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Katrina Insurance Claims
Katrina Insurance Claims
This years Hurricane season has done tremendous damage to residents located in parts of the South and Gulf Coast regions of the United States. Hurricane Katrina specifically turned residents lives upside down in Alabama, Georgia, Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi and Tennessee. Thousands of people’s homes in this area were devastated and destroyed, making it extremely burdensome for victims to get insurance claims paid.Insurance companies have a propensity to treat claimants more justly when the playing field is leveled and the insurer is conscious that the claimant has legal representation. The most valuable process of dealing with your insurance company is to have a lawyer on your side before you first speak to your insurance company.
According to the law, insurance companies are obligates to handle your claim with good faith and fair dealing. We purchase insurance to grant aid in times when we need help the most. It is unconscionable that insurance companies choose profits over helping their clients who have paid substantial money for coverage.
Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi and the majority of other states have laws governing how insurance companies must deal with claimants. Louisiana makes it mandatory for insurers to make a written offer to resolve a property damage claim within 30 days after receipt of a "satisfactory proof of loss" for the claim. If the insurance company fails to do this and it has no reason for failing to do so, the company may owe penalties of up to 25% on the amount due.
Even when insurance companies respond within 30 days, they are denying claims left and right. Homeowners insurance typically doesn’t cover floods resulting from a hurricane. Therefore, the National Flood Insurance Program generally covers flood damage. Most homeowner’s policies include a sentence excluding flood, surface water, waves, tidal water, overflow of a body of water or spray from any of these.
Homeowners insurance though does cover things such as wind damage and damage from wind-driven rain. Insurers are using the disclaimer about flooding to get out of paying claims on homes damaged only by wind. Many inland residents of places like Baton Rouge are finding that their claims are being denied and that their insurers are citing their flooding disclaimer. This denial of homeowner’s claims in non-flooded areas is a bad faith practice.
If you are a victim of a denied hurricane katrina insurance claim due to bad faith or have not filled your claim, please fill out the form at the right for a free case evaluation by a qualified hurricane claim attorney.
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State Farm Hurricane Katrina Lawsuits
Apr 8, 2008
Keywords: State Farm Katrina Lawyer Mississippi Lawsuit Information Bad Faith State Farm Hurricane Katrina Lawsuits The Lawyers and attorneys at our firm are offering free consultations to residents of Mississippi whose attorneys were dismissed from lawsuits regarding State Farm Insurance Co.'s handling of Hurricane Katrina damage claims. In April 2008, law firms and attorneys affiliated with Richard "Dickie" Scruggs were barred from State Farm Hurricane...
State Farm Adjustment Firm Settles with Katrina Victims in Civil RICO Lawsuit
Nov 14, 2007 | Parker Waichman Alonso LLP
State Farm Insurance Company policy holders whose Hurricane Katrina damage claims were denied have reached a settlement with a firm that helped the company prepare damage adjustments. Under the terms of the settlement, claims against Forensic Analysis and Engineering Corp. will be dropped from a federal lawsuit that accuses State Farm of racketeering when it denied thousands of Hurricane Katrina insurance claims.State Farm was one of the largest insurers on the Gulf Coast when Katrina...
Miss. Attorney General to Sue State Farm
May 1, 2007 | AP
Mississippi Attorney General Jim Hood said Tuesday he plans to sue State Farm Fire and Casualty Co. because he believes the insurer failed to honor the terms of their agreement for a mass settlement of policyholder claims over Hurricane Katrina damage. Hood, who agreed in January to drop State Farm from a civil suit his office filed less than a month after Katrina, said his office is in the "final stages" of drafting a new complaint that accuses State Farm of breach of contract. ...
More than 200 victims of Hurricane Katrina had sued the insurer; terms of the deal weren't disclosed
Apr 24, 2007 | AP
Nationwide Mutual Insurance Co. has agreed to settle out of court with more than 200 residents of Mississippi's Gulf Coast who sued the insurer over Hurricane Katrina damage, a lawyer for the policyholders said. Terms of the mass settlement between the Columbus, Ohio-based company and up to 227 of its policyholders were not disclosed. All of the homeowners are represented by a team of lawyers, who helped negotiate a similar deal for clients who had sued State Farm Insurance Cos. In that deal,...
Katrina suit costs Allstate $2.8M
Apr 17, 2007 | AP
Allstate Insurance Co. must pay a Louisiana man who lost his home to Hurricane Katrina more than $2.8 million in damages and penalties, a federal jury decided Monday in a case that hinged largely on whether it was wind or storm surge that wiped out his house. The jury found Allstate, which claimed most of the damage was due to storm surge, an event not covered in its policy did not pay Robert Weiss enough money to cover wind damage to his home. The verdict included a $1.5 million penalty for...
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Quick Facts
Katrina Insurance Claims Reference Guide
Areas Affected
Alabama
Florida
Georgia
Louisiana
Mississippi
South Carolina
Texas
Covered by Insurance
Wind damage
Wind-driven rain
Why Claims Denied
Floods
Surface water
Waves
Tidal water
Overflow of water
Spray from water
Related Topics
Business Interruption Claims
Wind Damage Claims
Levee Failure
Hurricane Claims
State Farm Katrina Claims
Other Topics
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