Protecting Your Insurance Claim

Understanding How To Protect Your Property Insurance Claim

In a perfect world, your insurance carrier will send out their field adjuster following your notification of a loss.  The adjuster will thoroughly inspect and properly value your damage and a check will be forthcoming in a reasonable amount of time. Unfortunately, in our 27 years of practicing public adjusting, we see too many cases where this is not the case. Questions arise, technical clauses of the insurance policy are brought forth by the insurance company or the policyholder misunderstands the coverage they thought they had.

The steps you take, the language you use, and the documentation you provide to substantiate your claim can all play a part in how well protected you will be if your claim is denied and you have to fight for a fair settlement. Here are just a few things you can do to protect your claim:

Start Before the Loss: Document the condition of your property with photos.  Make sure all important documents including your insurance policy are stored in a safe and accessible place, preferably protected from water, fire and other hazards. Make sure you understand your responsibilities under your insurance policy. Most importantly, have a plan in place for dealing with any damage contingency. This is especially true for commercial businesses that should have a disaster plan in place. Tutwiler & Associates offers a Pre-Loss Inspection Service that will make sure businesses and property owners are prepared to meet the requirements of an insurance claim. 

Take Photos: Once everyone is safe, this is one of the first things you can do to document the damage. If we were to point to the number one thing a policyholder should do after a loss once life, health and safety issues are satisfied, it would be to photograph all damages as well as all areas of the insured property that were impacted by the loss event. Often losses are settled in conference rooms, mediation forums, and sometimes in a courtroom. As the old saying goes, a picture is worth a thousand words.  Having photos to dispute the other side's position can be powerful and result in getting the payment you deserve.

Find Areas of Agreement First: Another area to help protect your claim is to try and reach agreements on as many issues as you can with the adjusters sent out by the insurance company. It is important that any agreements reached be followed up with written correspondence to confirm what was said, by whom, and about what. Our experience has been that your loss may have multiple adjusters involved at different times.  So it is important that you maintain a file with all letters and notes that were used to confirm agreements or positions that were taken over the course of a claim adjustment.

Be Mindful of Salvage Issues: Understand and protect your interest in salvage rights. While certain items may be damaged to the extent that they cannot be restored to their pre-loss value, they may still have significant value to others in a salvage market. You may have the rights to salvage or the money it may bring if sold by a professional salvage firm. Case in point: Hurricane Ivan destroyed a building that had as its tenant a very high-end ladies apparel store. The damage to the building was caused by the combination of flood waters and wind which blew open part of the walls and destroyed the roof. As two different adjusters were involved, one for the wind and the other for flood, we discussed and got agreement that any and all salvage was to belong to the insured. This was followed up with confirmation letters. Much later in the adjustment, the wind carrier tried to take a credit deduction for salvage from the final settlement. Fortunately, our letter protecting the client quickly settled this issue, much to the dissatisfaction of the insurance company examiner trying to get a windfall financial recovery for his employer.

Wind vs. Flood: As a result of the recent hurricanes and the litigation that has resulted when both wind and flood act together to cause a loss (concurrent causation) and the language in your insurance policy (the anti-concurrent causation exclusion), we know that going forward the policyholder will have the burden to prove what peril caused what part of the loss. This is known in the industry as a " slab loss" where nothing is left except for the building slab. When the loss is a total loss and involves both wind and flood, you can expect the wind carriers to require that you have some proof of how much your damage was caused by the wind. This presents a problem for policyholders, given their first concern should be life, health, and safety issues. Now it will be how to document the loss as it happened. Remember the importance of photos before and after the loss. Photos of debris in trees and other things on the property can make a big difference in your ability to collect what is owed on your loss.

Beware of What You Sign: Be very cautious about signing any authorization or assignment forms pressured on you after your loss by contractors. While you certainly have an obligation to mitigate your loss, you should take the time to read and understand the forms that vendors sent out by your insurance company or who just show up trying to get your business. If emergency services are required, it is important to try and get all parties to agree on the scope of work and price of the services to be performed. Avoid the situation that we often see where the carrier refuses to pay a bill you submit claiming that the price is inflated and the scope too wide. Because you alone authorized the work, they require you to pay for it. This often results in the service provider putting a lien on your property. Get agreements in writing on the front end!

Be Careful on How You Value Your Loss: Another common mistake policyholders make when trying to handle their own claim is they often will document their loss up to what they think the limit of their policy coverage is. This is a big mistake for a number of reasons. First, any numbers you submit are subject to be adjusted to an actual cash value amount (depreciation taken). Even if your losses exceed your coverage, you should fully determine the loss as you may have some benefits available under the U.S. tax code as an uninsured tax deduction. Also, part of the loss may be the result of someone else’s negligence, such as a defective product that caused a fire. In these cases, your insurance company may pursue subrogation which may result in you recovering your uninsured losses provided they were properly documented.

A special note is in order for Florida homeowners. As the law now stands, in September 2010 an “admitted” homeowner’s insurance carrier cannot take depreciation on personal property losses. Commercial claims and surplus lines insurers can and probably will continue to take depreciation on contents/business personal property items.

Remember keep your eye on the ball, the money ball. You only have so much coverage in your policy and any money spent will reduce the limit that is available to you for your loss. If there are questionable expenses the insurance company wants to incur in your claim, ask or demand they be paid out of claim expenses which is on their side of the ledger and not out of your policy limits.

Please visit our Success Stories page to see examples of how we have settled property insurance claims for others like yourself.

Contact a public adjuster from Tutwiler & Associates if you have a question or would like a free consultation about a property insurance claim. Or call 1.800.321.4488