Haw. Code R. § 16-185-106 - Qualifications of independent certified public accountant
(a) The commissioner shall not recognize a
person or firm as a qualified independent certified public accountant if the
person or firm:
(1) Is not in good standing
with the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants and in all states
in which the accountant is licensed to practice or, for a Canadian or British
company, that is not a chartered accountant; or
(2) Has either directly or indirectly entered
into an agreement of indemnity or release from liability (collectively referred
to as indemnification) with respect to the audit of the insurer.
(b) Except as otherwise provided
in this chapter, the commissioner shall recognize an independent certified
public accountant as qualified as long as that person conforms to the standards
of the accounting profession, as contained in the Code of Professional Ethics
of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants, chapter 466, HRS,
chapter 16-71, Hawaii Administrative Rules, and the Hawai`i Board of Public
Accountancy, or similar statutes, rules, and code of conduct regulating the
practice of accountancy in the state in which the accountant is licensed to
practice.
(c) A qualified
independent certified public accountant may enter into an agreement with an
insurer to have disputes relating to an audit resolved by mediation or
arbitration. However, in the event of a delinquency proceeding commenced
against the insurer under article 15, chapter 431, HRS, the mediation or
arbitration provisions shall operate at the option of the insurer's statutory
successor.
(d)
(1) The lead or coordinating audit partner
having primary responsibility for the audit may not act in that capacity for
more than five consecutive years. Thereafter, that partner shall be
disqualified from acting in that or a similar capacity for the same company or
its insurance subsidiaries or affiliates for a period of five consecutive
years. An insurer may make application to the commissioner for relief from the
above rotation requirement on the basis of unusual circumstances. This
application should be made at least thirty days before the end of the calendar
year. The commissioner may consider the following factors in determining if the
relief should be granted:
(A) Number of
partners, expertise of the partners, or the number of insurance clients in the
currently registered firm;
(B)
Premium volume of the insurer; or
(C) Number of jurisdictions in which the
insurer transacts business; and
(2) The insurer shall file, with its annual
statement filing, the approval for relief from subsection (d)(1) with the
states in which it is licensed in or doing business in and with the National
Association of Insurance Commissioners. If the nondomestic state accepts
electronic filing with the National Association of Insurance Commissioners, the
insurer shall file the approval in an electronic format acceptable to the
National Association of Insurance Commissioners.
(e) The commissioner shall neither recognize
as a qualified independent certified public accountant nor accept an annual
audited financial report, prepared in whole or in part, by a natural person
who:
(1) Has been convicted of fraud,
bribery, a violation of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act,
18
U.S.C. sections 1961 to
1968,
or any dishonest conduct or practices under federal or state law;
(2) Has been found to have violated the
insurance laws of this state; or
(3) Has demonstrated a pattern or practice of
failing to detect or disclose material information in previous reports filed
under the provisions of this chapter.
(f) Subject to sections
431:2-308
and
431:3-302.5, HRS,
the commissioner may hold a hearing to determine whether an independent
certified public accountant is qualified and, considering the evidence
presented, may rule that the accountant is not qualified for purposes of
expressing his or her opinion on the financial statements in the annual audited
financial report made pursuant to this chapter and require the insurer to
replace the accountant with another whose relationship with the insurer is
qualified within the meaning of this chapter.
(g)
(1) The
commissioner shall not recognize as a qualified independent certified public
accountant nor accept an annual audited financial report, prepared in whole or
in part by an accountant who provides to an insurer, contemporaneously with the
audit, the following non-audit services:
(A)
Bookkeeping or other services related to the accounting records or financial
statements of the insurer;
(B)
Financial information systems design and implementation;
(C) Appraisal or valuation services, fairness
opinions, or contribution-in kind reports;
(D) Actuarially-oriented advisory services
involving the determination of amounts recorded in the financial statements.
The accountant may assist an insurer in understanding the methods, assumptions,
and inputs used in the determination of amounts recorded in the financial
statement, only if it is reasonable to conclude that the services provided will
not be subject to audit procedures during an audit of the insurer's financial
statements. An accountant's actuary may also issue an actuarial opinion or
certification on an insurer's reserves if the following conditions have been
met:
(i) Neither the accountant nor the
accountant's actuary has performed any management functions or made any
management decisions;
(ii) The
insurer has competent personnel or engages a third-party actuary to estimate
the reserves for which management takes responsibility; and
(iii) The accountant's actuary tests the
reasonableness of the reserves after the insurer's management has determined
the amount of the reserves;
(E) Internal audit outsourcing
services;
(F) Management functions
or human resources;
(G) Broker or
dealer, investment adviser, or investment banking services;
(H) Legal services or expert services
unrelated to the audit; or
(I) Any
other services that the commissioner determines, by regulation, are
impermissible.
(2) In
general, the principles of independence with respect to services provided by
the qualified independent certified public accountant are largely predicated on
three basic principles, violations of which would impair the accountant's
independence. The principles are that the accountant:
(A) Cannot function in the role of
management;
(B) Cannot audit his or
her own work; and
(C) Cannot serve
in an advocacy role for the insurer.
(h) Insurers having direct written and
assumed premiums of less than $100,000,000 in any calendar year may request an
exemption from subsection (g). The insurer shall file with the commissioner a
written statement discussing the reasons why the insurer should be exempt from
these provisions. If the commissioner finds, upon review of this statement,
that compliance with subsection (g) would constitute a financial or
organizational hardship upon the insurer, an exemption may be
granted.
(i) A qualified
independent certified public accountant who performs the audit may engage in
other non-audit services, including tax services, that are not described in or
that do not conflict with subsection (g), only if the activity is approved in
advance by the audit committee, in accordance with subsection (j).
(j) All auditing services and non-audit
services provided to an insurer by the qualified independent certified public
accountant of the insurer shall be preapproved by the audit committee. The
preapproval requirement is waived with respect to non-audit services if the
insurer is a SOX compliant entity or a direct or indirect wholly-owned
subsidiary of a SOX compliant entity or:
(1)
The aggregate amount of all such non-audit services provided to the insurer
constitutes not more than five per cent of the total amount of fees paid by the
insurer to its qualified independent certified public accountant during the
fiscal year in which the non-audit services are provided;
(2) The services were not recognized by the
insurer at the time of the engagement to be non-audit services; and
(3) The services are promptly brought to the
attention of the audit committee and approved prior to the completion of the
audit by the audit committee or by one or more members of the audit committee
who are the members of the board of directors to whom authority to grant such
approvals has been delegated by the audit committee.
(k) The audit committee may delegate to one
or more designated members of the audit committee the authority to grant the
preapprovals required by subsection (j). The decisions of any member to whom
this authority is delegated shall be presented to the full audit committee at
each of its scheduled meetings.
(l)
(1) The commissioner shall not recognize an
independent certified public accountant as qualified for a particular insurer
if a member of the board, president, chief executive officer, controller, chief
financial officer, chief accounting officer, or any person serving in an
equivalent position for that insurer, was employed by the independent certified
public accountant and participated in the audit of that insurer during the
one-year period preceding the date that the most current statutory opinion is
due. This paragraph shall only apply to partners and senior managers involved
in the audit. An insurer may make application to the commissioner for relief
from the above requirement on the basis of unusual circumstances.
(2) The insurer shall file, with its annual
statement filing, the approval for relief from subsection (l)(1) with the
states that it is licensed in or doing business in and the National Association
of Insurance Commissioners. If the nondomestic state accepts electronic filing
with the National Association of Insurance Commissioners, the insurer shall
file the approval in an electronic format acceptable to the National
Association of Insurance Commissioners.
Notes
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