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International Insurance Act 1988


SAMOA


INTERNATIONAL INSURANCE ACT 1988


Arrangement of Provisions


PART 1
PRELIMINARY


  1. Short title and commencement
  2. Interpretation

PART 2
ADMINISTRATION
OF ACT


  1. Appointment of Registrar of International Insurance and Deputy Registrar
  2. Registration of International Insurance Companies
  3. Applications for Registration
  4. Refusal of Registration
  5. Registration
  6. Renewal of Registration
  7. Cancellation, suspension or imposition of conditions on licence
  8. Appeal against cancellation, suspension or imposition of conditions on licence
  9. Place of business
  10. Notification of changes

PART 3
RECORDS, ACCOUNTS AND LONG-TERM BUSINESS


13.Keeping of business records

  1. Annual Accounts
  2. Application of other Act
  3. Statutory and long-term business fund
  4. Transfer of long-term business
  5. Solvency margins
  6. Solvency margin for reinsurer and captive insurer

PART 4
REGULATION OF REGISTERED INSURERS


  1. Restriction of business

20A. Share not to be issued or transferred without approval

  1. Advertising
  2. Insurance Managers
  3. Management
  4. Power to obtain information
  5. Inspection and investigation
  6. Use of information
  7. Winding-up of registered insurer
  8. Winding-up on petition of Registrar
  9. Winding-up of insurer with long-term business
  10. Continuation of long-term business insurers in liquidation
  11. Reduction of contracts as alternative to winding up
  12. Breaches of professional secrecy
  13. Responsibility of employer for breach of security

PART 5
TAXATION AND
EXEMPTIONS


  1. Profits and dividends
  2. Exemption from stamp duty
  3. Exemption from currency and exchange control
  4. Power of exemption

PART 6
SUPPLEMENTARY

  1. Indemnity
  2. False statements
  3. General penalty provisions
  4. Regulations
  5. Procedure where none laid down

42A. English the authentic text

  1. Financial provisions


INTERNATIONAL INSURANCE ACT 1988

1988 No.43


AN ACT to provide for the regulation of persons establishing and carrying on off-shore insurance business from within Samoa and for purposes connected therewith.

[Assent date:15 March 1989]


PART 1
PRELIMINARY


1. Short title and commencement(1) This Act may be cited as the International Insurance Act 1988.
(2) This Act comes into force on such date as may be specified by the Head of State by Order.


2. Interpretation– In this Act, unless the context otherwise requires:

“actuary” means a person who has qualified as an actuary by examination of 1 of the professional bodies of actuaries approved by the Registrar and who is a current member in good standing of 1 of those bodies, or is a person of good standing with some other actuarial qualification who is recognised by the Registrar as such for the purposes of this Act;

“approved securities” means securities located or effected in Samoa or elsewhere and approved by the Authority for the purposes of section 6(1)(b);

“auditor” means a person who is a member of 1 of the professional bodies approved by the Authority and who is a registered company auditor for the purposes of the International Companies Act 1988;

“Authority” means the Samoa International Finance Authority established under the Samoa International Finance Authority Act 2005;

“Captive Insurance Business” means insurance business where the insured is a parent or affiliated company of the registered insurer or is a person in respect of whom the registered insurer is authorised by the Authority to provide insurance;

“Chief Executive” means in relation to a registered insurer, an employee of such insurer, who, either alone or jointly with another, is, responsible under the immediate authority of the directors for the conduct of the whole of the insurance business of that insurer;

“category of business” means long-term business, general business, reinsurance business or captive insurance business as the case may be;

“company” means a body corporate formed or incorporated (other than a domestic company) whether in Samoa or outside Samoa and includes any foreign company (other than an overseas company registered under the Companies Act 1955 (NZ) but does not include a corporation sole;

“conditions” includes restrictions;

“Contract of Insurance” includes any contract the effecting of which constitutes the carrying on of insurance business;

“controller” means a person:

(a) in accordance with whose directions or instructions the directors of a registered insurer are accustomed to act; or

(b) who either alone or with any associate or associates is entitled to exercise, or control the exercise of, one-third or more of the voting power at any general meeting of a registered insurer;

“Court” means the Supreme Court of Samoa;

“Director” means any person (including a company registered under the International Companies Act 1988 and the Trustee Companies Act 1988) occupying the position of director by whatever name called and includes a person in accordance with whose directions or instructions the directors of a company are accustomed to act;

“dollar” means a unit of the currency of the United States of America and “$” has the same meaning;

“domestic business” means insurance business where, whether the contract of insurance is made in Samoa or elsewhere, the subject matter of the contract is either:

(a) property that at the time of making of the contract is in, or in transit to or from Samoa; or

(b) the life, safety, fidelity or insurable interest of an individual who at the time of the making of the contract is ordinarily resident in Samoa; or

(c) a risk of a company formed in Samoa that is not an international company or a foreign company;

“foreign company” means a company registered under Part 10 of the International Companies Act 1988;

“general business” means insurance business that is not long-term business, reinsurance business, or captive business and without limiting the generality of this term includes marine insurance, engineering insurance, aviation insurance, transportation insurance, motor insurance, property liability insurance, pecuniary loss insurance, credit and guarantor insurance and miscellaneous personal insurance;

“insurance” includes assurance and reinsurance;

“Insurance Business” means the business of effecting and carrying out contracts:

(a) protecting persons against loss or liability to loss in respect of risks to which such, persons may be exposed; or

(b) to pay a sum of money or other thing of value upon the happening of an event, and includes reinsurance business;

“insurance manager” means a person, not being an employee of an insurer, who:

(a) provides management services for 1 or more insurers; or

(b) holds himself or herself out as a manager in relation to 1 or more insurers, but does not include the keeping of insurance business accounts for a registered insurer;

“insurer” means a person effecting or carrying on a insurance business and except where otherwise stated, includes each member of an association of underwriters;

“international company” means a company incorporated pursuant to the International Companies Act 1988;

“long-term business” means insurance business of any of the following kinds, namely:

(a) affecting and carrying out contracts of insurance on human life or contracts to pay annuities on human life;

(b) effecting and carrying out contracts of insurance against risks of the persons insured sustaining injury as the result of an accident, or of an accident of a specified class, or dying as the result of an accident or of an accident of a specified class, becoming incapacitated in consequence of disease, or disease of a specified class, being contracts that are expressed to be in effect for a period of not less than 5years or without limit of time and either not expressed to be terminable by the insurer before the expiration of 5 years from the taking effect thereof or are expressed to be so terminable before the expiration of that period only in special circumstances therein mentioned;

(c) effecting and carrying out contracts of insurance, whether effected by the issue of policies, bonds or endowment certificates or otherwise, whereby in return for 1 or more premiums paid to the insurer a sum or a series of sums is to become payable to the persons insured in the future, not being contracts such as fall within either paragraph (a) or (b);

(d) any kind of insurance business declared by regulation to be long-term business;

“long-term business fund” means a fund established under section 16(2);

“Minister” means the Minister of Finance;

“off-shore insurance business” means the carrying on or the conducting whether within or outside Samoa of any insurance business where each of the insured, the person to whom the policy moneys are payable and the owner of the policy or any 1 or more of such persons:

(a) is not domiciled in Samoa; or

(b) is not ordinarily resident in Samoa; or

(c) is not a company incorporated or registered in Samoa under any legislation other than the International Companies Act 1988; or

(d) is a trustee company;

“owner” in relation to a policy; means the person who has the legal title to the policy and includes an assignee;

“policy” means:

(a) any policy or other contract of insurance and any policy, bond, certificate, receipt or other instrument evidencing the contract with the insurer or underwriter or any person named in a policy or other contract of insurance who is liable to pay or contribute towards payment of the sum secured by the policy or contract; or

(b) an instrument evidencing a contract to pay an annuity; or

(c) any policy or other contract in relation to insurance business of any class under which there is an existing liability already accrued or under which a liability may accrue;

“policy holder” means a person who is the legal holder of a policy for securing a contract with an insurer, including an assignee and:

(a) in relation to such long-term business as consists in the granting of annuities upon human life, includes an annuitant; and

(b) in relation to insurance business of any kind, includes a person to whom, under a policy, a benefit is due or a periodic payment is payable;

“person” includes a body of persons corporate or unincorporate;

“registered insurer” means an insurer registered or formerly registered under section 7 to carry on off-shore insurance business;

“registered insurance Manager” is a person registered under section 22;

“registrar” means the person appointed under section 3 to be the Registrar of International Insurance for the administration of this Act and includes any person appointed to be the Deputy Registrar or an Assistant Registrar when exercising any powers under this Act in accordance with the directions of the registrar;

“regulations” means regulations made under section 41;

“reinsurance business” means insurance business where the risk insured by a person is a risk that person has accepted from an insurer;

“related company” has the meaning given by section 4(5) of the International Companies Act 1988;

“statutory fund” means a fund established under section 16(1);

“solvency margin” has the meaning ascribed to it by section 18(1);

“year” means a calendar year.


PART 2
ADMINISTRATION OF ACT


3. Appointment of Registrar of International Insurance and Deputy Registrar (1) There shall be appointed by the Authority and publicly notified a Registrar of International Insurance to have the charge and control of the International Insurance Act and to carry out the duties and functions vested in the Registrar by or under this or any other Act.
(2) There shall also be appointed by the Authority such Deputy Registrars of International Insurance and other officers as are required for the purposes of this Act.
(3) Anything by this Act appointed or authorised or requested to be done by the Registrar may be done by any such Deputy Registrar and is as valid and effectual as if done by the Registrar.
(4) All Courts, Judges, and persons acting judicially shall take judicial notice of the seal and also of the signature of the Registrar and of any Deputy Registrar.
(5) For the purpose of ascertaining whether a registered insurer is complying with the provisions of this Act, the Registrar or any person authorised by him or her may inspect any book, minute book, register or record required by or under this Act to be kept by the registered insurer.
(6) A person who, except for the purposes of this Act, or when properly ordered to do so by the Court, makes a record of, divulges or communicates to any other person, any information which he or she has acquired by reason of such inspection, commits an offence against this Act.
(7) A registered insurer or any official thereof shall, on being required by the Registrar or a person authorised by the Registrar, produce any such book, register or record.
(8) A registered insurer or any officer thereof shall not obstruct or hinder the Registrar or person so authorised while exercising any of the powers referred to in subsection (5).
(9) There shall be paid to the Registrar such fees and penalties as are prescribed.


4. Registration of International Insurance Companies– No person, shall carry on or transact or hold himself or herself out as carrying on or transacting any off-shore insurance business in or from within Samoa unless that person holds a valid certificate of registration issued under this Part and any person who contravenes this section commits an offence against this Act.


4A. Use of the word “Insurance”, etc.(1) Except with the approval of the Registrar in writing, no person, other than a registered insurer under this Act or the holder of a valid insurance licence issued under the Insurance Act 2007 shall:

(a) use or continue to use the words “insurance”, “assurance”, “indemnity”, “guarantee”, “underwriting”, “reinsurance”, “re”, “surety”, “casualty”, or any other word which in the opinion of the Registrar connotes insurance business or any of their derivatives in any other language in the description or title under which such person is carrying on business in or from within Samoa; or

(b) make or continue to make any representation in any billhead, printed form, letter, letterhead, circular, paper notice, advertisement or in any other manner whatsoever that such person is carrying on offshore insurance business in or from within Samoa.
(2) A person who contravenes this section commits an offence against this Act.


5. Application for registration(1) Applications for registration to carry on an off-shore insurance business shall be made in writing in the prescribed form to the Authority and be accompanied by:

(a) a certified copy of the Act, charter, deed of settlement, Memorandum of Association and Articles of Association of the body corporate, or other document or documents by which the body corporate is constituted; and

(b) such fee as may be prescribed by regulation; and

(c) such evidence as the Authority or the Registrar may require—

(i) to show that the applicant has complied with its obligations under the International Companies Act 1988;

(ii) of the nature and character of the applicant's business;

(iii) of the financial standing of the applicant;

(iv) of the shareholding and management of the applicant; and

(v) of the ultimate beneficial ownership of the stocks or shares of the applicant; and

(d) the address of its registered office in Samoa; and

(e) such references as the Authority or the Registrar may require; and

(f) such other information as may be required by regulations.
(2) In addition to the documents, information, and evidence which shall accompany an application under subsection (1), an applicant shall if required to do so by the Authority, provide any additional documents, information, or evidence as the Authority or the Registrar may require.


6. Refusal of registration(1) The Authority shall not register any applicant under section 7 if the applicant:

(a) is not an international company or a foreign company; or

(b) does not satisfy the Authority that the amount paid up on its share capital—

(i) in a case where the applicant proposes to carry on long-term business but no other category of business, is $500,000 or more; or

(ii) in a case where the applicant proposes to carry on general business but no other category of business, is $500,000 or more; or

(iii) in a case where the applicant proposes to carry on reinsurance business but no other category of business, is $200,000 or more; or

(iv) in a case where the applicant proposes to carry on captive insurance business but no other category of business is $100,000 or more; or

(v) in a case where the applicant proposes to carry on more than 1 category of business is the aggregate of the amounts required for each category and, subject to subsection (2), does not satisfy the Registrar that the minimum amount paid up on its share capital is maintained in approved securities; or

(c) does not satisfy the Authority that the controller, directors and chief executive (if any) of the applicant are fit and proper persons to be associated with insurance companies; or

(d) does not satisfy the Authority that it has, or has available, adequate knowledge and expertise of the insurance business to be carried on; or

(e) does not satisfy the Authority that it has either:

(i) management in Samoa with adequate knowledge and expertise of the insurance business to be carried on and has at least 1 director resident in Samoa; or

(ii) appointed a registered insurance manager in Samoa with adequate knowledge and experience of the insurance business to be carried on; or

(f) does not comply with the criteria contained in regulations; or

(g) it is in the public interest to refuse the registration.
(2) The requirement to maintain minimum paid up share capital in approved securities shall not apply where the applicant does not propose to carry on any insurance business other than reinsurance business or captive insurance business.


7. Registration(1) In relation to every application for registration the Authority shall either:

(a) issue a certificate of registration to the applicant authorising it to carry on, subject to such terms and conditions as the Authority thinks are appropriate, a category or categories of insurance business; or

(b) reject the application; or

(c) defer the application and direct that such further enquiries as the Registrar considers necessary be made.
(2) Where:

(a) the Registrar rejects an application the Authority shall notify the applicant in writing of the rejection but the Authority shall not be required to give reasons therefor; and

(b) an application is rejected any application fee, less a prescribed administration charge, must be refunded.
(3) If any terms and conditions are imposed under subsection (1)(a), the Authority may vary or revoke any of those terms or conditions or impose any additional conditions.


8. Renewal of Registration(1) The first certificate of registration is valid for 12 months from the date of registration and is renewable thereafter for further periods of 12 months from each anniversary of the date of registration upon due payment of the prescribed annual renewal fee.
(2) Where application to renew the certificate is not made before the date of expiry, or the annual renewal fee is not paid prior to that date, a renewal certificate may nevertheless be issued, on payment of the prescribed penalties provided that:

(i) the certificate of registration has not been cancelled or revoked;

(ii) a renewal application is made and the annual renewal fee is paid, within 1 month after the date of expiry of the certificate; and

(iii) the Registrar is satisfied that there were good and sufficient reasons as to why an application for renewal or payment of the renewal fee was not made prior to the date of expiry of the certificate.
(3) A certificate of registration shall show on its face the date of expiry.
(4) A director or officer of a registered insurer who knowingly permits the company to continue to carry on its insurance business after the date of expiry of its certificate of registration and before a current certificate of registration has been issued commits an offence against this Act.


9. Cancellation, suspension or imposition of conditions on licence (1) A certificate of registration may be cancelled or suspended or made subject to conditions by the Authority at any time for such period as the Authority deems fit, where there has been any change in the circumstances of the registered insurer (including any change in shareholding, management, or beneficial ownership) which would have caused the Authority to have refused an application for registration if such changed circumstances had been part of the original application or where the registered insurer:

(a) fails to provide any document, information or evidence which he or she has been required to provide; or

(b) fails to notify the Authority of any material changes which have taken place, as required by section 12; or

(c) has a winding-up order made against it; or

(d) fails to comply with any term or condition subject to which the certificate of registration was issued; or

(e) is in breach of any duty or obligation imposed upon it by this Act or commits an offence under this Act; or

(f) ceases to transact off-shore insurance business from within Samoa and requests that the certificate or registration be cancelled; or

(g) conducts its affairs in a manner which is or might be prejudicial to the interests of present or potential policy holders and the general public.
(2) Where the Authority intends to suspend or cancel or impose conditions on a licence under subsection (1) it shall give the registered insurer notice of its intention and a reasonable opportunity to show cause as to why the licence should not be suspended or cancelled or made subject to conditions.
(3) Where the Authority has given notice to the registered insurer of its intention to suspend or cancel or impose conditions on the certificate of registration under subsection (2) the Authority, after considering any submissions and evidence by the registered insurer may:

(a) suspend or cancel or impose conditions on the certificate of registration; or

(b) alter its intention by suspending instead of cancelling the certificate of registration or vice versa; or

(c) not proceed with its intention to suspend or cancel or impose conditions on the certificate of registration, and it shall give notice to the registered insurer of its decisions and such decision shall take effect from such date as is specified by the Authority in the notice.
(4) Where the Authority gives notice to the registered insurer of its decision to suspend or cancel or impose conditions on the certificate of registration under subsection (3), the registered insurer shall return the certificate of registration to the Authority forthwith.


10. Appeal against cancellation, suspension or imposition of conditions on licence (1) A person who is aggrieved by the cancellation or suspension or imposition of conditions on a licence may, within 14 days of the giving of the notice under section 9(3), appeal against the cancellation, suspension or imposition of conditions to a Judge of the Court in Chambers whose decision thereon is final.
(2) Pending the determination of any appeal under subsection (1), the Judge may at any time defer the cancellation, suspension or imposition of conditions which is the subject of the appeal.


11. Place of business (1) A registered insurer shall transact business only from its registered office in Samoa or through the office of a trustee company unless it applies for and receives the prior written permission of the Authority to maintain a permanent establishment in Samoa and the Authority may grant the permission upon such terms and conditions as it thinks fit.
(2) Unless otherwise approved, the principal place of business of the registered insurer shall be its registered office in Samoa or the address of the trustee company as the case may be.


12. Notification of changes (1) A registered insurer shall within 21 days after the making of an alteration in the Act, charter, deed of settlement, Memorandum of Association, Articles of Association or other document by which it was constituted a body corporate, submit to the Authority particulars in writing of the alteration certified by a director or the secretary of the registered insurer.
(2) A registered insurer shall forthwith notify the Authority in writing, of any material change in the particulars set out in the application for registration or in the documents, information, or evidence accompanying that application or in any documents, information or evidence, if any, given under section 5.
(3) A person who fails to comply with this section commits an offence against this Act.


PART 3
RECORDS, ACCOUNTS AND
LONG-TERM BUSINESS


13. Keeping of business records (1) In this section:

“accounts” means profit and loss accounts and balance sheets, and includes notes (other than directors’ reports) attached to, or intended to be read with, any of those profit and loss accounts or balance sheets;

“business records” include accounting, policy and claims records of the registered insurer and such working papers and other documents as are necessary to explain the methods and calculations by which its accounts are made up.
(2) A registered insurer shall keep and maintain:

(a) such business records as correctly record and explain its transactions and financial position;

(b) its business records in such a manner as will enable true and fair accounts to be prepared;

(c) its business records in such a manner as will allow its accounts to be conveniently and properly audited; and

(d) its business records at its principal place of business in Samoa unless otherwise authorised in writing by the Authority.
(3) A registered insurer who fails to comply with this section commits an offence against this Act.


14. Annual Accounts – (1) The provisions of the International Companies Act 1988 relating to accounts and auditors except to the extent that they are inconsistent with this Act shall apply to registered insurers.
(2) In this section, “annual accounts” mean:

(a) the revenue or fund account for the year;

(b) the profit and loss account for the year or, in the case of a registered insurer not trading for profit, income and expenditure account for the year; and

(c) the balance sheet as at the end of the year in such form (being a form calculated to enable comparisons to be made between the registered insurer’s business for the year in respect of which the statements are prepared and the registered insurer’s business for the year immediately preceding that year) and shall contain such information, as may be prescribed.
(3)(a) A copy of the registered insurer’s audited annual accounts shall be submitted to the Registrar within 21 days after the date of the meeting at which the accounts were approved by the Board of Directors and in any event not later than 6 months after the close of the financial year to which they relate; and

(b) where the audited accounts are submitted later than 6 months after the close of the financial year to which they relate a penalty to be prescribed shall be payable.
(4) Such statements, reports, certificates and information as may be required by regulations made under this Act, or required by any other enactment to be annexed or attached to the annual accounts for any purpose shall be produced to the Registrar at the same time as the annual accounts are submitted.
(5) For the purpose of this section, an audit shall be carried out by a registered company auditor approved for that purpose by the Authority.
(6) A registered insurer who wilfully fails to comply with subsection (3) or (4), commits an offence against this Act.


14A. Actuarial Valuation(1) A registered insurer licensed to carry on long term business shall, in addition to filing audited accounts as required under section 14, prepare and file every 2 years an actuarial valuation of its assets and liabilities, certified by an approved actuary, so as to enable the Registrar to be satisfied as to its solvency.
(2) The actuarial valuation shall be submitted to the Registrar not later than 6 months after the close of the financial year to which it relates.
(3) A person who contravenes this section commits an offence against this Act.


15. Application of other Act – Section 117 of the International Companies Act 1988 does not apply to a registered insurer.


16. Statutory and long-term business funds (1):

(a) subject to this section, a registered insurer may establish and maintain 1 or more statutory funds, under an appropriate name, in respect of such part or parts of the off-shore insurance business carried on by it, as the registered insurer so determines;

(b) where a registered insurer has established a statutory fund, it shall determine as soon as practicable thereafter what part or parts of its off-shore insurance business relate to that statutory fund;

(c) a registered insurer shall not determine that a particular policy or policies issued by it relates to a particular statutory fund unless the owner of the policy or the person who upon the issue of the policy will become the owner has consented in writing to the application of this section to the policy;

(d) all amounts received by a registered insurer in respect of any part of its off-shore insurance business in respect of which it has established a statutory fund, shall be carried to and become assets of that fund, including any income arising from investment of the assets of that statutory fund;

(da) the assets of every statutory fund maintained by a registered insurer may be invested (subject to any provisions in the instrument constituting the registered insurer or in the articles of association or other rules of the registered insurer which impose restrictions upon the manner in which the assets of the registered insurer may be invested) in such manner as the registered insurer thinks fits;

(e) for the purposes of paragraph (da), the whole or any part of the assets of a statutory fund may be applied or invested by a registered insurer in or towards the payment of any premium or other fee or payment (each of whatsoever nature) payable in order to effect or maintain, or in respect of effecting or maintaining, reinsurance in respect of that statutory fund.
(2)(a) Where a registered insurer transacts or carries on long term insurance business, the insurer shall establish a statutory fund to be known as the long-term business fund into an appropriately named sub-fund of which, all receipts in respect of each subclass of such business shall be paid;

(b) no transfer of assets from a long-term business fund other than a transfer under subsection (3)(c) shall be effected without—

(i) the authority of a resolution of the directors of the registered insurer;

(ii) the written consent of the actuary to the registered insurer;

(c) No registered insurer transacting or carrying on long-term business shall declare or pay a dividend to any person other than a policy-holder unless:

(i) at a date within the year immediately preceding the declaration of the dividend, the value of the assets in its long-term business fund as certified by the actuary to the registered insurer, exceeds the extent (as so certified) of the liabilities of the registered insurer’s long-term business; and

(ii) the amount of such dividend shall not be such as to cause the margin of solvency of the registered insurer to fall below the amount required under section 18.
(3)(a) A registered insurer which has established any statutory fund or a long-term business fund in respect of any part of its off-shore business shall:

(i) keep its business accounts in respect of such insurance business separate from any business accounts kept in respect of any other insurance business; and

(ii) maintain books of account and other records in such a manner that the assets of any statutory or long-term business fund established under this section and the liabilities referable to the off-shore insurance business to which any statutory or long-term business fund relates, can be readily identified at any time;

(b) the assets of a statutory or long-term business fund shall not be available to meet any liabilities or expenses of the registered insurer other than the liabilities or expenses referable to that part or parts of the insurance business to which the statutory or long-term business fund relates;

(c) the restriction imposed by subsection (3)(b) shall not apply to so much of those assets as are certified by the actuary to the insurer to exceed the extent (as certified) of the liabilities of the registered insurer’s long-term business;

(d) a registered insurer shall not mortgage or charge any assets of any statutory or long-term business fund other than with the consent of all owners of policies issued in respect of the insurance business to which that statutory or long-term business fund relates;

(e) the assets of a statutory or long-term business fund shall be kept distinct and separate from all other assets of the registered insurer; and

(f) where a registered insurer has established a statutory or long-term business fund under this section—

(i) no assets of the registered insurer other than those comprising and constituting the statutory or long-term business fund shall be available to meet any liabilities or expenses (each of whatsoever nature) in any way referable to the insurance business to which the statutory or long-term business fund relates; and

(ii) no proceedings of any nature whatsoever seeking to recover from such registered insurer any assets or amounts of the statutory or long-term business fund a value thereof shall be taken in any way against or in respect of such registered insurer in any Court and no judgment of any Court shall issue against any such registered insurer or be enforced in Samoa against such registered insurer for any moneys or assets other than those of the statutory or long-term business fund.
(4) A registered insurer who contravenes the provisions of this section commits an offence against this Act.


17. Transfer of long-term business (1) Where it is proposed to carry out a scheme under which the whole or part of the long-term business carried on by a registered insurer (“the transferor”) is to be transferred to another registered insurer (“the transferee”) the transferor or transferee may apply to the Court by petition, for an Order sanctioning the scheme.
(2) The Court shall not determine an application under this section unless the petition is accompanied by a report on the terms of the scheme by an independent actuary (not being an employee of, nor actuary to, either registered insurer) and the Court is satisfied that the requirements of subsection (3) have been complied with or that in the circumstances compliance is unnecessary.
(3) The requirements referred to in subsection (2) are:

(a) that a notice has been published in any 2 newspapers circulating in Samoa as the Authority shall approve stating that the application has been made and giving the address of the offices at which, and the period for which, copies of the documents under paragraph (d) will be available as required by that paragraph;

(b) except where the Court has otherwise directed, that the statement—

(i) setting out the terms of the scheme; and

(ii) containing a summary of the report mentioned in subsection (2) sufficient to indicate the opinion of the actuary on the likely effects of the scheme on the long-term policy holders of the registered insurers concerned, has been sent to each of those policy holders and to every member of those registered insurers;

(c) that a copy of, the petition and the report mentioned in subsection (2) and any statement sent out under paragraph (b) has been served on the Authority and that a period of not less than 3 weeks has elapsed since the date of such service; and

(d) that copies of, the petition and the report mentioned in subsection (2) have been open to inspection at the office in Samoa of the registered insurers concerned or their representatives for a period of not less than 3 weeks beginning with the date of the publication of a notice under paragraph (a).
(4) Each of the registered insurers concerned shall provide a copy of, the petition and the report mentioned in subsection (2) to any person who asks for 1 at any time before an Order sanctioning the scheme is made on the petition.
(5) On any petition under this section:

(a) the Authority or the Registrar; and

(b) a person (including any employee of the transferor or the transferee),
who alleges that he or she would be adversely affected by the carrying out of the scheme is entitled to be heard.
(6) The Court shall not make an Order sanctioning the scheme unless it is satisfied that the transferee is, or, immediately after the making of the Order will be authorised to carry on any long-term business to be transferred under the scheme.
(7) No such transfer as is mentioned in subsection (1) shall be carried out unless the scheme relating to the transfer has been sanctioned by the Court under this section and no Order shall be made under the International Companies Act 1988 in respect of so much of any compromise or arrangement as involves any such transfer.
(8) Where the Court makes an Order under this section sanctioning a scheme the Court may, either by that Order or by any subsequent Order, make provision for all or any of the following matters:

(a) the transfer to the transferee of the whole or any part of the undertaking and of the property or liabilities of the transferor;

(b) the allotting or appropriation by the transferee of any shares, debentures, policies or other like interests in the transferee which under the scheme are to be allotted or appropriated by the transferee to or for any person;

(c) the continuation by or against the transferee of any legal proceedings pending by or against the transferor;

(d) the dissolution, without winding up, of the transferor;

(e) such incidental, consequential and supplementary matters as are necessary to secure that the scheme is fully and effectively carried out.
(9) Where any such Order provides for the transfer of property or liabilities, that property shall, by virtue of the Order, be transferred to and vest in, and those liabilities shall, by virtue of the Order, be transferred to and become the liabilities of the transferee and, in the case of any property, if the Order so directs, free from any mortgage or charge which is by virtue of the scheme to cease to have effect.
(10) For the purposes of any provision requiring the delivery of an instrument as a condition for the registration of the transfer of any property, an Order which by virtue of this section operates to transfer any property shall be treated as an instrument of transfer.
(11) Where a scheme is sanctioned by an Order of the Court under this section the transferee shall, within 10 days from the date on which the order is made, or such longer period as the Registrar may allow, deposit 2 certified copies of the Order with the Registrar.
(12) A person who fails to comply with subsection (4) or (11) commits an offence against this Act.
(13) In this section:

“property” includes property, rights and powers of every description;

“liabilities” include duties;

“share” and “debenture” have the same meaning as in the International Companies Act 1988.


18. Solvency margins(1) Subject to subsection (7) a registered insurer shall ensure that the value of its assets exceeds the amount of its liabilities (“the margin of solvency”) by such amount as may be prescribed by or determined in accordance with regulations made for the purposes of this section.
(2) If the solvency margin of a registered insurer falls below such amount as may be prescribed by or determined in accordance with regulations made for the purposes of this section, the registered insurer shall at the request of the Registrar submit to him or her a short-term financial scheme within 30 days of the request, or such longer periods as the Registrar may permit, and shall if the Registrar considers the scheme (or the scheme as previously modified) inadequate, propose modifications to it.
(3) Where a registered insurer is required to maintain separate solvency margins in respect of long-term and general business, subsection (2) shall have effect as if any reference to the solvency margin of the registered insurer is a reference to the aggregate of those margins.
(4) A scheme submitted under subsection (2) may include proposals for:

(a) the appointment of a special manager acceptable to the Registrar; and

(b) the discontinuance, either in whole or in part, of the registered insurer’s business.
(5) A registered insurer shall give effect to any scheme accepted by the Registrar.
(6) If a registered insurer is unable or fails to submit a scheme which is acceptable to the Registrar, the registered insurer shall be deemed for the purposes of section 159 of the International Companies Act1988, to be unable to pay its debts.
(7) This section does not apply to a registered insurer who carries on only reinsurance business or captive insurance business.


19. Solvency margin for reinsurer and captive insurer – A registered insurer who carries on only reinsurance business or captive insurance business shall:

(a) have such surplus of tangible assets or other assets as may be approved by the Registrar over liabilities as may be prescribed by regulation; and

(b) demonstrate if required by Registrar in writing to the satisfaction of the Registrar its financial stability.


PART 4
REGULATION OF REGISTERED INSURERS


20. Restriction of Business (1) A registered insurer shall not carry on any activities, in Samoa or elsewhere, otherwise than in connection with or for the purpose of its off-shore insurance business.
(2) Subject to subsection (1), a registered insurer shall not carry on business other than off-shore insurance business.
(3) A registered insurer who is authorised to carry on only captive insurance business shall not accept business from or insure any person who is not a parent or affiliated company of the registered insurer unless the insured is a person in respect of whom the registered insurer is authorised by the Authority to provide insurance.
(4) Reinsurance:

(a) subject to paragraph (b), a registered insurer may effect reinsurance in respect of any off-shore insurance business undertaken by it and may assign to the owner of a policy the rights of the registered insurer against the reinsurer in respect of any particular policy. In the event of such an assignment being effected the owner of the policy shall continue to have rights against the registered insurer only to the extent that the risks covered by the policy issued by the registered insurer have not been so reinsured;

(b) an assignment under paragraph (a) is valid only if the owner of the policy has consented in writing to this section applying or if the person who will become the owner of a policy upon its issue has so consented prior to the issue of the policy; and

(c) nothing in this section restricts the ability of a registered insurer to effect reinsurance without an assignment under paragraph (a).
(5) A registered insurer shall not use or operate under a name which:

(a) so closely resembles or is identical to the name of any company firm or business house whether within Samoa or not, as is likely to mislead or deceive; or

(b) is calculated to falsely suggest the patronage of or connection with some person or authority whether within Samoa or not; or

(c) is calculated to falsely suggest that such registered insurer has a special status in relation to or derived from the Government, or has the official backing of or act on behalf of the said Government or of any department of official thereof or is recognised in Samoa as a national insurer.
(6) A person who contravenes this section commits an offence against this Act.


20A. Share not to be issued or transferred without approval(1) No shares in or other securities whatsoever of a registered insurer are to be issued and no issued shares or beneficial interests in shares or other securities of any registered insurer are to be transferred or disposed of in any manner without the prior written approval of the Registrar:
PROVIDED THAT the Registrar may exempt any registered insurer from this section, subject to the terms and conditions, if any, as the Registrar may deem necessary.
(2) In subsection (1) the reference to shares of any registered insurer being transferred or disposed of includes any transfer or disposition that would result in any change in beneficial ownership of the registered insurer.
(3) Despite subsection (1), the prior written approval of the Registrar shall not be required where shares or other securities are issued to existing shareholders on a pro-rata basis.
(4) No bearer shares or share warrants to bearer may be issued by a registered insurer.


21. Advertising (1) No advertising is to be used by a registered insurer which is likely to mislead, or deceive prospective policy holders with respect to the registered insurer’s assets, corporate structure, financial standing, age or relative position in the insurance business or in any other material respect.
(2) A person who contravenes this section commits an offence against this Act.


22. Insurance Managers (1) No person shall act as an insurance manager for, or in relation to, a registered insurer, unless that person:

(a) is registered in a register to be kept by the Registrar in accordance with regulations and has paid to the Registrar the prescribed registration fee and every prescribed annual renewal fee; and

(b) is exempted from registration by such regulations, and is either an international company or a foreign company.
(2) An applicant for registration shall provide such documents and information as may be required by the Authority or the Registrar including, without limiting the generality of the foregoing, such documents and information as the Authority or the Registrar may require to satisfy itself, himself or herself that the applicant is a fit and proper person and has or has available adequate knowledge and expertise so as to provide satisfactory insurance management services in Samoa.
(3) Sections 23, 24, 25 and 32 apply, with the necessary modifications in relation to any person acting as an insurance manager as they apply to a registered insurer.
(4) The Authority may if he or she thinks it proper to do so:

(a) refuse to register any application for registration; and

(b) cancel any registration at any time.
(5) Where a person carries on a business which in any respect is or in the opinion of the Authority appears to be, of a similar character to the business carried on by an insurance manager, that person upon a declaration made by the Authority in writing is subject to the provisions of this section and is deemed to be acting as an insurance manager.
(6) Any person who:

(a) contravenes subsection (1); or

(b) wilfully—

(i) takes or uses any style, title or description which consists of or includes the expression “insurance manager” when he or she is not registered; or

(ii) takes or uses any style, title or description falsely implying or otherwise pretends, that he or she is registered,
commits an offence against this Act.


23. Management(1) Subject to subsection (2) a registered insurer shall have:

(a) management in Samoa; or

(b) appoint a registered insurance manager in Samoa with adequate knowledge and experience of the insurance business carried on.
(2) A registered insurer who is authorised to carry on only captive insurance business shall appoint a registered insurance manager in Samoa with adequate knowledge and experience of the insurance business carried on or to be carried on, unless it is authorised by the Authority to maintain a permanent establishment pursuant to section 11(1).


24. Power to obtain information (1) The Authority or the Registrar may require a registered insurer to provide to the Authority or the Registrar, at specified times or intervals, with information about specified matters relating to the insurer being, if the Authority or the Registrar so requires, information verified in a specified manner or provided in a specified form.
(2) Where by virtue of subsection (1) the Authority or the Registrar has required a registered insurer to provide information about specified matters and the registered insurer has failed to provide that information, the Authority or the Registrar may require the registered insurer’s actuary, auditor, insurance manager or banker to provide such information about those matters as is within their knowledge.
(3) The Authority or the Registrar may require a registered insurer to produce, at such time and place as the Authority or the Registrar may specify, such documents or information as the Authority or the Registrar may specify.
(4) Where by virtue of subsection (3) the Authority or the Registrar has power to require the production of any document from any registered insurer, the Authority or the Registrar shall have the like power to require the production of that document from any person who appears to the Authority or the Registrar to be in possession of it; but where any person from whom such production is required claims a lien on any document produced by him or her, the production shall be without prejudice to the lien.
(5) A power conferred by virtue of subsection (3) or (4) to require a registered insurer or other person to produce any document or information shall include a power to take copies of it or extracts from it.
(6) In this section and section 25, references to the Registrar shall include any person appointed in writing by the Authority to carry out the duties of the Registrar.
(7) A person who fails to supply information or to produce any document when required to do so by the Authority or the Registrar under this section, commits an offence against this Act.
(8) The powers conferred by this section and section 25 may be exercised in relation to a registered insurer whose certificate of registration has been cancelled or suspended but shall not be exercised after that registered insurer has ceased to have any liability in respect of any contract of insurance which was entered into at a time when it was registered.


25. Inspection and Investigation (1) The Authority may appoint any qualified person as an Inspector to investigate the affairs or any part of the affairs of a registered insurer and to inspect the registered insurer’s business and accounting records and accounts and such other records as may have been kept by the registered insurer in the course of its off-shore insurance business, if the Registrar has reason to believe that the registered insurer is carrying on its business in a manner prejudicial to the interest of its policy holders or of persons who may become policy holders or that it may have insufficient assets to cover its liabilities and claims by policy holders, or either in Samoa or elsewhere it may be contravening any of the provisions of this Act.
(2) It is the duty of the registered insurer under investigation and of all past and present officers of the registered insurer and of any related company which has been involved in the off-shore insurance business transactions of the registered insurer, to produce to the Inspector all books, records and documents relating to the registered insurer or related company under investigation which are in their custody or control and otherwise to give the Inspector all assistance in connection with the investigation which they are reasonably able to give.
(3) The Inspector shall have every such power of entry and access as may be necessary for the purposes of this section, and he or she may take possession of all such books, accounts and documents as, and for so long as, may be necessary for the purposes of his or her inspection and investigation.
(4) The Inspector shall exercise his or her right of entry and access under subsection (3) during the normal office hours of the registered insurer, unless otherwise authorised by the Court.
(5) The Inspector may take copies of all books, accounts and documents of the registered insurer in his or her possession for the purposes of his or her inspection and investigation under this section.
(6) The Authority, may if it thinks fit, order the registered insurer or any related company whose officers are investigated under the provisions of this section to pay all or any of the expenses properly incurred in connection with the investigation or in connection with the proceedings instituted as a result of the investigation.
(7) A person who:

(a) wilfully obstructs the Inspector acting in the execution of his or her powers under this section; or

(b) refuses or fails or neglects to produce any books, accounts, documents or information required under this section; or

(c) knowingly produces or causes or permits to be produced any book, account, document or information required under this section which he or she knows to be false in a material particular,
commits an offence against this Act.
(8) The Inspector shall have the same powers in respect of the supply of information and production of documents as are given to the Authority or the Registrar under section 24.


26. Preservation of secrecy (1) Except for the purpose of the performance or exercise of the Minister or the Authority’s duties or functions under this Act or when lawfully required to do so by any court of competent jurisdiction within Samoa, neither the Minister nor the Authority, the Registrar nor any officials or officers thereof shall disclose any information relating to any application by a person under the provisions of this Act or to the affairs of a registered insurer or of a policy holder of a registered insurer which the Minister, Authority, Registrar or any officials or officers thereof has acquired in the performance or exercise of such duties or functions under this Act.
(2) Subsection (1) does not apply to a disclosure by the Registrar:

(a) necessary for the effective regulation of a registered insurer;

(b) in respect of the affairs of the registered insurer or a policy holder of a registered insurer with the authority of the registered insurer of the policy holder of the registered insurer which has been voluntarily given, as the case may be; and

(c) where the information is already in the public domain.
(3) The Registrar may disclose to a foreign insurance supervisory authority or any other like regulatory authority information about the registered insurer, provided that;

(a) the Registrar is satisfied that the intended recipient authority is subject to adequate legal restrictions on further disclosures which shall include the provision of an undertaking on confidentiality;

(b) the information provided by the Registrar does not contain any names of individual policy holders of the registered insurer concerned; and

(c) the information is required for the purposes of insurance supervision only and is not related directly or indirectly to the imposition, calculation and collection of taxes or the enforcement of exchange control regulations.


27. Winding-up of registered insurer (1) Part 9 of the International Companies Act 1988 applies to the winding-up of a registered insurer registered under this Act, so far as they are applicable, subject to this section and sections 28, 29 and 30.
(2) A petition for the winding-up of a registered insurer shall not be presented, other than by the Authority except by leave of the Court.


28. Winding-up on petition of Authority (1) The Registrar may present a petition for the winding-up of a registered insurer or its business within Samoa on any ground provided by and in accordance with the International Companies Act 1988, and on the grounds:

(a) that the registered insurer has failed to satisfy an obligation to which it is or was subject by virtue of this Act; and

(b) that the registered insurer being under an obligation imposed by the International Companies Act 1988 or this Act with respect to the keeping of business and accounting records, has failed to satisfy that obligation or to produce records kept in satisfaction of that obligation and the Authority is unable to ascertain its financial position.
(2) In any proceedings on a petition to wind up a registered insurer presented by the Authority under subsection (1) evidence that such registered insurer was insolvent at the close of the period to which the annual accounts of the registered insurer last submitted under section 14 relate shall be evidence that the registered insurer continues to be unable to pay its debts, unless the contrary is proved.


29. Winding-up of insurer with long-term business – (1) No registered insurer which carries on long-term business is to be wound-up voluntarily.
(2) Subject to subsection (3) in any winding-up:

(a) the assets in a registered insurer’s long-term business fund or funds are to be available only for meeting the liabilities and expenses of the registered insurer attributable to such long-term business for which the particular fund or funds were created; and

(b) the other assets of the registered insurer shall be available only for meeting the liabilities and expenses of the registered insurer attributable to its other business.
(3) Where the value of the assets mentioned in either of the paragraphs of subsection (2) exceeds the amount of the liabilities and expenses mentioned in that paragraph, the restriction imposed by that subsection shall not apply to so much of those assets as represents the excess.
(4) Where under the International Companies Act 1988 any money or property is ordered to be repaid or restored to a registered insurer or any sum is ordered to be contributed to its assets then, if, and in so far as the wrongful act which is the reason for the making of the order relates to assets representing a fund or funds maintained by the registered insurer in respect of its long-term business, the Court shall include in the Order a direction that the money, property or contribution shall be treated for the purposes of this Act as assets of that fund or funds and this Act shall have effect accordingly.


30. Continuation of long-term business insurers in liquidation (1) This section has effect in relation to the winding-up of a registered insurer carrying on long-term business.
(2) The Liquidator shall, unless the Court otherwise orders, carry on the long-term business of the registered insurer with a view to its being transferred as a going concern to another international company or foreign company and, in carrying on that business as aforesaid, the Liquidator may agree to the variation of any contracts of insurance in existence at the commencement of the winding-up but shall not affect any new contracts of insurance.
(3) If the Liquidator is satisfied that the interests of the creditors in respect of liabilities of the registered insurer attributable to its long-term business require the appointment of a special manager of the registered insurer’s long-term business, the Liquidator may apply to the Court, and the Court may on such application appoint a special manager of this business to act during such time as the Court may direct, with such power as may be granted to the Liquidator by the Court.
(4) A special manager appointed under subsection (3) shall:

(a) give such security and account in such manner as the Court may direct; and

(b) receive such remuneration as may be fixed by the Court.
(5) The Court may, if it thinks fit and subject to such conditions (if any) as it may determine, reduce the amount of the contracts made by the registered insurer in the course of carrying on its long-term business.
(6) The Court may, on the application of the Liquidator, or a special manager appointed under subsection (3) or the Authority, appoint an independent actuary to investigate the long-term business of such company and to report to the Liquidator, the special manager or the Authority as the case may be, on the desirability or otherwise of that business being continued and on any reduction in the contracts made in the course of carrying on that business that may be necessary for its successful continuation.


31. Reduction of contracts as alternative to winding-up– In the case of an insurance company which has been proved to be unable to pay its debts, the Court may, if it thinks fit, reduce the amount of the contracts of the company on such terms and subject to such conditions as the Court thinks just, in place of making a winding up order.


32. Breaches of professional secrecy (1) Except as provided in section 26, a person commits an offence against this Act who:

(a) divulges any information, in Samoa or elsewhere, in relation to‒

(i) any off-shore insurance business in Samoa; or

(ii) the transfer of moneys and property into or out of Samoa in the course of any off-shore insurance business; or

(iii) any insurance policy issued by a registered insurer or the fact of any person having, or having had, such a policy, of which he or she has become aware in his or her capacity as an officer, employee or authorised agent of a registered insurer, or as an officer or employee of an auditing company; or

(b) attempts to induce others to breach professional secrecy in relation to any such matters.
(2) An offence under subsection (1) may be committed either during or after the termination of, the official or employment relationship or of the agency or the practice of the profession.
(3) Despite subsection (1), it shall not be an offence under this section to divulge such information:

(a) to an Inspector appointed under section 25 or to the Authority or the Registrar pursuant to section 24;

(b) to the person on whose behalf the off-shore insurance business is being carried out;

(c) in Samoa, to an officer or employee of the same registered insurer in the performance of his or her duties as such officer or employee;

(d) to an officer or employee of an insurance company or other such financial institution outside Samoa, if all the persons concerned in the off-shore insurance business or in whose name the policy stands, consent in writing to his or her doing so;

(e) to an officer or employee of the registered insurer outside Samoa so long as the names of the persons concerned in the off-shore insurance business and any information which might identify them and the names in which policies stand are not divulged;

(f) to an officer or employee of a trustee company at whose office the registered insurer is transacting business under section 11; and

(g) to the Authority or the Registrar by the auditor or former auditor or by the actuary or former actuary of a registered insurer with respect to its audited accounts or actuarial valuations.
(4) For the purposes of subsection (3)(d) all the persons concerned in off-shore insurance business and in whose names policies stand is taken to have consented to an officer or employee of a registered insurer divulging to an officer or employee of an insurance institution outside Samoa such information of the off-shore insurance business being carried out as is essential to the carrying out of that insurance business but the consent deemed to be given pursuant to this subsection shall not apply to any particulars which are not so essential to the carrying out of that insurance business.
(5) Nothing in this section prevents the Court from requiring a person to produce documents or to give evidence in any proceedings in the Court of any facts relevant in such proceedings.


33. Responsibility of employer for breach of security (1) For the purposes of section 32, an offence by an officer or employee of a registered insurer or of an auditing company, as the case may be or by a person after termination of his or her employment as an officer or employee of a registered insurer or of an auditing company, as the case may be, whether such offence occurs in Samoa or elsewhere, is deemed also to be an offence by that registered insurer or by that auditing company.
(2) Despite subsection (1), an offence under section 32 by a person after termination of the official or employment relationship, or of the practice of the profession with a registered insurer or an auditing company, shall not be deemed to be an offence by the registered insurer or by the auditing company, where the registered insurer or auditing company, as the case may be, can demonstrate, on the balance of probabilities, that it has taken all reasonable steps to prevent an offence by the person.


PART 5
TAXATION AND EXEMPTIONS


34. Profits and dividends – Despite anything contained in any other enactment:

(a) no income tax, nor any other direct or indirect tax or impost, shall be levied in Samoa upon the transactions, contracts, securities or other dealings or upon profits or gains of a registered insurer, or upon any premiums earned by a registered insurer, or money paid to an insured by a registered insurer, in respect of any off-shore insurance business written in or from within Samoa; and

(b) no income tax, nor any other direct or indirect tax or impost, shall be levied in Samoa in respect of any dividends or earnings attributable to the shares or securities of a registered insurer, or upon any premiums paid to a registered insurer or money paid to an insured by a registered insurer.


35. Exemption from stamp duty – Contracts of insurance executed for or in connection with the off-shore insurance business of a registered insurer under this Act are exempt from stamp duty.


36. Exemption from currency and exchange control (1) An off-shore insurance business conducted by a registered insurer under this Act shall be exempt from any currency and exchange control restrictions or regulations.
(2) No foreign exchange levy shall be imposed or be payable in respect of an off-shore insurance business conducted by a registered insurer under this Act.


37. Power of exemption (1) The Authority may of its own motion or pursuant to an application in writing from a registered insurer exempt such registered insurer from all or any part of the provisions of this Act or any regulations made under this Act and may impose such terms and conditions as the Authority thinks fit as a condition under which such exemption is granted. An exemption granted under this subsection may be revoked or the terms and conditions changed by the Authority at any time.
(2) In dealing with an application the Authority shall not be required to act judicially and its decision in all cases are final.


PART 6
SUPPLEMENTARY


38. Indemnity - The Minister, the Authority and the Registrar shall not, nor shall any member, officer or person acting pursuant to any authority conferred by the Minister, the Authority or the Registrar, as the case may be, is liable to any action, suit or proceeding for, or in respect of, any act or matter done or omitted to be done in good faith in the exercise, or purported exercise, of the functions conferred by or under this Act or any regulations made thereunder.


39. False statements – A person who:

(a) causes or permits to be included in any book or document provided or produced to the Authority, the Registrar or to an Inspector appointed under the provisions of section 25 a statement which he or she knows to be false in a material particular; or

(b) in purported compliance with any provision of this Act or a requirement imposed under any such provisions, provides information which he or she knows to be false in a material particular or recklessly provided information which is false in a material particular,
commits an offence against this Act.


40. General penalty provisions (1) A person who commits an offence against the provisions, or any part of the provisions of any one of sections 12, 13, 21, 22, 24 and 33 is liable on conviction:

(a) if the offender is an individual to a fine not exceeding 100 penalty units or to a term of imprisonment not exceeding 12 months or to both such fine and imprisonment in respect of each such offence; and

(b) if the offender is not an individual to a fine not exceeding 200 penalty units.
(2) A person who commits an offence against the provisions, or any part of the provisions or any one of sections 3, 4, 4A, 8, 20, 25, 32 and 39 is liable:

(a) if the offender is an individual, to a fine not exceeding 300 penalty units or to a term of imprisonment not exceeding 2 years, or to both, such fine and imprisonment in respect of each such offence; and

(b) if the offender is not an individual to a fine not exceeding 500 penalty units.
(3) A person who contravenes or fails or neglects to comply with this Act or regulations made thereunder, commits an offence against this Act and is liable on conviction, in a case where for which no specific penalty is otherwise provided in this Act,

(a) if the offender is an individual, to a fine not exceeding 50 penalty units or to a term of imprisonment not exceeding 6 months or to both such fine and imprisonment, or

(b) if the offender is not an individual to a fine not exceeding 100 penalty units.
(4) Where a person is convicted of an offence under this Act and such offence is a continuing one the offender is liable in addition to the penalty otherwise provided for in this Act to an additional fine not exceeding 5 penalty units for every day on which the offence has continued.
(5) Where an offence under this Act committed by a body corporate is proved to have been committed with the consent or connivance of, or to be attributable to any neglect on the part of a director, chief executive, manager, secretary or other similar officer or employee of the body corporate, or a person who was purporting to act in such capacity, he or she, as well the body corporate, is taken to have committed an offence against this Act and liable to be proceeded against and punished accordingly.
(6) No person is prosecuted for an offence under this Act without the consent of the Director of Public Prosecutions.


41. Regulations (1) The Head of State, acting on the advice of Cabinet, may make regulations as may be deemed necessary or expedient for the purpose of giving full effect to the provisions of this Act and for the due administration thereof.
(2) Without limiting the general powers conferred by subsection (1) it is declared that any regulations may be made under this section for all or any of the following purposes:

(a) provisions prohibiting or restricting the issue or transfer of any share in a registered insurer or any interest in such a share, to any specified person or class of persons;

(b) provisions restricting a registered insurer and any related company from entering into transactions of any specified description with a person of any specified class or description;

(c)(i) the preparation, form and content of the annual accounts of a registered insurer—

(ii) the preparation, form and content of statements, reports and information to be annexed to annual accounts;

(iii) the modification of the International Companies Act 1988 in its application to registered insurers; and

(iv) provisions restricting the appointment of auditors to persons who have effected indemnity insurance of such type and amount as may be specified;

(d) the determination of the level and amount of assets and liabilities for the purposes of the calculations of margins of solvency under this Act and regulations made in exercise of this power may provide that, for any specified purpose, assets or liabilities of any specified category or description is to be left out of account or is taken into account only to a specified extent;

(e) the fixing of penalties for the contravention of any provisions or regulations made under this Act;

(f) purposes connected with any of the matters specified in paragraphs (a) to (c).


42. Procedure where none laid down - If an act or step is required or permitted to be done under this Act, and no form is prescribed or procedure laid down in this Act or regulations for doing the same the Registrar may, in response to an application to him or her, or on his or her own motion give directions as to the manner in which the same may be done and an act or step done or taken in accordance with his or her directions is a valid performance of such act or step.


42A. English the authentic text (1) A document filed with the Registrar, and all records and accounts required to be kept under this Act is to be in the English language.
(2) Where a document is not in the English language it is to be accompanied by an authentic English translation; and if there is any conflict in meaning between the foreign language and the English version, the English version prevails.


43. Repealed.


44. Insurance Act 2007 – Nothing in the Insurance Act 2007 shall apply to an international insurance company registered under this Act.



REVISION NOTES 2008 –2015


This is the official version of this Act as at 31 December 2015.


This Act has been revised by the Legislative Drafting Division from 2008 – 2015 respectively under the authority of the Attorney General given under the Revision and Publication of Laws Act 2008.


The following general revisions have been made:

(a) Amendments have been made to conform to modern drafting styles and to use modern language as applied in the laws of Samoa;

(b) Amendments have been made to up-date references to offices, officers and statutes. (e.g. Insurance Act 2007);

(c) Insertion of the commencement date;

(d) References to the male gender made gender neutral;

(e) Other minor editing has been done in accordance with the lawful powers of the Attorney General:

(i) “Every” and “any” changed to “a/an” or “each” where appropriate;
(ii) Present tense drafting style where appropriate:
(iii) Offence provisions: “shall be guilty” changed to “commits”;
(iv) Removal/replacement of obsolete and archaic terms with plain language where appropriate:
(v) Numbers in words changed to figures;
(vi) Removal of superflous terms: “of this section/subsection/Act”;
(vii) Adopting practice of placing “and” or “or” at the end of each paragraph where appropriate;
(viii) Section 7 revised and paragraphed;
(ix) Section 17(5) restructured;
(x) Section 40(1)(2) & (3) revised and paragraphed.

The following amendment has been made to this Act since the publication of the Consolidated and Revised Statutes of Samoa 2007:.


By the National Prosecution Office Act 2015 which commences on 1 January 2016:

Section 40(6) Omit “Attorney General” and substitute “Director of Public Prosecutions”.


This Act is administered by
the Central Bank of Samoa.



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