GIM10060 - Non-resident insurers: regulatory background: EEA insurers: further guidance on meaning of “branch” and “provision of services”
Further guidance on the distinction between a
‘branch’ and the ‘provisions of services’
is contained in the European Commission document “Commission
Interpretative Communication: Freedom to provide services and the
general good in the insurance sector” EC(1999)5046 of 2
February 2000.
It is the Commission’s view that for the links between
an independent person – such as, for example, an independent
intermediary – and an insurance undertaking to be regarded as
meaning that the insurance undertaking falls within the scope of
the rules governing the right of establishment rather than those
applicable to the freedom to provide services, the independent
person must meet three cumulative conditions. These are (a) he must
be subject to the direction and control of the insurance
undertaking he represents (b) he must be able to commit the
insurance undertaking, and (c) he must have received a permanent
brief.
There is nothing to prevent a company both having an
establishment in the extended sense of Article 3 and also providing
services. Indeed the company may use facilities of the
establishment in connection with the provisions of services without
making that provision through a branch, if the activities of the
establishment are ancillary to the insurance contract. This would
apply, for example to the use of risk assessment services or of
local medical services, or to receipt of notices of claims relating
to policies entered into under the freedom to provide services).
The use of fixed, ATM-type electronic machines for carrying
out insurance transactions (such as issuing travel insurance
policies at airports etc) is covered by the rules on the freedom to
provide services, unless the machines are attached to branches
opened by the insurer in the host Member State concerned.
Cross-border insurance activities carried on via electronic
commerce (e.g. the Internet) are subject to the provisions of the
Insurance Directives relating to the freedom to provide
services.
