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Library - Insurance
Rights of Policyholders
PROTECTING YOUR RIGHTS UNDER YOUR
DISABILITY
INSURANCE
A disability insurance policy pays
benefits when you are unable to work because of injury or disease.
This allows you to meet your financial obligations, such as mortgage
payments, or medical bills while you are disabled from work.
Disability policies usually pay a fixed amount for a set period of
time, such as five years or up to age 65. The amount paid is usually
40% to 60% of your income.
Disability policies have different definitions of
disability. Some policies pay benefits if you are totally
disabled from your usual occupation. Some policies do not pay
benefits even if you are totally disabled from your usual
occupation, if there are any other occupations for which you are
qualified that you can still perform.
However, if the insurer contends that you are not totally disabled
because there are other occupations you can still perform, even
though you are not qualified for those occupations, then the
insurer is not using the proper legal standard.
Additionally, total disability from your job does not
mean that you cannot perform any part of your job duties, but that
you can no longer perform the most "substantial and material"
duties of your job because of your illness or injury. Again, if
the insurer contends that you are not totally disabled because you
can still perform some of the minor tasks in your occupation, then
the insurer is not using the proper legal standard.
Disability policies usually require that the disability
occur within a certain period of time after an accident. However,
under California law, the disability relates back to the time of the
accident as long as the accident caused the disability.
Within the first two years after a policy is issued,
the insurer may refuse to pay your disability claim if it discovers
that there are misrepresentations of important facts in the
application. After two years, some policies state that the insurer
may still refuse to pay if the policyholder intentionally concealed
important facts; other policies provide that the insurer may no
longer refuse to pay. In addition, although some policies provide
for guaranteed renewal each year, other policies can be canceled by
the insurer at the end of the policy year.
Insureds are especially vulnerable when disability
insurers refuse to pay, because it becomes difficult, if not
impossible, for a disabled person who cannot work and earn to meet
monthly financial obligations. It is one of those situations when
the policy holder is at the mercy of the insurance company.
There had been instances when the insurer denied
benefits on technical but unreasonable grounds. The insurer
submitted the policyholder's medical records for review by its own
paid doctors, who then concluded that the insured is not disabled.
In other instances, the insurer conducted surveillance operations of
its own policyholder and argued that the disabled person can perform
other jobs. In one case, a disabled chiropractor's monthly benefit
of $8,100 was stopped based on the insurer’s frivolous argument that
she can perform bookkeeping work.
As a result of unfair denials, there have been several
cases where juries awarded multi-million dollar verdicts against
disability insurers that wrongfully refused to pay claims.
Unfortunately, these wrongful refusals exist in the world of
insurance claims.
©
Law Offices C. Joe Sayas, Jr.
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