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Arkansas Personal Injury Lawyer
CALLIS L. CHILDS, ATTORNEY AT LAW
243 U.S. Highway 64 East
Conway, AR 72032
Telephone: (501) 327-1700 FAX: (501) 327-6066 Toll Free: (866) 226-7657
e-mail:cchilds@tcworks.net |
WHAT YOU
SHOULD KNOW ABOUT INSURANCE AGENTS,
INSURANCE PREMIUMS, RATES AND CLAIMS, AND INSURANCE
ADJUSTERS.
A Special Report
In addition to knowing about the
three common mistakes that you are most likely to make, I would be
short-changing you if I did not cover other issues that you must know
about.
INSURANCE AGENTS
Insurance agents are the
nicest people in the world.
They make their living by
selling insurance coverages to people just like you; life insurance,
homeowner's insurance, car insurance and hundreds of other kinds of
insurance coverages that most people have never heard about.
I’d Like To Do Something Special For You..Absolutely FREE Of Charge And Without Further Obligation!
I’d like to buy you an hour of my time to discuss anything that may concern you about your injury claim. So please call me now at 866-226-7657 to set up your case review.
Your insurance agent is paid on
a commission basis. Simply, that means that he or she receives a
percentage of the monies--which are called premiums--that you pay to
the insurance company. So, it pays for insurance agents to be nice so
they can sell you as much insurance coverage as possible and collect as
much commissions as possible. The insurance agent is the nice side of
the insurance business.
The insurance agent not only
gets paid a commission, but he or she also gets paid an extra amount
based on what is known as their loss ratio each year. Their loss ratio
is determined by comparing the money that comes in to the insurance
company as premiums and the money that goes out of the insurance
company for various kinds of claims.
A claim is money that the
insurance company has to pay out for an injury or a loss. An example
would be a fire loss of your home. If your home burns down because of a
short in your wiring, your own insurance company would pay a claim to
you which would be for the loss of your home.
In a perfect world for an
insurance agent, his or her insurance company or companies would
collect all of the premiums that you, the customer, agreed to pay and
you, the insured, would never do anything or have anything happen which
would cause a claim to be made against your insurance company; no
fires, no hail storms, no wrecks, no illness, etc.
The reason that your insurance
agent wants this to be a perfect world with no claims is because, if
there are no claims, your insurance agent is going to get extra
compensation in the form of a bonus.
The more claims that are filed
and/or paid on an insurance policy, then the less bonus there is for
the agent.
What this means is that, when
you have a claim which is covered by your paid-up insurance policy,
your agent, depending on his or her character, may or may not tell you
about the benefits that are available to you which you have paid for.
Let me give you an example
A young, married, working woman,
with a husband and children, was injured in a car wreck. They came to
see me because of her injuries but primarily because they were having
such a difficult time paying their every day living expenses, since she
was out of work, and her medical bills from the wreck were piling up
dramatically.
They brought with them a
document which showed the different insurance coverages that they had
on their own vehicle. That insurance paper showed that they themselves
had paid their own insurance company a separate amount to pay her
medical bills from the wreck and to pay her wages lost while she was
unable to work after the wreck.
Their dismayed comment to me
was: "My insurance agent never said anything about that." Their agent
did not want them to collect the medical payment benefits and the lost
income benefits because it would affect, or could affect, his or her
loss ratio bonus at the end of the year.
You see, your insurance
agent--if you have these additional coverages that you paid for by
separate premiums--will always have a choice to make. And this choice
may have bad financial consequences for him or her.
If he or she tells you about
your different insurance benefits, then you will benefit by collecting
them because you paid for those coverages. That may aversely affect his
or her loss ratio bonus. If he or she does not tell you about the
benefits that you are entitled to, then you do not know to obtain those
benefits, and his loss ratio bonus is improved.
Your agent may not have enough
character to tell you what your insurance benefits, under your own
insurance policy, are.
In addition, the insurance
company that he works for, or sells for, may have specific rules which
prohibit him from giving you the information that you need so that you
can claim these benefits that you paid for as part of your premium.
The point is that you may not
get accurate and complete information from your insurance agent about
your insurance benefits.
INSURANCE PREMIUMS, RATES AND CLAIMS
You should have a document from
your car insurance company that lists your "declarations." That is,
"declarations of coverages," "coverage," etc. This document should
break down into the different kinds of coverages that you have on your
vehicle or vehicles.
The first item listed is
liability for personal injury and for property damage. Liability is a
coverage, which every vehicle is required to carry, which provides
compensation if your vehicle causes personal injury to some other
person, or damage to their vehicle or property.
Newer cars' policies generally
then list comprehensive or collision coverage with or without a
deductible. Then the declarations page will list other coverages such
as medical pay coverage, income disability coverage, wrongful death
benefit, uninsured motorist, underinsured motorist, rental, emergency
road service, towing, etc.
The important point about these
different coverages is that your insurance company charges for them,
and you pay a separate amount for each one of these separate coverages.
Let's suppose that your vehicle
breaks down on the interstate and you have to have emergency road
service and a towing bill. You have paid your own insurance company a
premium to cover those charges.
Obviously, you should have your
insurance company pay them. You paid them the premium and they agreed
to pay the charges if you break down on the highway and you have to be
towed. In other words, you paid for the coverage and your insurance
company should pay what the towing company charges you.
In Arkansas an insurance company
cannot raise your rates because of a wreck that was not your fault.
You should receive the financial
benefit of the insurance coverages that you have paid for.
INSURANCE ADJUSTERS
Just above I discussed insurance
agents. They are the nice people who sell insurance and they make their
living based on their success in persuading you to buy insurance from
their company or through them from another company.
Now, let's discuss insurance
adjusters. Theyıre very different from agents. In fact, they are not so
nice because their job is to close a file as cheaply and as quickly as
possible.
Insurance companies are very
simple to understand. They take money in as premiums and they pay money
out for salaries, buildings, advertising, utilities, etc. and for
CLAIMS. Money in, money out.
Insurance companies spend
billions of dollars every year to tell you how nice their agents are.
And they are. What they do not tell you is that on the claims end they
have adjusters who are not so nice.
An insurance adjuster is usually
bright, articulate, well educated, well trained, personable and
capable. They work as an employee of the insurance company or as a
middleman for an insurance company to close your claim as cheaply and
quickly as possible. They are not your friend.
They are not my friends either.
They know that my responsibility is to get you every dollar of
compensation that I can that you are legally entitled to receive.
Why You Shouldnıt Talk To An Adjuster Yourself
You should never attempt to
resolve or settle a claim with an insurance adjuster by yourself for
many reasons. The primary reason is that he or she knows exactly what
they are doing and you don't have a clue.
Remember, his or her job is to
get you to settle your claim as cheaply as possible. He or she is not
interested in what is fair. His or her loyalty is to the company.
The second reason is that the
insurance adjuster settles claims based on values which are not
compatible with your values.
An adjustor is looking for
weaknesses not virtues. If you are less educated, unemployed, elderly,
a minority member, housed in a manufactured home (trailer), then your
claim is worth less to him or her than if you are well educated,
employed, middle aged, white or living in a brick home in suburbia.
When you communicate with an
adjuster by yourself you are making a potentially serious mistake.
Because your tone, grammar, accent, choice of words, volume, etc., may
provide him or her with information. The more information they have,
the less valuable is your claim.
Even if you are well educated,
rich, self assured and live in a mansion, you still should not
communicate with an adjuster. You may have a trace of arrogance,
suspiciousness, impatience or other slight flaw which can be exploited
by an insurance defense attorney and which, thus, reduces the value of
your claim.
The third reason that you should
never talk to an insurance adjuster is because it is extremely
difficult, both psychologically and emotionally, to insist on being
compensated for injuries.
It is similar to asking for help.
The real difficulty to asking
for help is within each one of us. Nearly all of us have family,
friends, co-workers, members in our church, etc. who would be glad to
help if they were only asked. The asking is the primary roadblock to
help
Speaking with an insurance
adjuster about one's injuries or a family member's injuries is very
similar to asking for help for oneself. There is no solid moral and/or
psychological ground to stand on to ask for help. And, one should
always be nice when asking for help or for compensation for injuries.
There is something that is very
powerful about having someone speak for you and for your benefit.
Having an attorney to represent
you regarding any kind of problem is powerful.
There are two words in the
English language that describe this power: synergistic and synergism.
What they mean, essentially, is that something has greater power or
impact than one would expect from simply looking at the relationship.
The attorney / client
relationship empowers the client to ask for help, which is
compensation, and it empowers the attorney, who probably could not
request help or compensation on his or her own behalf, to demand and
obtain help, i.e. compensation, for the client.
This entire attorney / client
process empowers the client to be compensated and it empowers the
attorney to obtain the compensation.
Callis L. Childs
Callis Childs is an injury lawyer in Arkansas with years of experience helping victims of car accidents.
Attorney Childs is a graduate of Vanderbilt University School of Law and has been practicing law for over 35 years. He is an injury attorney in Arkansas that will do everything it takes to obtain the compensation you rightly deserve.
If you’re looking for an injury lawyer in Arkansas that offers a free consultation and does not get paid unless you do, trust in the experience of Callis Childs. Call 1-866-226-7657 today. |
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