Sentences with phrase «back against the insurer»

Michael scored two landmark rulings in Federal Court in Ayres v. USAA Casualty Insurance Company and Cunningham v. Liberty Mutual Fire Insurance Company, pushing back against insurers improperly applying changes to Florida's sinkhole legislation.
If you sign a release of claims, you can never go back against the insurer or the other driver, if it turns out you have additional injuries.

Not exact matches

Kimmel has since actively railed against Obamacare repeal efforts, arguing that various proposals being debated by the law's opponents would gut protections for people like Billy born with pre-existing conditions, either by rolling back Obamacare's mandated insurance benefits for certain health conditions or allowing states to set up rules that would let insurers charge sick people more for their coverage.
Here's some of what's going on in the health care world as we head into Easter weekend: payers are pushing back against PTC Therapeutcics» controversial Duchenne muscular dystropy drug; insurers are cautiously lauding new rules for Obamacare's marketplaces; a fascinating lawsuit in Arkansas explores the ethics of drug making; and a new test for Zika virus can produce results within an hour.
A hearing in NAFA's case is scheduled for Aug. 25; the hearing in the case brought by insurer Market Synergy against DOL was set to take place on Aug. 24, but it has been pushed back to Sept. 21.
A surrender charge is a hold back amount that an insurer charges against the cash values of a life insurance policy for the first 8 to 10 years, if funds are withdrawn early.
Your insurer can deduct unpaid premiums, loans you've taken against your policy and haven't paid back yet, and possibly surrender fees.
A personal injury law firm has won its case against an insurer which settled claims with clients behind its back, in a major victory for claimant lawyers.
We're back You forget to give the Motor Insurers» Bureau (MIB) timely notice that your client was about to start proceedings against an uninsured driver and the MIB refuses to waive the requirement.
In the threshold motion in Maxwell v. Luck, previously discussed here, Justice Howell pushed back against what is increasingly becoming a routine attempt by insurers to dismiss chronic pain on the basis of the lack of objective symptoms in personal injury claims.
Back in the mid-1980s, the National Organization for Women filed a class - action lawsuit against the auto insurance industry, claiming discrimination; according to the complaint, auto insurers were charging more for policies covering women drivers, despite the fact that statically, women have fewer accidents.
Back in 2011, the fair trade regulator had dismissed an ATPA complaint against General Insurers (Public Sector) Association of India.
Interest incurred on indebtedness has historically been deductible, (although the deduction of «personal» interest was largely eliminated in 1986), and in the 1950s a type of «leveraged insurance» transaction began being marketed that permitted an insurance owner to in effect deduct the cost of paying for insurance by (1) paying large premiums to create cash values, (2) «borrowing» against the cash value to in effect strip out the large premiums, and (3) paying deductible «interest» back to the insurer, which was in turn credited to the policy's cash value as tax - deferred earnings on the policy that could fund the insurer's legitimate charges against policy value for cost of insurance, etc..
Just as RE-Insider predicted when the HUD settlement came out earlier this month, angry homeowners have filed a federal consumer fraud class action lawsuit against Fidelity National Title Insurance and other major title insurers alleging the companies kicked back fees to real estate agents for real estate settlement services.
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