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Tag: Louisville car wreck attorney

Dealing with Insurance after a Car Wreck

Episode 6:  Louisville automobile accident attorney Jim Desmond continues the discussion about the accident claim process.  He’s going to explain important issues related to getting back to normal, after a car wreck.  This discussion began in Episode 5.

Assuming you now have the police report, you’ll determine what company is actually insuring the automobile.  This might take some effort.  Once a claim in opened, they issue a claim number.  It’s important to include that number on any communication.

It’s possible that you and the at fault driver might be covered by the same insurance carrier.  You need to understand your rights.  Get documentation on your car’s fair market value.  They might try to low-ball the property damage claim.  The police report, photographs from the accident site and other documentation will better position your claim.  Be mindful of your tone when speaking to the adjuster.  The reasonable person typically has a good chance of getting to a fair settlement.

Permissive Use

The doctrine that if someone gives you their keys to use their car, you should be covered by their insurance.  Your own coverage is secondary.  However, if you’ve been driving their car on a regular basis, without being listed as an additional insured, the insurance company may be able to fight the claim.

What if I Don’t Want to Handle the Case Myself? 

Some people don’t want to do all of the legwork after a car wreck.  As an attorney, Jim Desmond is happy to handle the details on your behalf.  It’s helpful, however, for the client to have a general understanding of the process.  By getting an attorney involved earlier, some of the process can be made more efficient because attorneys file these claims all the time.

Kentucky is a pure comparative fault state.  If the other side successfully argues you are partially at fault, they now have a claim against you.  Even if the reason you were in the accident is 85% the other person’s fault, you may still be on the hook for 15% of the damages.  It’s not about what actually happened.  It’s about what either party can actually prove, after a car wreck.

Determining who had the right of way is a key factor in establishing which driver is at fault.  Many collisions occur when pulling into traffic, turning left across on-coming traffic or some other action causing a rear-end collision.  People instinctively develop a presumption of what caused the wreck.  This is why the accident-site photos, police reports and other details discussed in Episode 5 are so important.

Louisville Injury Attorney Jim Desmond Discusses what to do after a car wreck

This Happened This Week

What happens if your daughter or son is driving your car out of state and has a wreck?  The laws of the state in which the car wreck occurred will take priority.  However, the insurance coverage you have from your own state will travel with the car.  For instance, even if the other state doesn’t have a no-fault system, your Kentucky no-fault benefits will still apply.  It’s a good idea to make sure your child is listed as an insured driver.  It may make sense to name your child on your policy, even if he/she only lives with you part of the time.

For more information, visit https://attorneydesmond.com/.

Important Disclaimers:

While this podcast addresses what to do after a car wreck, the information provided on this podcast is for general informational purposes only.  It should not be construed as legal advice and does not constitute an attorney-client relationship.  You should seek the advice of an attorney for guidance related to your specific situation.  I am only licensed in Kentucky and Indiana, so the general advice provided may not apply outside of those states.

This podcast maybe freely shared, but may not be the modified or edited in any way.  This is an attorney advertisement.   Principal office is located in Louisville, KY.  Co-host Jim Ray is a non-attorney spokesperson.

Filed Under: Car Wrecks, Insurance Issues, Podcast Tagged With: Automobile Insurance, car accident, Louisville car wreck attorney

Episode 4 UM/UIM Coverage

Uninsured Motorist (UM) and Under Insured Motorist (UIM) Coverage.  In today’s episode, Louisville personal injury attorney Jim Desmond discusses UM/UIM Coverage.  Uninsured Motorist and/or Under Insured Motorist coverage is generally used for pain and suffering claims and uncompensated medical expenses.

Your uninsured motorist coverage and under insured motorist coverage must be in place before the collision occurs.  Bodily injury coverage refers to the amount your policy will pay for the other person, not you.

You can have coverage as a named insured and others may be covered under resident relative concept.  UM/UIM coverage can apply to resident relatives.

Jim Desmond discusses various situations, including a bus accident requiring multiple claimants to file against a single driver.  He explains how UM/UIM coverage can be an added layer of protection.  If there are multiple injured parties, the attorneys will work to help decide how the coverage will be divided among the victims.

If you are hesitant to file a claim in an automobile accident, it begins as a personal injury claim, not a lawsuit.  You’re trying to recover from the at-fault driver via negotiations.  If you can’t reach an acceptable settlement, your attorney can file a lawsuit.  In most cases though, you’re going after the insurance company that is covering the at-fault driver.

Louisville personal injury attorney Jim Desmond

 

  • This Happened This Week 

The no-fault carrier has a lien against the case for the amount it paid.  If you can figure out the policy limits of the at-fault driver, your attorney can petition the at-fault driver’s insurance company pay the victim directly.  This may avoid having the no-fault carrier recover the lien.  It’s complicated, but your attorney understands whether it’s possible in your case.

  • Need to Hire an Attorney for Your Auto Accident Case?

You can contact Jim Desmond at www.AttorneyDesmond.com.  His cell phone is (502) 609-7657.  Follow the links on his website to his Facebook page, where you’ll be able to follow him and keep up to date with new information about personal injury law in Kentucky and Indiana.

Important Disclaimers:

The information provided on this podcast is for general informational purposes only.  It should not be construed as legal advice and does not constitute an attorney-client relationship.  You should seek the advice of an attorney for guidance related to your specific situation.  I am only licensed in Kentucky and Indiana, so the general advice provided may not apply outside of those states.

This podcast maybe freely shared, but may not be the modified or edited in any way.  This is an attorney advertisement.   Co-host Jim Ray is a non-attorney spokesperson.

 

 

Filed Under: Car Wrecks, Insurance Issues, Podcast Tagged With: Louisville car wreck attorney, Under insured motorist coverage, Uninsured motorist coverage

The Kentucky Uninsured Driver Loophole

The Kentucky Uninsured Driver Loophole
There’s a legal requirement, per Kentucky law, that your car must have insurance coverage.  Anyone who has read one of my blogs or has visited my website, www.AttorneyDesmond.com, has probably heard me preach about having at least $100,000 per of uninsured motorist coverage on both their automobile insurance and their motorcycle insurance.  Nevertheless, it appears there’s a Kentucky uninsured driver loophole.
My blogs tell true stories of how a person injured in a car wreck in Kentucky, through no fault of their own and caused entirely by someone else’s negligence, ultimately discovered that the at-fault driver failed to have his or her vehicle properly insured.  Consequently, my injured clients have to rely on their own automobile or motorcycle insurance to cover their medical bills and their claim for pain and suffering.
One of my most recent blogs dealt with the issue of suing an uninsured driver for my client’s pain and suffering and whether the potential recovery justified the cost of litigation.   Several readers of that post raised the issue of how is it someone can be uninsured and still be on the road?  Since personal injury law usually addresses the after-effect of someone not having their vehicle properly insured, I had to research some of the Kentucky Revised Statutes to find the answers.  Unfortunately, from the information I am gathering, it appears that Kentucky law is totally inadequate to address the issue.  I believe this creates a Kentucky uninsured driver loophole.
Most of the motor vehicle law for Kentucky is contained in what is known as the Kentucky Motor Vehicle Reparations Act.  This Act can pretty much be found in Section 304.39 et. seq. of the Kentucky Revised Statutes.  KRS 304.39-080 (5) of the Kentucky Motor Vehicle Reparations Act states that if you own or operate a vehicle registered in Kentucky, you must have at least the minimum amount of liability insurance which is set out in KRS 304.39-110; which is an insurance policy with a single limit of $60,000 or limits of $25,000 per person, $50,000 per accident and $10,000 in property damage.
If you fail to have your vehicle insured, the registration for your vehicle will be revoked, see KRS 304.39-080(5) and KRS 304.39-090, pursuant to KRS 186A.040 and you will be subject to the criminal penalties laid out in KRS 304.39-060.
So, when we are pulled over by a police officer, that officer will has a computer system in his vehicle, known as a Mobile Data Terminal (“MDT”), which is linked to a database referred to as AVIS, Automated Vehicle Information System.  This database maintains title, registration, and insurance information for all vehicles, boats and trailers registered in Kentucky.
When an insurance company cancels or does not renew an automobile insurance policy, it is required to provide the Kentucky Department of Vehicle Regulation with the VIN number of the vehicle. If that VIN number does not appear in AVIS for two consecutive months, the Department has to send the insured a statement that they have to show proof of insurance within 30 days or the registration of the vehicle will be revoked. See KRS 186A.040.

This is the part the concerns me; the only proactive step taken by the State of Kentucky when it is informed that a vehicle is not properly insured, according to the AVIS system, is to revoke the registration of that vehicle! 

The County Attorney is not even informed of this revocation of the registration unless that registration has been revoked 3 times within a 12 month period.  See KRS 186A.040(4)(b).  When State Representative Ron Crimm attempted to amend this statute, through HB 337 in 2010, so that the County Attorney would prosecute the first time the vehicle’s registration was revoked. The bill was shot down in part because the Kentucky County Attorney’s Association opined that there would be hundreds of more prosecutions thereby resulting in a significant financial burden to County Attorneys and local jails for the housing of inmates.

Risks of the Kentucky Uninsured Driver Loophole

So logically, according to the current status of Kentucky Motor Vehicle law, I can stop paying my for my car insurance and not until 90 days later, (two months of no insurance showing on my vehicle through AVIS and 30 days notice required by KRS 186A.040), will the registration for my vehicle be revoked. Thereafter, unless I am pulled over and issued a citation, I won’t be subject to criminal prosecution for no insurance so I can renew my license plate just before it expires and effectively save money by not having to pay for car insurance for approximately 9 months.  To me, this is a dangerous Kentucky uninsured driver loophole.

Please understand that I am in no way advocating that someone operate a motor vehicle without car insurance.

If you do so, you can be subject to multiple claims from other driver’s for your negligence and even if you were not at fault for the car wreck, you cannot recover the first $10,000 of your medical expenses and lost wages.  See KRS 304.39.060.  However, I am shocked at what appears to be a big hole in criminal law in regard to Kentucky drivers who fail to carry the proper insurance.  Again, as I have said hundreds of times before, there is nothing in Kentucky law that guarantees the at-fault driver truly has liability insurance to cover the damages he causes through in a car wreck.
I am not a politician and nor do I have any desire to be.  In fact, out of all my blogs, this one has tended to violate one of my own rules and been overly complicated, by citing statutes, rather than simply addressing the needs of the typical Kentucky driver. However, I thought it was important that you, the consumer, could fact check my sources.
Very simply, the safety of you and your family, while operating a vehicle on Kentucky roadways, needs to be your primary concern. Even if the Kentucky Legislature amended the law so that an uninsured driver would be prosecuted sooner, there is still no guarantee in the law that he could be fully responsible for the injuries and damages he might inflict through his negligence.
My legal advice is remains the same.  Rather than which personal injury lawyer you choose or which insurance is company is “best”, make sure each and every motorcycle or car insurance policy you have has at least $100,000 per person of uninsured and underinsured motorist coverage.
Through the analysis described above, there is no guarantee that the other driver truly has car insurance and even if he does, it can be as little as $25,000 per person. Therefore, you need to protect yourself before the car wreck by putting on your own automobile insurance policy the types of insurance you may need should you be involved in a serious car wreck.  Don’t be a victim of this Kentucky uninsured driver loophole.

Watch this Brief Video for more Information about Uninsured and Under-Insured Motorist Coverage

Filed Under: Car Wrecks, Insurance Issues Tagged With: Desmond Law Office, Louisville car wreck attorney, Uninsured driver

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