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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Stewart
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/8/08
HM 58
SHORT TITLE PRC Revisions to Title Insurance Law
SB
ANALYST Earnest
REVENUE (dollars in thousands)
Estimated Revenue
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY08
FY09
FY10
NFI
NFI
NFI
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Memorial 58 finds that
for the last ten years, the title insurance industry in New Mexico has earned profits that are
far in excess of the profit margins underlying the rates promulgated but the superintendent
of insurance
current statutes require all title insurers to charge uniform rates set by the superintendent;
the introduction of price competition may encourage title insurers to offer consumers and
lenders rates that are lower than those adopted by the superintendent of insurance;
the current statutory requirement that the superintendent conduct annual title insurance rate
hearings absorbs an inordinate amount of the limited resources of the insurance division of
the public regulation commission;
concerns have been raised that remedies available to property owners arising from negligent
title searches and examinations may be unreasonably limited by the New Mexico Title
Insurance Law;
the attorney general; the public regulation commission; the superintendent of insurance;
think New Mexico, a nonpartisan public policy group; the American association of retired
persons; the senior citizens' law office; the United States conference of Catholic bishops;
real estate groups; newspapers across the state; and other interested parties have stated the
need for revising the New Mexico Title Insurance Law;
Therefore, the memorial requests that the insurance division of the Public Regulation
Commission draft a comprehensive revision of the New Mexico Title Insurance Law and to
pg_0002
House Memorial 58 – Page
2
submit the proposed revision to the interim Legislative Finance Committee, the interim
Mortgage Finance Authority Act oversight committee and the governor;
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The fiscal implications are limited to the any administrative impact imposed on the Insurance
Division at the PRC.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
In the 2007 session, HM 80 was passed, requesting that PRC study current title insurance laws
and present its findings to the Legislature. The PRC Insurance Division contracted with UNM
Anderson School of Management to conduct a study of title insurance laws and markets in New
Mexico and surrounding states. This memorial builds on the work performed in 2007 to request
for recommendation for comprehensive title insurance reform.
Think NM, a nonprofit, nonpartisan, policy research organization has already made such a
recommendation. Based on those recommendations, Senate Bill 497 was introduced in the
current session.
BE/bb