Articles Tagged with subrogation

dollarsIt is common for health and disability (lost wages) insurance carriers to pay benefits to their insureds who are injured due to someone else’s negligence. Many of these policies include reimbursement provisions allowing the insurer to recover payments from any personal injury settlement or judgment obtained by the insured.

How Much Must Be Repaid?

The reimbursement amount depends on two key factors:

  1. Policy Language
  2. The Source of the Settlement or Judgment

Most policies state that the insurer is entitled to full reimbursement from the insured’s recovery—often before the insured or their attorney receives anything. However, when the recovery is from a tortfeasor (the at-fault party), Florida law may limit the insurer’s rights.

Continue reading

HighwayDriving-thumb-165x249Despite having many potential sources of payment for medical expenses in ride share-related crashes, Uber riders sometimes end up holding the bag.

The most common payment sources are PIP, MedPay, health insurance, Medicare, Medicaid, and bodily injury liability insurance.

With a few exceptions, every owner or registrant of a motor vehicle required to be registered and licensed in Florida must maintain PIP insurance. See Florida Statute 627.733. PIP, which applies without regard to fault, covers medical expenses and lost wages. Most Florida policies limit PIP coverage to $10,000 and apply deductibles.

One of the benefits of the ride share industry is that people can go without owning a vehicle. However, PIP is not automatically available to those PIP passengers who live in Florida and do not reside with a relative who maintains PIP insurance. Likewise, other medical insurance may not be available.

Continue reading

Pie-Chart-300x246Not infrequently, both a workers’ compensation case and a personal injury liability case will arise from the same accident. For example, a construction site supervisor involved in a motor vehicle crash while traveling to Home Depot for supplies can pursue workers’ compensation benefits from the employer and civil liability damages from the at-fault party.

Florida Statute 440.39(2) provides that “the employer or, in the event the employer is insured against liability hereunder, the insurer shall be subrogated to the rights of the employee or his or her dependents against such third-party tortfeasor.” This means that the employer and its workers’ compensation insurance carrier are entitled to recover a portion of their expenditures from money the injured employee receives from the at-fault third party.

Typically, it is not a dollar-for-dollar recovery. The formula for the recovery is contained in section 440.39(3)(a).

Continue reading

Contact Information