Home > Off Topic > Urgent help needed, Just had a total loss Vehicle fire. |
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jimbob7 Member Since: 06 Jul 2013 Location: uk Posts: 2055 |
Ouch,feel your pain bro,but at the end of the day nobodies hurt.You may lose money on the jcb but f**k it,it's money.Guess you owe the farmer some beers and LOL at having a halfwit neighbour!! Pov.spec,ftw. 2006, 110,TD5.
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21st Oct 2015 10:39am |
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blackwolf Member Since: 03 Nov 2009 Location: South West England Posts: 17386 |
I'm really sorry to hear of your disaster, terrible! Thank goodness you have at least one brave, public spirited neighbour who is prepared to do the decent thing.
I can't offer much advice since I have no experience in this situation, but there are some things that common sense suggest. Firstly, was it an "agreed value" policy? If so, and the value you suggested (and agreed) was low, then I suspect that you are rather stuffed. If not agreed value, was the description you gave of the machine to the insurance company accurate, and did the company know that you had improved the condition of the machine? The reason that this may be important is that the insurance company must/should have a general impression of the value of the machine themselves which they would use together with other factors when calculating the premium. In other words, if you had a machine which realistically was worth £5k and you told them it was worth £50k, your premiums would be higher but they won't pay out £50k if it's a total loss. Similarly if you have mis-estimated the value and are low, I don't see why the comapny should only pay out your understimate, provided of course it wasn't agreed value. Bottom line, the pre-fire condition of the machine should determine its value. Any evidence you have (photos, receipts, etc) could be used for evidence. I don't see why the loss adjuster cannot see the machine where it is, and personally I would not allow its removal until I had a satisfactory 'agreement in principle' with the insurance company. Depending on the terms of the insurance, it probably only becomes their property when you agree to make a claim, and they agree that you can make the claim. Until then, it's yours. Your complaining neighbour sounds like a thoroughly worthless piece of garbage. Just remember if her house catches fire to ring the council to ask if she is allowed to burn it down, not the fire service! You couldn't make it up. Do you know what caused the fire? Electrical fault or arson? What kind of machine was it, backhoe loader or 360? |
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21st Oct 2015 10:45am |
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