InsuranceHeadline.com Home Headline Home Searh Insurance Directory Listings by State, City Zip Code or Detailed Keyword Search! Search News  Company Index  Add Your Listings to The Insurance Phone Book! Advertise Manage Insurance Phone Book Directory ListingsEditor Login

Insurance Headlines - Insurance Headlines.com is the premier online news source that insurance & financial professional rely on - making Insurance Headlines.com the top choice for syndicating news on the world wide web.

Headline News | Life & Health | Property & Casualty | Financial & Investments | Banks & Thrifts | Syndicate News

1
Home L&H P&C F&I Post Feeds RSS Search
 


 Free Insurance & Financial Headline Newsletters - Subscribe Today!

Choose Newsletters

Daily Headlines

Weekly Headlines

Product Promo's

Job Offers

Enter Your E-mail

Advertising Options

Post Press Releases

Post Insurance Articles

Online Advertising

Newsletter Advertising

Company Sponsors

Resources

Insurance Newsletters

Company News & Stocks

Syndicate News

InsHeadlines on Twitter

Industry Links

Archive
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
 1  2  3  4  5  6  7
 8  9  10  11  12  13  14
 15  16  17  18  19  20  21
 22  23  24  25  26  27  28
 29  30

1



Email to a friend | Print this | PDF version
See your advertisement here
Fla. Appeals Court Rules On PIP Benefit Suits

 by National Underwriter
 Nov 17,2009

Share |

A plaintiff who is not entitled to medical payments after an auto accident cannot recover from an insurer because the reasons the claim was denied were not properly spelled out, a Florida appeals court ruled.

The decision, which according to the attorney who defended against the claim would bar many lawsuits, was made Nov. 4 by a three-judge panel of the 3rd District Court of Appeal in Miami.

Under their ruling a person cannot sue their auto insurance company for failing to provide an explanation of benefits on a personal injury protection claim when it is determined no payment is required.

In deciding in favor of United Auto, the court reversed a lower court award of $19,530 in legal fees.

"The result of the court's opinion will likely be a decrease in frivolous lawsuits filed solely for the purpose of obtaining attorney's fees from the insurance company," Thomas Hunker, a United Auto attorney, said in a statement.

Thomas Plante, the auto injury victim in the case, was given medical care in February 2004 by A 1st Choice Healthcare Systems, which sued United Auto for payment.

Thirteen months after A 1st Choice requested payment for services, United Auto responded by checking off an explanation of benefits (EOB) form box that said the bill was not submitted according to law, and another saying, “See peer review attached,” but without an attachment.

A 1st Choice filed a two-count complaint seeking damages for nonpayment of benefits and damages for late filing of the EOB form. The benefits payment charge was dropped when it turned out the amount requested was within Mr. Plante’s uncovered deductible amount of insurance, but a breach of payment claim was pursued for a late response (over 30 days) to the request for payment.

For the late response the judge awarded $1. The appeals court said he should not have awarded attorney fees because the law only allows a cause of action for personal injury benefits and there were none.

Mr. Hunker said the ruling will “simplify the personal injury protection litigation process and get the focus back on whether the bills were due and owing.”

The attorney charged that lawsuits that go beyond that “are a legal tactic by plaintiffs' attorneys to turn court claims for personal injury benefits into a lawsuit for bad faith.”

Mr. Hunker asserted, "The effect of adding these extra counts to a lawsuit is to take the focus off of the failure of the insured and medical provider to fulfill their obligations and cast the insurance company in a bad light."

He noted that in the unanimous opinion Judge Frank A. Sheperd wrote, "It is clear there is neither a requirement nor a deadline for a personal injury protection insurer to respond to a request for payment." The court added that a response is required only at the time of payment or rejection of a claim.

"Personal injury plaintiffs can still sue insurance companies for bad faith under the bad faith statute," Mr. Hunker said, "but they will have to give the insurer notice and a fair chance to cure any alleged defect."

A call to Russel Lazega, attorney for A 1st Choice, was not immediately returned.

NU Online News Service, Nov. 13, 11:05 a.m. EST

A plaintiff who is not entitled to medical payments after an auto accident cannot recover from an insurer because the reasons the claim was denied were not properly spelled out, a Florida appeals court ruled.

The decision, which according to the attorney who defended against the claim would bar many lawsuits, was made Nov. 4 by a three-judge panel of the 3rd District Court of Appeal in Miami.

Under their ruling a person cannot sue their auto insurance company for failing to provide an explanation of benefits on a personal injury protection claim when it is determined no payment is required.

In deciding in favor of United Auto, the court reversed a lower court award of $19,530 in legal fees.

"The result of the court's opinion will likely be a decrease in frivolous lawsuits filed solely for the purpose of obtaining attorney's fees from the insurance company," Thomas Hunker, a United Auto attorney, said in a statement.

Thomas Plante, the auto injury victim in the case, was given medical care in February 2004 by A 1st Choice Healthcare Systems, which sued United Auto for payment.

Thirteen months after A 1st Choice requested payment for services, United Auto responded by checking off an explanation of benefits (EOB) form box that said the bill was not submitted according to law, and another saying, “See peer review attached,” but without an attachment.

A 1st Choice filed a two-count complaint seeking damages for nonpayment of benefits and damages for late filing of the EOB form. The benefits payment charge was dropped when it turned out the amount requested was within Mr. Plante’s uncovered deductible amount of insurance, but a breach of payment claim was pursued for a late response (over 30 days) to the request for payment.

For the late response the judge awarded $1. The appeals court said he should not have awarded attorney fees because the law only allows a cause of action for personal injury benefits and there were none.

Mr. Hunker said the ruling will “simplify the personal injury protection litigation process and get the focus back on whether the bills were due and owing.”

The attorney charged that lawsuits that go beyond that “are a legal tactic by plaintiffs' attorneys to turn court claims for personal injury benefits into a lawsuit for bad faith.”

Mr. Hunker asserted, "The effect of adding these extra counts to a lawsuit is to take the focus off of the failure of the insured and medical provider to fulfill their obligations and cast the insurance company in a bad light."

He noted that in the unanimous opinion Judge Frank A. Sheperd wrote, "It is clear there is neither a requirement nor a deadline for a personal injury protection insurer to respond to a request for payment." The court added that a response is required only at the time of payment or rejection of a claim.

"Personal injury plaintiffs can still sue insurance companies for bad faith under the bad faith statute," Mr. Hunker said, "but they will have to give the insurer notice and a fair chance to cure any alleged defect."

A call to Russel Lazega, attorney for A 1st Choice, was not immediately returned.

© Copyright 2009 National Underwriter Property & Casualty. A Summit Business Media publication. All Rights Reserved.



Share |

Did you enjoy this article? (total 0 votes)
Related news

Jury awards motorist $1.25 million in lawsuit against insurance company by The-Pueblo-Chieftain posted on Nov 09,2006
Fraud and Buildup Add 13 to 18 Percent in Excess Payments to Auto Injury Claims by NAMIC posted on Nov 25,2008
Wal-Mart Got Millions From Workers' Life Insurance Policies by TBO.com-News posted on Apr 13,2008
Judge: Insurance benefit can't exceed loss amount for home destroyed by Katrina by Clarionledger.com posted on Nov 08,2006
Health Insurance Lawsuits Dismissed by Los-Angeles-Times posted on Jun 21,2006
Appeals Court Blocks Allstate Order by AP-News posted on Jan 18,2008
Appeals court upholds jury verdict against Allstate by KC-Biz-Journal posted on Jul 30,2008
Appeals court upholds $8.5M verdict against State Farm by KansasCityBizJournal posted on Jan 08,2008
Sugarman Obtains Precedent-Setting Appeals Court Decision by PRWEB.com posted on Aug 13,2007
Sacramento briefing: Court OKs new auto rate rules by The-Sacramento-Bee posted on Aug 17,2006

Comments (0 posted) 


Headline Sponsors


Sponsor

Insurance Headlines - Insurance Headlines.com is the premier online news source that insurance & financial professional rely on - making Insurance Headlines.com the top choice for syndicating news on the world wide web.

Copyright© 2005-2010 Insurance Syndication, LLC

Powered by: InsuranceHeadlines.com - InsurancePhonebook.com

Top Insurance News - Follow InsHeadlines on Twitter

Follow Insurance Headlines on Twitter and Share Insurance Industry News

About Us | Privacy Policy | Terms & Conditions | Insurance Newsletters | Free News Feeds | Advertise | Company Sponsors | Insurance RSS | Industry Links