Current through Register Vol. 46, No. 39, September 25, 2024
This section is applicable to claims arising under motor
vehicle collision and comprehensive coverages. The provisions of this Part
shall continue to be applicable to these claims, except to the extent that such
provisions are inconsistent with the specific provisions of this section. The
sections of this Part that do not apply at all to motor vehicle physical damage
claims are sections
216.2(b)-(d),
216.6(c), (h),
and 216.9 of this Part.
(a) The following shall govern the
construction of the terms used in this section:
(1) Agreed price shall mean the amount agreed
to by the insurer and the insured, or their representatives, as the reasonable
cost to repair damages to the motor vehicle resulting from the loss, without
considering any deductible or other deductions.
(2) Designated representative (DR) shall mean
an insured's broker of record or an insured's intended repair shop designated
by the insured to represent the insured shop in negotiations with the insurer
in an attempt to settle the claim. Such designated representative may legally
act on the insured's behalf. If the designated representative is the insured's
intended repair shop, such repair shop, if located within New York State, must
be registered pursuant to the provisions of the Motor Vehicle Repair Shop
Registration Act (article 12-A, Vehicle and Traffic Law), and may only
represent the insured in negotiation of the amount necessary to repair the
insured's damaged vehicle. The designation form must contain the repairer's
registration number.
(3) Motor
vehicle shall have the meaning ascribed in section
311 of
the Vehicle and Traffic Law.
(4)
Substantially similar vehicle shall mean a vehicle of the same make, model,
year and condition, including all major options of the insured vehicle. Mileage
must not exceed that of the insured vehicle by more than 4,000 miles or 10
percent of the mileage on the vehicle at the date of loss, whichever is
greater.
(5) Business day shall
mean a day other than Saturday, Sunday or a New York State legal
holiday.
(6) Crash part means a
part of a motor vehicle, which:
(i) is made
of sheet metal, plastic, fiberglass or similar material, including a door,
fender, panel, bumper, hood, floor or trunk lid, but not including windows or
hubcaps; and
(ii) constitutes or
provides support for the motor vehicle's exterior.
(7) Original equipment manufacturer or OEM
means a motor vehicle manufacturer or distributor that produces or markets,
under its own name, crash parts for use in motor vehicles that it manufactures
or distributes under its own name.
(8) Nonoriginal equipment manufacturer or
non-OEM means a manufacturer or distributor (including any entity supplying the
required warranty other than a manufacturer), that produces or markets, under
its own name, crash parts for use in motor vehicles that it does not
manufacture or distribute.
(9)
Waste material means material defined as a liquid toxic waste or liquid
hazardous waste material under Federal or New York State environmental laws or
regulations.
(10) Local market area
shall mean a 100-mile radius, limited to within the United States, of the place
of principal garagement of the insured's motor vehicle.
(b) Adjustment of partial losses.
(1) If, upon notification of a loss, the
insurer intends to exercise its right to inspect damages prior to repair, it
shall have six business days following receipt of notice of claim to inspect
the insured's damaged motor vehicle, which is available for inspection, during
normal business hours at a place and time reasonably convenient to the insured.
In addition, negotiations shall commence and a good faith offer of settlement,
sufficient to repair the vehicle to its condition immediately prior to the
loss, shall be made within the aforesaid six-day period to the designated
representative, and it may also be made to the insured. If there is no
designated representative, the offer shall be made to the insured within the
six-day period.
(2) Before
negotiating a loss with the insured's designated representative, the insurer
must receive written proof of such designation, properly executed and signed by
the insured. The designated representative form shall be accepted by the
insurer or its representative when it is offered by either the designated
representative or the insured. Prior to negotiating a loss with a repair shop,
the insurer shall ascertain the repair shop registration number and the
currency of the registration. The insurer shall not knowingly negotiate a loss
with an unregistered repair shop.
(3) The person inspecting the damaged vehicle
on behalf of the insurer must be licensed or authorized, under article 21 of
the Insurance Law, to negotiate the loss with the insured or the insured's
designated representative. At the time of initial inspection, the person chosen
by the insurer to inspect damages must attempt to enter into negotiations,
involving the extent of damages, manner of repair and number of hours to repair
the damaged vehicle, with the designated representative or, if no designated
representative, the insured, in accordance with the following procedures:
(i) at the time of inspection, the insurer
shall furnish a copy of its estimate, which at a minimum, must indicate the
extent of known damages and manner of repair; or
(ii) if the insurer utilizes electronic data
processing equipment to generate its repair estimate the insurer shall furnish,
at the time of inspection, its estimate or a copy of its worksheet, which at a
minimum, must indicate the extent of known damages and manner of repair or, in
the alternative, such insurer may hand-deliver to the insured's designated
representative or, if no designated representative, the insured, no later than
24 hours following the inspection, a copy of the insurer's detailed written
estimate of the cost of repairing the damages resulting from the loss,
specifying all appropriate deductions.
Within the aforesaid six-business-day period, the insured's
designated representative or, if no designated representative, the insured
shall, in all events, receive from the insurer a copy of the insurer's detailed
written estimate of the cost of repairing the damages resulting from the loss,
specifying all appropriate deductions.
(4) The insurer's repair estimate shall
include, as a separate line item, the reasonable cost for proper disposal of
waste material generated by painting the motor vehicle or crash part, in the
following manner (or using another method that is acceptable to the
superintendent as functionally equivalent):
(i) the cost per paint hour shall be
calculated by dividing the repair shop's annual disposal fees for such waste
material, after adjusting for reclaiming or recycling by the repair shop, by
the number of hours expended annually to paint vehicles;
(ii) the reasonable cost for proper disposal
of the waste material shall be calculated by multiplying the number of hours
estimated to paint the vehicle by the cost per paint hour;
(iii) presentation of the manifest and
invoice documenting a repair shop's disposal and disposal cost for hazardous
waste may be required by an insurer as a condition for this separate line
itemization, and the failure of the repair shop to provide such documentation
shall relieve the insurer from any consideration or inclusion of such disposal
cost on an itemized basis within the repair estimate;
(iv) the reasonable cost shall not exceed the
prevailing cost for such disposal in the geographic area of such repair;
and
(v) a new repair shop may use
the prevailing cost for disposal of hazardous waste in its geographic area
during its first year in business.
(5) If the insurer's repair estimate is based
upon the use of any non-OEM crash part:
(i)
the estimate shall specify the non-OEM or non-OEM supplier;
(ii) the insurer shall not, without consent
of the insured or the insured's designated representative, specify non-OEM
crash parts from more than three different suppliers for any one
repair;
(iii) the crash part shall
equal or exceed the comparable OEM crash part in terms of fit, form, finish,
quality and performance;
(iv) the
crash part must be warranted by the non-OEM at least to the extent and duration
as the comparable OEM crash part;
(v) the insurer shall specify only certified
crash parts, in regard to any part that has been duly certified by a qualified
certifying entity acceptable to the superintendent;
(vi) if the crash part has not been certified
by a qualified certifying entity acceptable to the superintendent, the non-OEM
must issue a written warranty, for at least the period of the insured's
ownership of the vehicle, that the crash part equals or exceeds the comparable
OEM crash part in terms of fit, form, finish, quality and performance;
and
(vii) the insurer shall cause
the damaged vehicle to be restored to its preloss condition consistent with the
non-OEM warranty, at no additional cost to the insured and within a reasonable
time, if the non-OEM fails to honor its warranty required in subparagraph (iv)
or (vi) of this paragraph.
(6) In determining whether a certifying
entity is qualified and acceptable for purposes of paragraph (5) of this
subdivision, the superintendent shall consider the extent to which the entity:
(i) has adopted written standards containing
conditions to be fulfilled by a manufacturer of crash parts;
(ii) tests, or contracts with an independent
testing organization that tests, crash parts, using suitable equipment and
techniques;
(iii) administers its
certification program in a nondiscriminatory manner regarding any manufacturer
or supplier of non-OEM crash parts;
(iv) provides a system to determine that
certified non-OEM crash parts continue to conform with standards prescribed in
subparagraph (5)(iii) of this subdivision and, failing to so conform, to
decertify and advise crash part users of withdrawals of certification for any
such part;
(v) provides mechanisms
for quickly receiving inquiries and promptly resolving disputes that arise
under the program in regard to consumers, insurers or repair shops;
(vi) provides a means of identifying each
certified non-OEM crash part and provides a system of security that guards
against misuse of the identification;
(vii) provides updated lists of certified
non-OEM crash parts on at least a quarterly basis; and
(viii) provides the superintendent with an
annual report, and such other reports as the superintendent may require,
highlighting any significant developments, problems or changes relating to
certification procedures or requirements.
(7) Negotiations must be conducted in good
faith, with the basic goal of promptly arriving at an agreed price with the
insured or the insured's designated representative. If the insured's intended
repair shop is not a designated representative of the insured, the insurer may
also reach an agreement with that repair shop on the cost to repair the damaged
vehicle, but that agreement shall not be binding upon the insured or the
designated representative. Early in negotiations, the insurer must inform the
insured's designated representative or, if there is no designated
representative, the insured of all deductions that will be made from the agreed
price. If an insurer shall require a proof of loss, its offer shall be
communicated to the insured via a proof of loss. The insurer shall also
communicate the offer to the designated representative.
(8) If the insurer fails to inspect the
damaged motor vehicle during the aforementioned six-business-day period, it
shall forfeit its right to inspect the damaged vehicle prior to repairs. Unless
the insured or designated representative shall permit an inspection after the
six-day period, negotiations shall be limited to labor and the price of parts
and shall not, unless objective evidence to the contrary is provided by the
insurer, involve disputes as to the existence of damage or the chosen manner of
repair. For the above forfeiture-of-inspection provision to apply, the damaged
vehicle must be available for inspection during normal business hours for the
entire aforementioned six-business-day period.
(9) If a second inspection of the vehicle is
required by the insurer in order to evaluate open items on the original
estimate, or hidden damage discovered upon commencement of repairs, such
inspection shall be performed within two business days following the date of
notice of additional or hidden damage from either the insured or the DR. When
repairs are sublet by the original repairer, thereby necessitating a
reinspection at a location other than the original repairer's location, such
reinspection must take place within four business days' notice, from either the
insured or the DR, of additional or hidden damage. At the time of the
subsequent inspection, the insurer shall furnish a copy of the insurer's
detailed written estimate of the cost of repairing the damages resulting from
the loss, specifying all appropriate deductions.
(10) If upon notification of a loss, the
insurer, because of the minor amount of the loss as reported by the insured,
requests an estimate of repairs from the insured in lieu of a physical
inspection, such a request must be made within three business days of the
notice of claim. The insured must receive notification that, upon receipt of
the estimate, the insurer may for good reasons (e.g., estimate far exceeded
original advice to insurer) elect to inspect the vehicle. Such inspection must
be made within four business days following the receipt of the estimate at the
claim processing office of the insurer. Such inspection shall be subject to the
provisions of this section, except that the six-business-day
forfeiture-of-inspection period specified in paragraph (8) of this subdivision
shall become applicable after the four business days. A good faith offer of
settlement sufficient to repair the vehicle to its condition immediately prior
to the loss, must be made to the designated representative and, it may also be
made to the insured within three business days of the receipt of the inspection
and/or estimate. If there is no designated representative, the offer shall be
made to the insured within the three-day period. If the insurer does not
perform its own physical inspection, it is nevertheless bound by all the
applicable requirements of this Part.
(11) Deductions for betterment and/or
depreciation are permitted only for parts normally subject to repair and
replacement during the useful life of the insured motor vehicle. Deductions for
betterment and/or depreciation shall be limited to the lesser of:
(i) an amount equal to the proportion that
the expired life of the part, to be repaired or replaced, bears to the normal
useful life of that part; or
(ii)
the amount by which the resale value of the motor vehicle is increased by the
repair or replacement. Calculations for betterment, depreciation and normal
useful life must be included in the insurer's claim file.
(12) Deductions for previous damage or prior
condition of the motor vehicle must be measurable, discernible, itemized and
specified as to dollar amount, and such deductions must be detailed in the
claim file. Such deductions shall be limited to the amount by which the resale
value of the motor vehicle is increased by the elimination of the previous
damage or the correction of the prior condition.
(13) Estimates of repairs prepared by
insurers or their representatives shall contain the following information at a
minimum: identity of policyholder and/or owner/claimant; owner/claimant's
address and telephone number; identity of insurer, including name, address,
license number and telephone number of adjuster; year, make, model, body style,
mileage, VIN, license number, color and condition of the damaged vehicle. The
estimate must also contain the claim number, the date of accident and the date
the vehicle was inspected. Each item of damage must be detailed as to the
paint, parts and labor hours it will require to repair that particular item. If
the appraisal is made at a repair shop, the registration number of the shop
must be included on the estimate form.
(14)
(i) If
after negotiations an agreed price cannot be reached, the insurer must furnish
the insured with a prescribed Notice of Rights letter (NYS APD 1), contained in
section 216.12 of this Part. The
requirement of this subparagraph shall not be applicable to a claim solely
involving window glass.
(ii) The
insurer must furnish the insured or the designated representative, at the
express request of either, with the name and address of a New York State
registered motor vehicle repairer, properly equipped to complete the repairs on
the damaged motor vehicle (back-up shop), at a location reasonably convenient
to the insured, who will repair the damaged motor vehicle at the insurer's
estimated cost of repair. A location reasonably convenient to the insured shall
mean: in Nassau, Suffolk and Westchester Counties and cities with 100,000 or
more population, 10 miles--and in all other areas of the State, 25 miles--from
the place where the motor vehicle is principally garaged; or the location of
the insured's repair facility. This mileage limitation shall not apply when a
repair facility properly equipped to complete the repairs is not available
within the above geographical area. In such a case a properly equipped facility
must be selected at a location as close as possible to the above definition of
reasonably convenient to the insured. The insurer must furnish the insured,
upon request, with a statement from the back-up shop that it will repair the
vehicle in a manner consistent with the insurer's estimate for the amount
estimated by the insurer to repair the damaged vehicle.
(15) If the insured's motor vehicle is
repaired at a repair shop recommended by the insurer, for a sum estimated by
the insurer as the reasonable cost to repair the vehicle, the insurer:
(i) shall select a repair shop that issues
written guarantees that any work performed in repairing damaged motor vehicles
meets generally accepted standards for safe and proper repairs;
(ii) shall cause the damaged vehicle to be
restored to its condition prior to the loss, at no additional cost to the
insured and within a reasonable time, if the repair shop it recommended does
not repair the damaged motor vehicle in accordance with generally accepted
standards for safe and proper repair; and
(iii) shall retain in its claim file a signed
section
2610 of the
Insurance Law Disclosure Statement (NYS APD 1-a), contained in section
216.12 of this Part, or other
written documentation that the insured requested recommendation of a repair
facility. If the insured has verbally requested a recommendation of a repair
facility prior to the issuance of the prescribed Notice of Rights form, the
requirement for written proof of referral shall be satisfied by a notation in
the claim files as to the date of such request and the identity of the person
to whom such request was made. The requirement of this subparagraph shall not
be applicable to a claim solely involving window glass.
(16) Salvage vehicle branding.
(i) This paragraph shall be applicable to
claims involving vehicles that are eight model years or newer on the date of
the loss.
(ii) If the insurer
determines that the cost to repair a damaged vehicle exceeds 75 percent of the
vehicle's actual cash value and if the insurer does not take possession of the
vehicle for disposition as salvage, the insurer shall require the vehicle owner
to provide the title to the insurer. The insurer may withhold the entire claim
payment, but must withhold at least 50 percent of its claim payment, after
application of any deductible, until receipt of the title. The vehicle owner
shall be advised by the insurer that the title is being requested in order to
comply with 15 NYCRR 20.20(c) and that the title will be branded as "REBUILT
SALVAGE" and will be returned to the owner by the Department of Motor
Vehicles.
(iii) As soon as
reasonably practicable, but no later than 10 business days after the receipt of
the title from the vehicle owner, the insurer shall forward the title to the
New York State Department of Motor Vehicles, Title Bureau, Empire State Plaza,
Albany, NY 12228.
(iv) For the
purpose of determining the vehicle's actual cash value pursuant to this
paragraph, an insurer shall use the methods prescribed in subparagraph
(c)(1)(i) or (iii) of this section; the value of repair parts shall be
determined by using the current published retail cost of the original equipment
manufacturer parts or the actual retail cost of the repair parts included on
the insurer's repair estimate; and the labor cost shall be computed based upon
hourly labor rate and time allocations that are consistent with the insurer's
repair estimates in the community where the repairs are performed.
(17) The insurer must mail or
hand-deliver its payment to the insured or the designated representative within
five business days after the insured has accepted the insurer's offer, or three
business days after the receipt of a completed proof of loss.
(18) The insured shall have the right to
receive the proceeds of any settlement in accordance with policy provisions.
However, if the insured agrees and this agreement is documented in the claim
file, the insurer may make the check or draft payable to the insured and the
lienholder and/or the insured's designated repairer. An insurer may not
condition payment of a loss upon repair of the automobile or receipt of a
completed Certification of Automobile Repairs.
(19) The following additional standards shall
be applicable to the settlement of private passenger automobile physical damage
claims:
(i) Subsequent to payment of the
claim, the insurer, in accordance with the provisions of section
3411
(i) of the Insurance Law, may request that
the automobile be made available for inspection, whether or not the automobile
is repaired. The inspection shall be conducted at a time and place reasonably
convenient to the insured. The inspection report shall be retained in the
insurer's claim file.
(ii) An
insurer shall request submission of a Certification of Automobile Repairs (NYS
APD 2), as contained in section
216.12 of this Part, signed and
certified by the insured and the automobile repairer, under penalties of
perjury, stating whether all items allowed by the insurer have been repaired
and, if not, that repairs were made in accordance with the repairer's invoice.
This form, together with a postage-paid return envelope, shall be given to the
insured or the insured's designated representative by the insurer during the
course of negotiation of the settlement amount.
(iii) The provisions of section
3411
(i) of the Insurance Law, with respect to
certification and repair invoices, do not apply where the amount of damage to
the insured automobile is less than the deductible applicable to the
policy.
(20) Pursuant to
the requirements of section
3411
(1) of the Insurance Law, whenever an insurer
discovers any evidence of overcharging, improper repairs or adjustments, or any
other wrongdoing by a motor vehicle repair shop, including its failure to
permit an inspection of the repaired automobile, to sign the Certification of
Automobile Repairs or to provide the insured with an itemized invoice, such
evidence shall be forwarded, within 30 days, to:
New York State Department of Motor Vehicles
Division of Vehicle Safety
Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller Empire State Plaza
Albany, NY 12228
The insurer shall thereafter cooperate fully with the
Department of Motor Vehicles in its investigation.
(c) Adjustment of total losses.
(1) If the insurer elects to make a cash
settlement, its minimum offer, subject to applicable deductions, must be one of
the following:
(i) The average of the retail
values for a substantially similar vehicle as listed in two valuation manuals
current at the date of loss and approved by this department. Manuals approved
for use are--The Redbook, published by National Market Reports Inc., and The
N.A.D.A. Official Used Car Guide, published by the National Automobile Dealers
Used Car Guide Company. The use of other manuals may be approved by this
department upon demonstration of need and suitability. If it is evident that an
option has not been considered in either or both of the above valuation
manuals, the insurer shall consider the value, if any, of such option in
arriving at the vehicle's value and shall utilize the best available method to
value such option. The insurer may deduct documented, reasonable dealer
preparation charges, up to $100, from the average of the retail values. The
insurer shall provide to the insured, no later than the date of payment of the
claim, a detailed copy of its calculation of the insured vehicle's total loss
value, including the valuation of options which are not considered in the base
price of the vehicle.
(ii) A
quotation for a substantially similar vehicle, obtained by the insurer from a
qualified dealer located reasonably convenient to the insured. A reasonable
location shall be within 25 miles of the place of principal garagement of the
motor vehicle. The substantially similar available vehicle must remain
available for purchase by the insured for a period of three calendar days
subsequent to receipt of notice of its availability by the insured, and the
insured must be able to purchase the substantially similar vehicle at the
quoted dealer for the insurer's cash offer plus applicable deductions. The
insurer must maintain in its claim file the dealer's name and location, the
vehicle identification number, the dealer stock number, the mileage and the
major options for the substantially similar vehicle which was the basis of its
quote. The notice to the insured of the availability of a substantially similar
vehicle must be sent by certified mail, return receipt requested, or be a
sound-recorded conversation reflecting the date of notice. The three calendar
days commence on the date the insured acknowledges receipt of notice. The
insured need not purchase the vehicle used as the basis of the insurer's
quotation, since the quotation merely serves as a basis for the insurer's
offer. The foregoing period is satisfied at the point an insured physically
verifies the existence of the substantially similar available vehicle used as
the basis of the insurer's quotation. Should the insurer's research of
substantially similar vehicles determine that the retail values contained in
the valuation manuals, prescribed in subparagraph (i) of this paragraph, are
inadequate to purchase a substantially similar vehicle, the insurer's offer
should be the amount determined by such research.
(iii) A quotation obtained from a
computerized database, approved by the superintendent, that produces
statistically valid fair market values for a substantially similar vehicle,
within the local market area that meets all the following minimum criteria:
(a) it shall produce values for at least 85
percent of all makes and models of private passenger automobiles, as defined in
section 67.1(a) of this
Title, for the last 15 model years, and shall take into account the values of
all major options for such vehicles:
(b) it shall rely upon values derived from
licensed dealers, which have minimum sales of 100 motor vehicles per year in
the local market area for all vehicles of seven model years or less of age, and
be based upon the physical inventory of vehicles sold within the 90 days prior
to the loss and vehicles which are available; and
(c) it shall monitor the average retail price
of private passenger automobiles when there is insufficient data or inventory
available from licensed dealers to ensure statistically valid local market area
values.
(iv) If the
method used in subparagraph (i), (ii) or (iii) of this paragraph would result
in a settlement offer greater than the purchase price plus the cost of
substantiated improvements paid by the insured for a vehicle purchased within
the 180 calendar days prior to date of loss, the insurer's offer of settlement
may be limited to the purchase price, plus the cost of any substantiated
improvements, less the deductible. This method of settlement shall not be
applicable to motor vehicles acquired by the insured through a private sale or
as a gift. A private sale is one in which the seller does not engage in the
sale of motor vehicles as an occupation.
(v) If it is not possible to value the
damaged motor vehicle by using an alternative method as described in
subparagraph (i), (ii), (iii), or (iv) of this paragraph, the insurer shall
determine the retail value by the best available method and shall explain to
the insured how its offer was calculated.
(2) If the insurer elects to replace the
vehicle, the replacement vehicle must be an immediately available,
substantially similar vehicle that is both furnished and paid for by the
insurer, subject to the deductible if any.
(3) A private passenger automobile of the
current model year means a current model year automobile that has not been
superseded in the marketplace by an officially introduced succeeding model, or
an automobile of the previous model year purchased new within 90 days prior to
the date of loss. If the insured vehicle is a private passenger automobile of
the current model year, the insurer shall pay to the insured the reasonable
purchase price to the insured on the date of loss of a new identical vehicle,
less any applicable deductible and an allowance for depreciation in accordance
with the schedule below, except where the utilization of this method of
settlement would result in a lower claim payment as compared with the
utilization of the methods described in subparagraphs (1)(i), (ii) and (iii) of
this subdivision.
DEPRECIATION SCHEDULE
Purchase price | Depreciation per mile |
Up to $10,000 | $.15 |
$10,001 to $15,000 | .20 |
$15,001 to $20,000 | .25 |
$20,001 to $25,000 | .30 |
$25,001 to $30,000 | .37 |
$30,001 to $35,000 | .45 |
More than $35,000 | .53 |
(4)
Right of recourse. If, within 35 calendar days after mailing of the claim
payment, the insured notifies the insurer in writing that the insured cannot
purchase a comparable vehicle for the market value, as determined under the
provisions of subparagraph (1)(i), (ii), (iii) or (v) or paragraph (3) of this
subdivision, the insurer shall reopen its claim file and shall offer, in its
discretion and subject to applicable deductions, one of the following options
to the insured:
(i) the insurer shall
identify and offer for settlement an amount sufficient to purchase a
substantially similar vehicle, as provided in subparagraph (1)(ii) of this
subdivision; or
(ii) the insurer
shall pay the insured the difference between the amount of its claim payment
and the cost of a substantially similar vehicle, as provided in subparagraph
(1)(ii) of this subdivision, located by the insured, or the insurer, upon
consent of the insured, may purchase that vehicle for the insured.
(5) The insurer shall not be
required to take action under paragraph (4) of this subdivision if its
documentation to the insured at the time of its final offer included written
notification of the availability of a substantially similar vehicle, as
provided in subparagraph (1)(ii) of this subdivision, which shall have been
available for at least three calendar days subsequent to the insured's receipt
of that offer. The documentation shall include the vehicle identification
number, the stock number or order number.
(6) If the insurer in the process of
adjusting a total loss makes a deduction for the salvage value of the insured
vehicle, the insurer must furnish the insured, upon the insured's request, with
the name and address of a licensed or certified salvage dealer or dismantler
who will purchase the salvage for the amount deducted with no additional
charges to the insured by the salvage dealer or dismantler.
(7) All applicable provisions of subdivision
(b) of this section ("adjustment of partial losses") also shall apply to the
adjustment of total losses, except that the insurer shall be allowed an
additional five business days to comply with the requirements of paragraph (1)
of subdivision (b) of this section. In the case of an unrecovered theft loss,
except as provided in section
216.8 of this Part, the insurer
shall make its offer for the total loss no later than the 25th calendar day
following the notice of loss, if the insured has provided all information that
has been requested by the insurer that is necessary to value the claim. If the
insured has not provided such information by the 25th calendar day following
the notice of loss, the insurer shall make its offer no later than the 5th
business day following receipt of such information.
(8) This subdivision does not prohibit an
insurer from issuing a stated value policy insuring against physical damage,
where the amount of damages to be paid in the event of a total loss is a
specified dollar amount.
(9) The
superintendent shall review the operation and efficacy of the total loss
provisions of this subdivision at least every five years.
(g) Subrogation agreements.
(1) Where an insured has received payment
under a physical damage coverage that is subject to a deductible, the insured
shall share, pro rata, with the insurer any net recovery received by the
insurer from third parties. Within 30 calendar days of such recovery, the
insurer must mail or hand-deliver to the insured its payment for the insured's
pro rata share of the recovery.
(2)
Net recovery shall be the total recovery less the insurer's allocated loss
adjustment expenses attributable to such recovery. The formula for computing
net recovery and the insured's share of recovery of the deductible may be
stated as follows:
(i) TOTAL RECOVERY -
ALLOCATED LOSS ADJUSTMENT EXPENSES = NET RECOVERY
(ii) DEDUCTIBLE/TOTAL LOSS x NET RECOVERY =
INSURED'S SHARE OF NET RECOVERY
Application of Formula: Assume a loss of $500 subject to a
$100 deductible with $50 in allocated loss adjustment expenses:
(a) if there is full recovery of $500:
computation of net recovery: $500 - $50 = $450
computation of insured's share of recovery: $100/$500 x $450
= $90
(b) If there is a
partial recovery of $300:
computation of net recovery: $300 - $50 = $250
computation of insured's share of recovery: $100/$500 x $250
= $50
(3) Unless the insurer returns its insured's
full deductible, it shall attempt to effect full recovery in clear liability
cases and shall not enter into any intercompany agreements that provide for the
acceptance of lesser amounts on a formula basis.
(4) If an insurer has paid a physical damage
claim that is subject to a deductible and it has elected to pursue its
subrogation claim, the insurer shall promptly attempt to effect recovery. If a
dispute arises between two or more insurers regarding the subrogation recovery,
and the insurers are unable to resolve it, the insurer seeking recovery shall
submit the dispute to binding arbitration or a court action shall be commenced
no later than 180 calendar days following the payment of the claim to its
insured.
(5) If an insurer has paid
a physical damage claim that is subject to a deductible and it is pursuing its
subrogation claim, the insurer shall notify its insured in writing of the
status of its claim 120 calendar days after the date of the claim payment to
its insured. An updated status letter shall be sent every 120 calendar days
thereafter until the claim is either honored or rejected.
(6) If an insurer has paid a physical damage
claim that is subject to a deductible and it elects not to pursue its
subrogation claim where the possibility of recovery exists, the insurer shall
so notify its insured in writing within 60 calendar days after it has paid the
claim, except that the notification shall be given at least 30 days prior to
the running of any applicable statute of limitations or period required for
notice of claim. If an insurer does not notify its insured within the time
periods prescribed above and the statute of limitations or period required for
notice of claim has expired, the insurer shall forthwith remit to its insured
the full amount of the insured's deductible.