Chamber Of Commerce Complains In West Virginia

So should Pennsylvanians care?

Here's why we have to be concerned about what the Chamber of Commerce is complaining about in West Virginia. There is a nasty legislative fight going on there concerning a piece of legislation that would require insurance carriers to provide the amount of  their insured's bodily injury policy limits to personal injury claimants and their attorneys before suit is filed. Proponents of the bill, such as West Virginia House Judiciary Chairman Tim Miley, take the position that the objective of the bill is to reduce litigation. Getting policy limits information pre-suit is relevant information that is typically not disclosed by insurance companies until suit is filed. In other words, why force a lawsuit just to obtain the information?

I agree with Miley and here's why.

In Pennsylvania, if I represent someone injured in a car accident , as in West Virginia, the opposing insurance company is not required to disclose their insured's policy limits unless and until suit is filed by me on behalf of my client. In reality, obtaining the amount of the defendant's coverage is largely dependent on a number of factors, including:

  • Which insurance company is involved;
  • The level of experience or lack thereof, of the insurance representative assigned to the claim;
  • The degree of injuries sustained by the plaintiff;
  • The amount of unpaid medical bills incurred by the plaintiff;
  • The amount of wage loss incurred by the plaintiff;
  • The county where suit will be filed.

State Farm and Allstate will rarely if ever disclose policy limits pre-suit. American Independent invariably only writes polices for the minimum amount of coverage, $15,000. If it's a Chubb Insurance Company policy and the defendant lives on the Main Line, more than likely it's not a $15,000 policy, but rather a much larger policy.  If the defendant is a business, there will be a commercial policy with at least $1,000,000 in coverage. 

So, some things we know going in, whether or not suit is eventually filed.

There are many cases where I am forced to file suit, only to receive a telephone call from the defense attorney assigned to the case immediately after the lawsuit is served on the defendant, and he or she will tell me the amount of the defendant's policy limits. They have to at that point. It is discoverable information under the Pennsylvania Rules of Civil Procedure. There's no reason to hide that information any more.

Does holding back the amount of an insured's bodily injury limits accomplish anything? No, it does not.

The Chamber and their political cohorts see it differently. The Chamber goes out of its way to oppose anything pro-consumer. And, as succinctly stated by Max Kennerly in his recent blog post, Chamber of Commerce Swings And Misses At Plaintiffs' Lawyer Advertising:

Don’t kid yourself that the U.S. Chamber of Commerce cares the slightest bit about small business. The Chamber is the most anti-free-market lobbying group in the country, an organization dedicated to ensuring the biggest corporations in the country stay that way, squashing small businesses and regular people alike.

Max's post points out that the Chamber essentially posits that lawyer advertising should be limited, restricted, monitored more so than other businesses. He criticizes, correctly so, a recent "study"  by the Chamber's research arm, The Institute For Legal Reform  which stated:

The plaintiffs’ bar contributes to the commercialization of the legal profession by using a sophisticated and complex combination of paid search advertising and high organic search optimization of websites to generate site traffic – all with the goal of collecting the personal contact information of potential plaintiffs.Plaintiffs’ firms are devoting millions of dollars to the creation and maintenance of websites, Facebook pages, Twitter handles, blogs and YouTube channels.

No doubt Plaintiff's attorneys are spending money on online marketing. So are other attorneys. So are other businesses!

The Chamber's position is that lawyers should not be as free to market online as other businesses. Guess what? Lawyer advertising is restricted already. How we advertise, what we say, and how we say it is already controlled and restricted by the Bar in each individual state. No other business is restricted in how they advertise, but lawyers are.

As far as I am concerned, the more information that is available to the consumer the better. I am much more concerned about someone who lets their personal injury claim lapse because of lack of knowledge of the statute of limitations (the kind of information freely and readily supplied on my website as well as on other plaintiff lawyer websites) than of lawyers spending money to create an online presence.

The Chamber doesn't view things that way. The less information the public has, the better positioned big business is to prevent the filing of lawsuits seeking compensation for legitimate claims for damages.

 

The "Cash For Kids" Scandal In Luzerne County-Former Judge Michael T. Conahan Convicted

Former Luzerne County, Pennsylvania judge Michael T. Conahan was  sentenced to 17 1/2 years in a federal prison and was fined $900,000.

Conahan pleaded guilty to racketeering conspiracy last year. He and former judge Mark Ciavarella Jr. were charged with taking bribes from the builder of a pair of juvenile detention centers and extorting cash from the facilities' co-owner in what has been called the "cash for kids" scandal.

Ciavarella was convicted  at trial. He was sentenced last month to 28 years in prison.

Assistant U.S. Attorney William Houser stated

"Mr. Conahan abused his power to enrich himself and his friend Mark Ciavarella. The justice system in Pennsylvania was shaken to its very foundation."

The Pennsylvania Supreme Court had to overturn 4,000 convictions of kids that Conahan and Ciavarella issued between 2003 and 2008.

The Pennsylvania Legislature Should Increase Car Insurance Liability Limits

Since 1984 bodily injury limits (BI) on a typical automobile insurance policy has been mandated at $15,000/$30,000. BI coverage is the coverage that provides financial protection to the at fault driver in an accident. 

The $15,000 number reflects the maximum amount of coverage the injured party can collect from the at fault driver's policy of insurance (if their injurIes warrant that amount). The $30,000 figure is the amount that any combined number of injured people can collect; for example, if the at fault driver injures more than one person in the same car accident.

Maryland has just increased their limits to $40,000/$60,000, up from $20,000/$40,000. This change was long overdue for Marylanders. Our hope is that the Pennsylvania legislature will pay heed to what their colleagues in Maryland have done and increase Pennsylvania's mandated BI limits. In fact most states have limits above Pennsylvania's $15,000/$30,000 amount.

To put the $15,000/$30,000 BI limits into perspective, consider what a dollar bought you in 1984.

  • Average Cost of new house $86,730.00
  • Average Income per year $21,600.00
  • Average Monthly Rent $350.00
  • Movie Ticket $2.50
  • 1 gallon of gas $1.10
  • Dodge RAM 50 Truck $8,995.00

Pennsylvania Car Accident Victims Are Catching On: In "The Great Recession" Car Insurance Companies Are Not Going To Treat Them Fairly

What's the first thing the other guy's insurance company representative will want from you after a car accident?  He'll want to take your recorded statement about the accident and your injuries.  He'll also want you to sign a medical authorization so that the insurance company can get all of your medical records all the way back to when you were in elementary school. He might even offer you money to settle your case, and in exchange he'll want a "full and final release."

Some  Pennsylvania accident victims are catching on. When the adjuster asks them for a statement, they turn it around on the insurance adjuster and ask if they can take the statement of the insured driver who was at fault . (Of course the insurance company won't allow that). 

One of my clients (who came to me after she got tired of the shenanigans of a State Farm investigator) told me that when the State Farm investigator started asking her about prior accidents and  injuries, she insisted upon knowing how much bodily injury coverage limits the State Farm insured carried. Now that's clever.

I have another client who told me when the Nationwide adjuster insisted that his car be repaired at a "certified" Nationwide repair shop, my client began asking what type of money on used parts Nationwide would save if the car was repaired at the "certified" repair shop as compared to another auto repair shop not "certified" by Nationwide. At that point the Nationwide adjuster backed off and explained that my client could get the car repaired where he wanted and Nationwide would have to pay no matter what the cost.

Here's the jingles we all hear on television and see in print media.

Allstate: "You're in good hands"

State Farm: "State Farm is there"

Nationwide: "Nationwide is on your side"

Geico has the gecko and the Neanderthal.

Progressive has the catchy TV commercials with Flo. All Flo promises is what the Progressive policy provides for; that is, what the insured paid for.

 

 

But, now more than ever consumers need to realize that these companies have no interest in protecting you following an accident. They are profit driven, nothing more and nothing less.

If you're not sure what to do if you've been involved in an accident and the insurance adjuster is knocking at your door, seek out the advice of a qualified personal injury attorney, whether it's our firm or another firm. There are plenty of good law firms in Philadelphia and the surrounding areas who handle personal injury cases. The point is, be smart. Don't rely on what the insurance company is telling you.