter 843; and
(D) a stipulated premium company operating under Chapter 884.
Tex. Ins. Code Ann. §
Section 157.101 is located in the Local Government Code and authorizes county commissioners courts to provide specified benefits to county employees. Looking at chapter 157 as a whole, see Citizens Bank of Bryanv. First State Bank, Hearne,
Thus, to answer your first question, because we have concluded that the Plan is not a health benefit plan and the County is not a health benefit plan issuer, as those terms are defined by chapter 1501, the Plan is generally not subject to chapter 1501.
(a) This section applies only if children are eligible for coverage under a large employer health benefit plan.
(b) Any limiting age applicable under a large employer health benefit plan to an unmarried child of an enrollee is 25 years of age.
Tex. Ins. Code Ann. §
Section 1503.003(a) provides that a "health benefitplan may not condition coverage for a child younger than 25 years of age on the child's being enrolled at an educational institution." Tex. Ins. Code Ann. §
To answer your question, we examine section
(a) An individual or group accident and health insurance policy that is delivered, issued for delivery, or renewed in this state, including a policy issued by a corporation operating under Chapter 842, or a self-funded or self-insured welfare or benefit plan or program, to the extent that regulation of the plan or program is not preempted by federal law, that provides for coverage for a child of an insured or group member, on payment of a premium, must provide coverage for:
(1) each grandchild of the insured or group member if the grandchild is:
(A) unmarried;
(B) younger than 25 years of age; and
(C) a dependent of the insured or group member for federal income tax purposes at the time application for coverage of the grandchild is made; and
(2) each child for whom the insured or group member must provide medical support under an order issued under Chapter 154, Family Code, or enforceable by a court in this state.
Tex. Ins. Code Ann. §
Whether the self-funded County Plan must provide coverage for stepchildren and/or grandchildren who do not live in the home of a covered County employee or retiree, and whether the self-funded County Plan may require a different premium for such stepchildren and/or grandchildren than for the natural or adopted children of a covered County employee or retiree.
Harris County Brief, supra note 1, at 1. You direct us to two sections of chapter 1201 that are pertinent to your query. Section 1201.063 provides that:
Regarding a natural or adopted child of an insured or group member or a child for whom the insured or group member must provide medical support under an order issued under Chapter 154, Family Code, or enforceable by a court in this state, an individual or group accident and health insurance policy that provides coverage for a child of an insured or group member may not set a different premium for the child, exclude the child from coverage, or discontinue coverage of the child because:
(1) the child does not reside with the insured or group member; or
(2) the insured or group member does not claim the child as an exemption for federal income tax purposes under Section 151(c)(1)(B), Internal Revenue Code of 1986.
Tex. Ins. Code. Ann. § 1201.063 (Vernon Pamphlet 2004-05) (emphasis added). Section 1201.064 requires:
An individual or group accident and health insurance policy that provides coverage for a child of an insured or group member may not:(1) set a premium for a child that is different from the premium for other children because the child is the natural or adopted child of the spouse of the insured or group member;
(2) exclude a child described by Subdivision (1) from coverage; or
(3) discontinue coverage for a child described by Subdivision (1).
Id. § 1201.064 (emphasis added).
Both sections apply to individual or group accident and health insurance policies. See id. §§ 1201.063, .064. An "accident and health insurance policy" is defined as "any policy or contract that provides insurance against loss resulting from: (A) accidental bodily injury; (B) accidental death; or (C) sickness." Id. § 1201.001(1). However, pursuant to section 1201.003, chapter 1201 generally applies only when the individual accident or health insurance policy is delivered or issued for delivery by:
(1) a life, health, and accident insurance company;
(2) a mutual insurance company including, . . . ;
(3) a local mutual aid association;
(4) a mutual or natural premium life or casualty insurance company;
(5) a general casualty company;
(6) a Lloyd's plan;
(7) a reciprocal or interinsurance exchange;
(8) a nonprofit hospital, medical, or dental service corporation, including a corporation operating under chapter 842; or(9) another insurer required by law to be authorized by the department [of insurance].
Id. § 1201.003(b). With regard to sections (1)-(8), the Plan is none of these. Neither is the Plan an "insurer required by law to be authorized by the department" of insurance, see id. § 1201.003(b)(9), because, as a self-funded plan, it is not an insurer. See supra p. 3;see also TDI Brief, supra note 3, at 2-3 (stating pursuant to Texas Insurance Code sections
Pursuant to the state's continuing statutory revision program, insurance code provisions of the Revised Civil Statutes recently have been codified into the Texas Insurance Code. Though the revision program is nonsubstantive, the Texas Supreme Court, in Fleming Foods of Texas, Inc. v. Rylander, directs that when specific provisions of a nonsubstantive codification are direct, unambiguous, and cannot be reconciled with prior law, the codification rather than the prior law must be given effect. This change from the civil statutes to the Insurance Code is the context in which we answer Harris County's questions.Harris County's self-funded benefit plan is not a "health benefit plan" as defined by Chapter 1501 of the Texas Insurance Code. Chapter 157 of the Texas Local Government Code, including section 157.101, is not another insurance law of this state as contemplated by Insurance Code section
1501.002 (6) but is instead legislative authority for counties to provide health benefits to employees and their dependents. Thus, Harris County is not a health benefit plan issuer under Insurance Code section1501.002 (6).Because the Harris County Plan is not a health benefit plan and Harris County is not a health benefit plan issuer, the Plan is not subject to the limiting age contained in section 1503.609 of the Insurance Code. Similarly, because the Plan is not a health benefit plan and the County is not a health benefit plan issuer, the provisions of section 1503.003(a), prohibiting the coverage of a covered County employee's child from being conditioned on the child's full-time enrollment at an educational institution, do not apply to the Plan.
Section
1201.062 , Insurance Code, expressly applies to self-funded plans like the Harris County Plan. Therefore, the Plan must cover, when it provides coverage for a child of a covered County employee, unmarried grandchildren who are younger than 25 and who are federal income tax dependents of the covered employee. The Plan must also cover children for whom the covered employee must provide medical support under an order issued pursuant to Chapter 154, Texas Family Code.Because the Harris County Plan is generally not subject to chapter 1201 of the Insurance Code, it is not required by sections 1201.063 and 1201.064 to provide coverage for grandchildren and stepchildren who do not reside with the covered County employee, provided they are not otherwise entitled to coverage under section
1201.062 (a)(1) or (2) of the Insurance Code. For the same reasons, the Plan is not prohibited by these provisions from charging different premiums for grandchildren and stepchildren that are not the adopted or natural child of the covered employee.
Very truly yours,
GREG ABBOTT Attorney General of TexasBARRY McBEE First Assistant Attorney General
DON R. WILLETT Deputy Attorney General for Legal Counsel
NANCY S. FULLER Chair, Opinion Committee
Charlotte M. Harper Assistant Attorney General, Opinion Committee
Regarding the question of different premiums, TDI argues that former civil statutes article 3.70-2(M) prohibited different premiums for stepchildren. See id. We believe former article 3.70-2(M) would not have included self-funded plans, see supra note 11, but in any event it is our opinion that sections 1201.063 and 1201.064 are not ambiguous, so underFleming Foods we are precluded from considering former article 3.70-2(M). With regard to different premiums for grandchildren, TDI argues that different premiums are also prohibited by articles 1.02 and 21.21-8, which have not yet been repealed. See id. TDI states that article 1.02 applies to "any legal entity engaged in the business of insurance" and that article 21.21-8 applies to "any person engaged in the business of insurance." Id. TDI argues that because former article 3.70-2(L) applied to an individual or group policy and included a self-insured or self-funded welfare or benefit plan or program, a self-funded plan is brought within the "ambit of a policy of accident and sickness insurance," and is therefore engaged in the business of insurance and subject to articles 1.02 and 21.21-8. Id. Our conclusion that the successor to former article 3.70-2(L) applies to the Plan does not make the Plan an insurer for all purposes. We have already concluded that the successor to former article 3.70-2(L) applies to the Plan. Seesupra pp. 9-11 (discussing section 1201.062). TDI concedes in its brief that the County is not engaged in the business of insurance. See TDI Brief, supra note 3, at 2-3. Accordingly, the provisions of articles 1.02 and 21.21-8 are not applicable.
