The Ten Best and Ten Worst States for Subrogating Workers’ Compensation in 2023

It has been seven years since we first published our rankings of the ten best and ten worst states for workers’ compensation subrogation. Since then, case decisions and legislatures have been busy trying to help trial lawyers destroy workers’ compensation subrogation liens in third-party personal injury cases. Therefore, it is time to revisit our rankings…

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Missouri

A VOICE OF REASON CRIES OUT IN THE MADE WHOLE WILDERNESS: It’s Not Illegal to Subrogate in Missouri Before Insured Made Whole

For years, trial lawyers have been threatening and filing class action lawsuits in multiple states in an effort to thwart their arch nemesis—subrogation. States such as Montana have gone so far as to hold that it is the burden of the subrogated insurance company to determine and prove that its insured has been fully made…

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Delaware

THE CONFUSING STATE OF DELAWARE PIP VS. WORKERS COMPENSATION SUBROGATION: Amguard Insurance Company A/S/O Richard E. Cleveland, 2023 WL 3789445 (Del. Super. 2023)

As is the case in many no-fault states, Delaware employees injured in an automobile accident in the course and scope of employment might be entitled to both workers’ compensation and PIP benefits simultaneously. The Worker’s Compensation Act requires every employer in the state, unless excluded, to provide statutory workers’ compensation benefits to an injured employee.…

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Georgia

MWL Defeats Made-Whole in Georgia!

Georgia has long been the bane of a subrogation professional’s existence. The State features both an anti-subrogation law and a complete compensation (“made-whole”) statute. The combination of these two laws have led many insurers to simply write off the hope of any recoveries on their subrogation claims. If you’ve given up all hope of recovering…

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Vehicle

Recovery of In-House Repair Costs and Loss of Use for Damage to Fleet/Commercial/Dealership Vehicles

One of the most heavily contested types of subrogation cases we encounter involves recovery of the reasonable cost of repairs performed in-house by a commercial fleet, trucking company, auto dealership, or rental car company whose vehicle has been damaged due to the negligence of a negligent third party. The liability carrier for the tortfeasor frequently…

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Deductible

“UNDER DEDUCTIBLE” SUBROGATION & DEDUCTIBLE REIMBURSEMENT: Helping Insureds Battle the Cost of Insurance

Insurance policy deductibles and subrogation make strange bedfellows. Most property and automobile insurance policies require that the insured pay a deductible—an out-of-pocket payment the insured is required to pay toward a covered loss before the insurance company kicks in with its own claim dollars. Some policies allow the insured to select a deductible, with the…

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Uninsured Motorist

UIM Coverage and the “Floating Layer” Theory

Most insurance claims professionals understand that, as opposed to uninsured motorist (UM) coverage, which pays damages to an insured who is involved in an accident with an uninsured driver, underinsured motorist (UIM) coverage is automobile insurance coverage which protects an insured involved in an accident with a tortfeasor who doesn’t have liability limits sufficient to…

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Chat GPT

What Artificial Intelligence Has to Say About the Societal Benefits of Insurance Subrogation

By ChatGPT (artificial intelligence chatbot) Foreward By Gary L. Wickert Artificial intelligence (AI) is intelligence—perceiving, synthesizing, and inferring information—demonstrated by computers or machines, as opposed to actual human intelligence. According to the current system of classification, there are actually four types of AI: reactive, limited memory, theory of mind, and self-aware. For many of us,…

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