โSep-06-2016 05:58 PM
โSep-09-2016 07:36 AM
JWRoberts wrote:
Nawwww. 4 years???? You are out of luck. Bite the bullet and move forward.
โSep-08-2016 09:01 AM
โSep-08-2016 05:21 AM
bodyshop bob wrote:
Insurance policies and their interpretation are subject to the laws of the state in which the coverage was purchased. So, call your state dept of insurance and ask about a statute of limitations. In many states, there isn't one. IF you had coverage with Progressive back in 2012 AND the shop can say with a very high degree of certainty that the incident in 2012 was the contributing factor to the water damage you should have some coverage in effect. There are certain exemptions and limitations, like failure to mitigate (that means to lessen the damage) but if a reasonable and prudent person thought the damage wasn't much, the duty to mitigate should go away.
Your entire claim is predicated upon the shop. IF they can be convinced to strongly state the 2012 incident caused the condition which led to the damages you should have some coverage in play. Do NOT listen to the first claim rep you deal with. Ask to speak to their Unit Manager, if no satisfaction from that person ask to speak to the Branch or Claims Manager and keep going up the line. I work for an auto insurance company now and several times we have afforded coverage to an Insured who just wouldn't go away. To be sure, there has to be a case for affording coverage in the first place. We don't provide coverage to thieves. But a reasonable person, making a reasonable claim with reasonable evidence to support their position usually wins the day.
They may only cover the damage that appears to be related to the loss and not all the water damage that occurred over time. So be it -- a little help is better than no help at all.
โSep-07-2016 05:17 PM
โSep-07-2016 05:07 PM
โSep-06-2016 08:59 PM
โSep-06-2016 07:26 PM
โSep-06-2016 06:51 PM
โSep-06-2016 06:20 PM