Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#16
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appeal and prove any any treatment not related to treatment of your injuries due to your accident. A real hassle. Maybe consider keeping uninsured motorists insurance. You can’t double dip . |
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#17
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#18
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#19
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#20
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My husband was hit years ago while on his bike by an uninsured driver who owned nothing but an old truck. After 3 surgeries putting rods in his legs and reconstructing
his hips, my husband walked with a bad limp the rest of his life. We had uninsured motorist coverage, yes they pay even if you are riding a bike or walking. Our attorney sued our insurance company. Our insurance company paid all the medical expenses, over $400,000, he got $480,000 for pain and suffering, he will never be the same physically, and the attorney got $350,000 and that was 21 years ago. I would never go without uninsured motorist coverage anywhere, especially here in Florida. The accident was here. You need a lot more than just your current medical bills covered. You always think you will never need insurance, until you do. |
#21
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Thanks for sharing. As always, "you" insure for what you can't afford. Premiums are cheap, coverage could be great.
__________________
Identifying as Mr. Helpful |
#22
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__________________
Most people are as happy as they make up their mind to be. Abraham Lincoln |
#23
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Liability insurance benefits someone you injure and protects your assets against a claim by the injured person. UM/UIM insurance protects you and your family by stepping into the place of the uninsured/underinsured driver and pays for your medical care, lost earnings, and pain and suffering. If your claim is not resolved by negotiation, it goes to arbitration. Most arbitrators, myself included, lean in favor of the insured, recognizing that he/she has paid for the coverage and is deserving of its benefits. UM/UIM covers claims "arising out of the use of an automobile". Thus, if you are a pedestrian and hit by an auto, whether on a street or in a parking lot, you have coverage. If you are riding a bicycle and a person throws open a car door in your path, you're covered. The UM/UIM coverage is very broad. It covers you and members of your family not only in the vehicle you have insured, but in any vehicle in which you or a family member is a passenger. This gives you great comfort when your teenage child is out riding with his/her no-good friend or your aged parent who lives with you is riding with his/her half-blind friend. Perhaps the greatest benefit is the Underinsured Motorist (UIM) coverage as you get to choose the amount of protection you want for yourself, your family, and your passengers. It covers your damages in excess of the limits of the person who injured you. Thus, if that person had the minimum limits of 15/30 and you have UM/UIM limits of $1M, you can recover up to $985,000 from your own carrier. During the years I was practicing law in California with its outrageous number of uninsured/underinsured drivers, illegal aliens, druggies, etc, I spent a great deal of time driving to/from courthouses and law offices on some of the most high-risk roads in the country. To protect myself and my family, I carried UM/UIM limits of $5M as, were I to be killed or disabled, the odds were that it would be while in an automobile. Of course, now that I am retired, our children grown, and we are financially secure, I have reduced those limits to $1M. For anyone who thinks I was being overly cautious, I should mention that I had a 34 year old partner with a non-working wife and two young children, who was killed by a drunk driver. The worst thing about insurance agents is that they sell insurance by price and not by the needs of the insured. Thus, as the OP noted, the agent told him that he didn't need UM/UIM so as to reduce the premium he quoted. Other agents tell their clients that UM/UIM is "not required". If an insurance agent tells you this, stand up and leave his/her office immediately. The agent also told the OP that Medicare would cover his medical expenses. While this is true, everyone our age knows that Medicare is limited, particularly as regards long-term care. For those who have chosen an Advantage plan, your choice of doctors is further limited. UM/UIM coverage is only limited by the amount of coverage you are willing to buy. I'll close this diatribe by telling the saddest I handled. A very successful man was referred to me by his business attorney. The man's son was killed when a passenger in a car of college students returning home after final exams overturned when the driver fell asleep (a not uncommon accident for students returning to California from college in Nevada or Utah). The driver had the minimum limits of 15/30 which his carrier promptly paid. The father wanted me to recover what I could from his own insurer, which the father thought had limits of $Millions. He intended to fund a scholarship in his son's name with whatever I was able to obtain. It turned out that his insurance agent had him sign a form declining all UM/UIM coverage as it substantially reduced the premium and the agent was competing on price with another agent. While he was very successful in his business, the father knew little about insurance. I knew the offending agent. I cussed him out to his face and bad-mouthed him to everyone I could for the years I remained in practice. Last edited by lawgolfer; 03-03-2024 at 08:02 AM. Reason: correct mispelling |
#24
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REPLYING TO CP HUBBELL;
Please read my lengthy post above. The problem with suing an agent is twofold. First, he will have the insured sign a form either waiving UM/UIM coverage or acknowledging that he has chosen minimum limits for the UM/UIM coverage even though he has chosen liability coverage with higher limits. The second problem is that, legally, the agent is NOT an agent of the insured, but, rather, is an agent of the insurance company. Thus, in most states, unless the person purchasing insurance asks the agent for advice on UM/UIM coverage and is given advice upon which he acts, the agent has no liability. This is in contrast to an insurance broker who is acting on behalf of the person seeking insurance. Also, the law in some states is very harsh and the insured is bound by the "four corners" of the written policy and is obligated to read the policy. These are the reasons that I declined to sue the agent in the story about the rich man I relate above.. Last edited by lawgolfer; 03-03-2024 at 08:32 AM. Reason: to address the post to which I was replying. |
#25
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#26
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To anyone who reads this RP please do not believe the opinions expressed therein. The RP can believe anything he wants; however, he poses a danger to anyone who acts on his opinions. Please read all the following posts, particularly those by the insurance agent; the claims adjuster; the woman whose husband was on a bicycle when hit by an uninsured driver; and mine. |
#27
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#28
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I got it because I live in an area where there are a lot of drivers with little to no insurance. This is what my insurance sales rep told me. So I got a rather large uninsured motorist policy. Years later I was in an accident that required two surgeries and I used that policy.
That said, my health insurance paid for the surgeries originally. Then the health insurance required my car insurance policy to pay them back. Plus, you are right. Your health insurance will cover your car accident. |
#29
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Uninsured motorist coverage is a type of auto insurance that provides extra security to drivers who are hit by drivers who do not have any liability insurance coverage12345. In Florida, it is not mandatory to take out uninsured or underinsured motorist insurance, but auto insurers are obliged to offer it to you, and you have the option of turning it down1. Uninsured motorist coverage covers you if you suffer damages inflicted by a driver who was driving without insurance or who had too little insurance2. It is intended to provide you a backup source of recovery if you are harmed in a crash by someone without liability insurance at all or without enough coverage to cover your damages.
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#30
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True only if you don't carry your own collision and personal injury insurance. IMO, Uninsured motorist only benefits the insurance company.
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Closed Thread |
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