Arizona Laws 20-239. Electronic communications and records; applicability; definitions
A. Any notice to a party or any other document that is required under this title in an insurance transaction or that is to serve as evidence of insurance coverage may be delivered, stored and presented by electronic means if it meets the requirements of Title 44, Chapter 26, Article 1. If an insurer uploads a document or notice to a portal or secure website, the insurer shall send a separate notice to the party that specifies that the document or notice has been uploaded and that includes a description of the document or notice that has been uploaded.
Terms Used In Arizona Laws 20-239
- Contract: A legal written agreement that becomes binding when signed.
- department: means the department of insurance and financial institutions. See Arizona Laws 20-101
- Evidence: Information presented in testimony or in documents that is used to persuade the fact finder (judge or jury) to decide the case for one side or the other.
- including: means not limited to and is not a term of exclusion. See Arizona Laws 1-215
- Property: includes both real and personal property. See Arizona Laws 1-215
- sent: means to deliver by United States mail, personal delivery or fax or by electronic means consistent with the requirements of section 20-239. See Arizona Laws 20-117
- United States: includes the District of Columbia and the territories. See Arizona Laws 1-215
B. An insurer may deliver a notice or document by electronic means to a party pursuant to this section if the party electronically consents to that method of electronic delivery and has not withdrawn consent. A named insured that effectuates insurance transactions by electronic means shall be deemed to have consented to receive notices and documents by electronic means in accordance with this section unless the named insured opts out of electronic delivery and elects delivery by hard copy.
C. Either an oral communication with a contemporaneous written record made of the communication or an archived recording of an oral communication subject to the insurer’s written record retention policy shall qualify as consent for the purposes of this section. The oral consent prescribed in this subsection applies only to an agreement to the use of electronic communication with the insurer and is not an agreement by the insured to any specific insurance policy or coverage or any other insurance matter.
D. Notwithstanding subsection A of this section, an insurer sending a notice pursuant to section 20-1632, subsection A, for a period of five years after the date of the notice, shall maintain in its files verification that the notice was sent by electronic means with a United States postal service electronic postmark or another email delivery service that provides electronic postmarks substantially similar to a United States postal service electronic postmark. The verification must contain sufficient information from which the department may determine that the notice was properly sent.
E. An insurer providing notice to an insured pursuant to section 20-1632 by electronic means shall also send that notice to the named insured by United States postal service certified mail, certificate of mailing or first class mail using intelligent mail barcode or another similar tracking method used or approved by the United States postal service pursuant to section 20-1632 if either of the following applies:
1. The notice being electronically delivered is rejected for delivery or returned to the insurer.
2. The insurer becomes aware that the email address provided by the party is no longer valid.
F. Delivery of a notice or document pursuant to this section is equivalent to any delivery method required or allowed under this title, including delivery by the United States postal service by first class mail, postage prepaid, certified mail, certificate of mailing or first class mail using intelligent mail barcode or another similar tracking method used or approved by the United States postal service.
G. After the party elects to receive notices and documents by electronic means, if a change in the hardware or software requirements needed to access or retain a notice or document delivered by electronic means creates a material risk that the party will not be able to access or retain a subsequent notice or document to which the consent applies, the insurer must inform the party of:
1. The revised hardware and software requirements for access to and retention of a notice or document delivered by electronic means.
2. The party’s right to withdraw consent without the imposition of any fee, condition or consequence.
H. This section does not affect the requirements related to content or timing of any notice or document required under this title.
I. If a provision of this title expressly requires verification or acknowledgment of receipt of a notice or document, the notice or document may be delivered by electronic means only if the method used provides for verification or acknowledgment of receipt.
J. The legal effectiveness, validity or enforceability of any insurance contract or policy executed by a party may not be denied solely because the insurer failed to obtain electronic consent or confirmation of consent.
K. A party’s withdrawal of consent:
1. Does not affect the legal effectiveness, validity or enforceability of a notice or document delivered by electronic means to the party before the withdrawal of consent is effective.
2. Is effective within seven days after the insurer receives the withdrawal.
L. If an insurer fails to comply with subsection G of this section, the party may treat that failure as a withdrawal of consent for the purposes of this section.
M. This section does not apply to a notice or document delivered by an insurer in an electronic format before July 24, 2014 to a party who, before that date, has consented to receive a notice or document in an electronic format as otherwise provided by law.
N. If a party’s consent to receive certain notices or documents in an electronic format is on file with an insurer before July 24, 2014 and the insurer intends to deliver additional notices or documents to that party in an electronic format pursuant to this section, before delivering the additional notices or documents electronically the insurer must notify the party of both of the following:
1. The notices or documents that may be delivered by electronic means under this section that were not previously delivered electronically.
2. The party’s right to withdraw consent to have notices or documents delivered by electronic means.
O. An insurer may not charge a fee to a party who does not consent to receive notices or documents by electronic means and who chooses to receive the notices or documents in hard copy.
P. This section applies only to property, casualty, disability, marine and transportation, surety, prepaid legal, prepaid dental, title, identity theft, workers’ compensation and life insurance policies and annuities that are subject to this title, including policies and contracts issued by health care services organizations and hospital, medical, dental and optometric service corporations.
Q. This section does not modify, limit or supersede the electronic signatures in global and national commerce act (P.L. 106-229; 15 United States Code §§ 7001 through 7031).
R. For the purposes of this section:
1. "Delivered by electronic means" includes either:
(a) The delivery to an email address at which a party has consented to receive notices or documents.
(b) The posting on an electronic network or site accessible via the internet or a mobile application, computer, mobile device, tablet or other electronic device, together with a separate notice of the posting that includes a description of the document or notice that has been posted and that is provided by email to the email address at which the party has consented to receive notice or by any other delivery method that has been consented to by the party.
2. "Party" means a recipient of any notice or document as part of an insurance transaction, including an applicant, an insured or a policyholder.