INSURANCE CHAPTER 49.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Objective Interpret the nature, theory, and different types of insurance INTRODUCTION TO INSURANCE.
Advertisements

Unit 9 – Risk Management Chapter 32, 33, 24, 35, and 36.
Business & Personal Finance
Insurance Law CHAPTER 19.
Chapter 23 Insuring Your Future Lesson 1: Insurance and How It Works
6. Legal Principles in Insurance Contracts BUS 200 Introduction to Risk Management and Insurance Fall 2008 Jin Park.
9-1 General Requirements - Enforceable Contract 1.Offer and acceptance 2.Consideration 3.Legal object 4.Competent parties 5.Legal form.
Click your mouse anywhere on the screen to advance the text in each slide. After the starburst appears, click a blue triangle to move to the next slide.
Chapter 10 Life Insurance
P A R T P A R T Property Personal Property and Bailments Real Property Landlord and Tenant Estates and Trusts Insurance Law 5 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Business.
RISK MANAGEMENT FOR ENTERPRISES AND INDIVIDUALS Chapter 9 Fundamental Doctrines Affecting Insurance Contracts.
Copyright © 2008 by West Legal Studies in Business A Division of Thomson Learning Chapter 36 Insurance Twomey Jennings Anderson’s Business Law and the.
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Business Law, sixth edition, Henry R. Cheeseman Chapter 50: Insurance Chapter 50: Insurance Business Law Legal, E-Commerce,
Chapter 17 Life Insurance Contractual Provisions.
Chapter 50 Insurance.
Insurance Is protection for individuals against possible financial losses Provides protection against many risks such as unexpected property loss, illness.
What is Personal Risk Management?. What is Risk? Risk is the chance of loss from some type of danger. Risk is the chance of loss from some type of danger.
Legal Principles of Insurance Chapter 9. Agenda Recall topics learned in your insurance or business law class to better understand this chapter Principle.
Chapter 381 The Contract The Insurance Contract The Application Duties of Parties Statutory Provisions Generally part of contract by express stipulation.
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Business Law, sixth edition, Henry R. Cheeseman Insurance.
Insurance Law PA E TR HC 27 “If anything can go wrong, it will.” Anonymous (1950s), known as Murphy’s Law.
© 2007 West Legal Studies in Business, A Division of Thomson Learning Chapter 30 Insurance, Wills, and Trusts.
Chapter 19 Outline Coping with Risk Why Life Insurance? Basic Elements of Life Insurance Buying Life Insurance: Who needs it and How Much? Insurance When.
Insurance Terms Business Essentials. Term Insurance An insurance policy that provides coverage for a limited period, the value payable only if a loss.
Chapter 37 Insurance Twomey, Business Law and the Regulatory Environment (14th Ed.)
© 2004 West Legal Studies in Business A Division of Thomson Learning BUSINESS LAW Twomey Jennings 1 st Ed. Twomey & Jennings BUSINESS LAW Chapter 49 Insurance.
PFIN 4 Protecting Your Property 10 Copyright ©2016 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly.
Chapter 38 Insurance, Wills and Trusts. 2  What is an insurable interest? When must an insurable interest exist?  Is an insurance broker the agent of.
Chapter 51 Insurance Law McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Copyright  2003 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd. PPTs t/a Fundamentals of Business Law 4e by Barron & Fletcher. Slides prepared by Kay Fanning. Copyright.
Ch. 18 Insurance Law Pages 318 – 339 Insurance Fundamentals
Chapter 49 Insurance. Insurance Insurance is a contractual arrangement for transferring and allocating risk. Risk. Prediction concerning potential loss.
27-1 Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
C HAPTER 18-1 & 18-2 R EVIEW Erin Brink 10 MC 5 FIB.
Life Insurance. Objectives Students will define keys terms related to life insurance Students will identify key features of various types of life insurance.
Prepared by Johnny Howard © 2015 South-Western, a part of Cengage Learning.
TORTS: A CIVIL WRONG Chapter 18. TORTS: A CIVIL WRONG Under criminal law, wrongs committed are called crimes. Under civil law, wrongs committed are called.
Copyright © 2017 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 9 Fundamental Legal Principles.
Insuring Your Future Objective: Discuss the common types of insurance Identify when an insurable interest is present Bellwork: What kinds of insurance.
Chapter 22 Personal Property, Bailments and Insurance.
RISK MANAGEMENT AND INSURANCE
Ch10 Analysis of Insurance Contracts (Ch6 in 11th ed.)
Property, Casualty, and Automobile Insurance
Chapter 51 Insurance Law Chapter 51: Insurance Law
Part II: Insurance in Business
Risk and Insurance Part 5 Managing Growth in the Small Business.
Risk Management 101.
Chapter 17 Contract Provisions in Life Insurance
Unit 8: INSURANCE.
Life Insurance: Policy Basics
Intro to Business Chapter 34
Introduction to Insurance
Chapter 1 Lesson 2 BASIC POLICY TYPES
Fundamental Legal Principles
Life, Fire, and Auto Insurance
PFIN 10 Protecting Your Property 5 BILLINGSLEY/ GITMAN/ JOEHNK/
Life, Fire, and Auto Insurance
Insurance Act Business Law
Insurance and How It Works
Introduction to Risk Management
Introduction Life is full of risks and accidents. People are at risk for getting injured when playing sports, riding in a car, or living in a house. Risk.
1.3 Purchasing Considerations
Lecture Five: Analysis Insurance Contracts
Insurance Basics (Don’t Risk It)
Buying Insurance Chapter 22 2/17/2019.
Basics Home Automobile Medical & Life
CHAPTER 50 INSURANCE © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Prentice-Hall.
©OnCourse Learning.
Insurable Interest Valuation Indemnity Legal Liability
Presentation transcript:

INSURANCE CHAPTER 49

Introduction Insurance is a contractual arrangement for transferring and allocating risk. Risk. Prediction concerning potential loss based on known and unknown factors. Risk Management. Involves the transfer of certain risks from the individual to the insurance company by a contractual agreement.

Insurance Terminology and Concepts The Concept of Risk Pooling. Based on spreading the risk of loss, large number of people obtaining insurance, reduces the premium . Classification of Insurance. Insurable Interest.

Insurance Terminology Policy (Insurance contract). Premium is the consideration to be paid to the insurer. Underwriter (usually an insurance company). Broker v. Agent.

Classification of Insurance Insurance is classified according to the nature of the risk involved. See Exhibit 49-1 in textbook for Insurance Classifications.

Insurable Interest A person can insure anything in which he or she has an insurable interest. Types of insurable interest: Life. Key-Person Life Insurance. Property.

Insurance Classifications Floater: Usually attaches to homeowners or business policies. Computers Goods transferred by employees Car insurance…both can be double coverage

Life Insurance Anyone who has an insurable interest. Must have a reasonable expectation of benefit from the continued life of another. Insurable interest must exist at the time the policy is obtained. Policy remains valid, even after interest no longer exists (divorce). Key-person insurance -- insurance obtained by an organization on the life of a person important to that organization. 6

Insurance Interest What if Bob’s story was true? Bob’s best friend George had a sister, Becky, that was a real dare devil. She loved to skydive, mountain bike, scuba dive and any other dangerous sport. Bob figured she was living on borrowed living on borrowed time. He called June, a casual friend, also an insurance agent. He told her Becky was a cousin and he was going to pay her way through college as a loan. He wanted to take out a $50,000 life insurance policy on Becky incase something happened to her before she would be able to pay him back the money. Six months later, Becky was killed in a skydiving accident. Will the insurance company have to honor the policy? What if Bob’s story was true?

Property Insurance Anyone who has an insurable interest. A person who derives a pecuniary (money) benefit from the preservation and continued existence of the property. Insurable interest must exist when the loss occurs. 7

The Insurance Contract Governed by the general principles of contract law, and regulated by the state. Application is an offer, which insurance company can either reject or accept. Acceptance sometimes conditional. Need consideration. Parties need capacity.

The Insurance Contract Application For Insurance. Effective Date. Provisions and Clauses. Interpreting Provisions of an Insurance Contract. Cancellation. Basic Duties and Rights. Defenses Against Payment.

Application For Insurance Filled in application attached to the policy and made a part of the contract. Misstatements or misrepresentation can void a policy, specially if company can show it would not have issued policy if it had known the facts.

Effective Date Broker is agent for the applicant. Agent is agent for the insurance company. He can issue a binder, if some consideration is paid, which will immediately bind the insurance company, depending on certain conditions being met. Parties may agree contract will not be effective until policy is issued and delivered or sent to applicant. Parties may agree policy will be binding, not be effective, until first premium paid, or physical exam passed.

Provisions and Clauses Provisions Mandated by Statute. Incontestability Clauses. Coinsurance Clauses. Appraisal and Arbitration Clauses. Multiple Insurance Coverage. Antilapse Clauses. 12

Provisions Mandated by Statute Provisions which are mandated by statute to be included in the insurance policy will be deemed to be in the insurance policy -- whether they are in the policy or not. 13

Coinsurance Clauses If owner insures her property for at least 80% of its value, owner will be able to recover up to the face value of the policy. If owner insures for less than 80%, owner will be responsible for a proportionate share of the loss. Amount of insurance recovery Coinsurance percentage = percentage (80%) x Property value

Acts of God Earthquakes Floods Hurricanes Lightning Tornados READ YOUR POLICY…

Appraisal and Arbitration Clauses If insurer and insured cannot agree on value of property, an appraisal can be demanded. Contract may also provide for arbitration. 16

Multiple Insurance Coverage If insured has multiple insurance policies and the amount of coverage exceeds the loss, the insured can collect from each insurer only the company’s proportionate share of the liability, relative to the total amount of insurance. 17

Anti-lapse Clauses Policy does not lapse automatically upon nonpayment of premium. Insured has a grace period of thirty or thirty-one days within which to pay the overdue premium. The insurer may be required to extend the insurance for a period of time. Insurer may issue a policy with less coverage to reflect the amount of the payments made. The insurer may pay the insured the cash surrender value of the policy.

Good Faith Obligations Insured must act in good faith. Insurer has duty to investigate to determine the facts. Third party claims: Insurer is obligated to make reasonable efforts to settle the claim, and policy provides that in this situation insured must cooperate. 21

Get the bond! If you are having a new roof put on your house. One of roofer’s employee’s falls off the roof and breaks his back. You and your homeowner policy could be held liable. To prevent this, get a bond from the roofer. No body no contract.

Interpreting Provisions of an Insurance Contract Courts interpret ambiguity against the insurance company. Uncertainty as to whether policy actually exists is resolved against the insurance company. Insurer must adequately notify insured of any change in policy under an existing policy. 19

Cancellation Insured can cancel policy at any time, and the insurer can cancel according to terms of policy. Insurer must give written notice of cancellation. 20

Defenses Against Payment Insurance company can raise any of the defenses that would be valid in any ordinary action or contract: Fraud, misrepresentation. Not if information given was optional. Not incorrect statement of age. Concurrent causation doctrine. 22

Types of Insurance Life Insurance. Fire and Homeowner’s Insurance. Automobile Insurance. Business Liability Insurance. 23

Life Insurance Types of Life Insurance: Whole life. Limited-Payment Life. Term Insurance. Endowment Insurance. Universal Life. 24

Life Insurance Features of rights and liabilities: Liability. Adjustment Due to Misstatement of Age. Assignment./vested interest Creditors’ Rights. Termination.

Fire and Homeowner’s Insurance Standard Fire Insurance Policies: Liability. Proof of Loss. Occupancy Clause. Homeowner’s Insurance: Assignment Property Coverage. Liability Coverage.

Automobile Insurance Liability Insurance.(Required) Collision and Comprehensive Insurance. Other Automobile Insurance. Uninsured Motorist. Accidental Death Benefits. Medical Payment Coverage. No-Fault Insurance.\each collects from own insurance

Business Liability Insurance General Liability. Product Liability. Professional Malpractice.(some states require) Worker’s Compensation.(required) Umbrella Policy..usually starts at one million