Northridge Redux.A new California law California Law consists of 29 codes, covering various subject areas, the State Constitution and Statutes. See also
More than seven years after the Northridge earthquake rocked the densely populated pop·u·late tr.v. pop·u·lat·ed, pop·u·lat·ing, pop·u·lates 1. To supply with inhabitants, as by colonization; people. 2. San Fernando Valley San Fernando Valley Valley, southern California, U.S. Northwest of central Los Angeles, the valley is bounded by the San Gabriel, Santa Susana, and Santa Monica mountains and the Simi Hills. northwest of Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850. , its aftershocks are still rumbling through courtrooms and claims offices. The 6.7-magnitude quake Quake - A string-oriented language designed to support the construction of Modula-3 programs from modules, interfaces and libraries. Written by Stephen Harrison of DEC SRC, 1993. struck on Jan. 17, 1994, killing 62 people, injuring more than 9,000 and leaving 20,000 homeless. More than 200,000 homes, apartments and buildings were either destroyed, damaged or deemed uninhabitable. Early estimates put the insured losses at $800 million, but the actual tally has soared beyond that over the years. The Institute for Business and Home Safety, which monitors amounts of claims paid by insurers, reports that insured losses from Northridge have reached a staggering $15.3 billion, making it the second-worst U.S. catastrophe Catastrophe, from the Greek Καταστροφή (katastrephein), literally means "to turn" (strephein) "downwards" (kata-). , after 1992's Hurricane Andrew This article is about the 1992 hurricane; there was also a Tropical Storm Andrew during the 1986 Atlantic hurricane season. Hurricane Andrew is the second-most-destructive hurricane in U.S. history, and the last of three Category 5 hurricanes that made U.S. , which caused $15.5 billion in insured losses. As sizable siz·a·ble also size·a·ble adj. Of considerable size; fairly large. siz a·ble·ness n. as the Northridge losses are, some predict they could
grow significantly larger now that California has effectively reopened
the book on these claims. Under a new state law that took effect Jan. 1,
2000--legislation that many see as political fallout fallout, minute particles of radioactive material produced by nuclear explosions (see atomic bomb; hydrogen bomb; Chernobyl) or by discharge from nuclear-power or atomic installations and scattered throughout the earth's atmosphere by winds and convection currents. from the
Northridge-related scandal involving former Insurance Commissioner Chuck
Quackenbush--the statute of limitations A type of federal or state law that restricts the time within which legal proceedings may be brought.Statutes of limitations, which date back to early Roman Law, are a fundamental part of European and U.S. law. has been extended to the end of this year on insurance claims stemming from the temblor. This could result in policyholders suing insurers if they feel their claims were handled unfairly or they missed the initial one-year filing deadline. "A whole new flood of lawsuits has been filed," said Brian S The name Brian (sometimes spelled Bryan) comes from an Irish backround. It is of Celtic origin and its meaning may be "hill" or "strong, noble, and high"[1]. . Kabateck, a partner in the law firm Quisenberry & Kabateck and one of the trial attorneys instrumental in writing the new law. He alone is involved in at least a dozen of these lawsuits, including a proposed class action against 21st Century Insurance Co., formerly 20th Century Insurance Co. And if a recent appellate Relating to appeals; reviews by superior courts of decisions of inferior courts or administrative agencies and other proceedings. ruling stands, he noted, an estimated 10,000 policyholders could take advantage of the law and initiate individual lawsuits or join class actions against insurers. "In my own experience, I've already had 300 to 400 phone calls" from interested property owners, he said. Over the next few years, this litigation An action brought in court to enforce a particular right. The act or process of bringing a lawsuit in and of itself; a judicial contest; any dispute. When a person begins a civil lawsuit, the person enters into a process called litigation. could result in hundreds of millions of dollars in additional claims costs, Kabateck said. "We have certainly seen lawsuits just because of the legislation being passed," agreed Joyce Kraeger, staff attorney for the Alliance of American Insurers, a national trade association that represents more than 325 property/casualty insurers. No Class Actions Yet But E. Jerry Davies, director of communications Director of Communications is a position in the private and public sectors. The Director of Communications is responsible for managing and directing an organization's internal and external communications. for the Personal Insurance Federation of California, pointed out that none of the largest earthquake insurers has seen a class action certified See certification. against it as a result of the new legislation. "We're looking at a few hundred single lawsuits, but not class actions," he said, adding that several were in the courts before the law was enacted. The federation represents five insurers--State Farm, Farmers, Safeco, Progressive and 21st Century--which collectively write about half the earthquake insurance Earthquake insurance is a form of property insurance that pays the policyholder in the event of an earthquake that causes damage to the property. Most ordinary homeowners insurance policies do not cover earthquake damage. in California. Progressive's earthquake coverage is for personal automobile damage through a liability clause in its auto policies. As of January 2001, the insurance industry in California had received more than 600,000 claims resulting from the Northridge quake. Of that total, one-tenth of 1% were unsettled, divided among about 200 companies. "When you're looking at one-tenth of 1%, somehow you've got to figure out that we're only talking about a few hundred left, and the majority of those are in litigation," Davies said. These cases involve allegations of fraud or low-balling of damage estimates by insurers or claims that plaintiffs were not notified of the one-year statute of limitations, Davies said. Davies maintains that insurers were dutiful du·ti·ful adj. 1. Careful to fulfill obligations. 2. Expressing or filled with a sense of obligation. du in sending out notices to policyholders about the claim-filing deadline. "Of the 600,000, some walked away from their property, filed a claim, but have never rebuilt, and the claim remains open," he said. "It's not that we're denying the claim; it's just that there's disagreement over the amount and the actual damage." Consumer advocates have defended the new law, saying quake victims have waited years for a fair hearing of their insurance claims. Years after the earthquake, some policyholders found damage to their property that was ignored or missed by the original adjuster, for which insurers have refused to pay, advocates say. For his part, Davies noted how more than 5,000 claims adjusters from throughout the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. descended on the Northridge area soon after the quake after the quake (神の子どもたちはみな踊る . "Were there some mistakes? Of course," he said. But, he argued, if legislators' and lawyers' contentions that tens of thousands of people have valid, but unsatisfied claims, why isn't the industry seeing brand-new lawsuits now "left and right?" he asked. "Because there aren't that many people left who have legitimate claims," he countered. Too Soon to Tell As of yet, industry organizations watching California for further developments say it's too soon to tell what the outcome will be. "There are no current indications as to what impact reopened claims may have on insurers, and there are no clear indications at this time as to the number of claims that may be reopened," said Dave Dasgupta, a spokesman for Insurance Services Office Insurance Services Office, Inc. (ISO) is a provider of data, underwriting, risk management and legal/regulatory services to property-casualty insurers and other clients. Headquartered in Jersey City, New Jersey, the organization serves clients with offices throughout the United Inc., a provider of information about property liability and risk. "We are monitoring this, but don't have anything definitive yet to share." Meanwhile, the new law has left the insurance industry frustrated frus·trate tr.v. frus·trat·ed, frus·trat·ing, frus·trates 1. a. To prevent from accomplishing a purpose or fulfilling a desire; thwart: at the very least and, sometimes, fighting mad. Through the legislation, lawmakers have "told the insurance industry, in effect, that every contract written in California on earthquake insurance is no longer valid," Davies said. In lobbying against the legislation--SB 1899--the insurance federation felt it was the closest thing to a "Salem Witch Hunt" that they'd ever seen in California, said President Dan Dunmoyer. Even the Legislature's own report, which was a result of hours of public hearings, stated that there was no real proof that they could detect of the insurance industry conducting a concerted effort to make mistakes in claims handling, he said. "The actual passage of SB 1899 followed the one year of hype hype 1 Slang n. 1. Excessive publicity and the ensuing commotion: the hype surrounding the murder trial. 2. behind the Quackenbush debacle, and it was widely reported during the debates over Quackenbush that the insurance industry somehow got away with something," Dunmoyer said. He noted that the media concentrated on "the unfounded claims of so-called consumer groups who kept repeating that the insurance industry got away with not paying claims, even though it had paid more than $15.3 billion in claims," a figure that was not widely reported, he said. First Appeal In February, the federation joined the AIA AIA - Application Integration Architecture , the Association of California Insurance Companies, the National Association of Independent Insurers and Century National Insurance Co. in asking a California appeals court to throw out the first lawsuit, Basich vs. Allstate Insurance Co., filed under the new state law. They contend that SB 1899 violates due process by destroying vested vested adj. referring to having an absolute right or title, when previously the holder of the right or title only had an expectation. Examples: after 20 years of employment Larry Loyal's pension rights are now vested. (See: vest, vested remainder) contract rights and that it isn't applicable in this case or any other case in which judgment was entered before Jan. 1, 2001. The AIA said the case arose from a claim of loss submitted to Allstate by the owner of a three-unit residential rental property following the Northridge quake. Shortly after the lawsuit was filed in March 1997, Allstate paid the full policy limits for damage to the property. But the owner now has continued to pursue his claims for bad faith, based on Allstate's alleged delay in investigating the claims and paying the policy limits. The case basically amounts to a dispute over the one-year statute of limitations for filing an earthquake claim, Dunmoyer said. While the court and appeals court "more or less" granted the judgment against the defendant insurance company, they didn't rule on the law itself. The case is on appeal to the state Supreme Court to specifically look at SB 1899 along with the judgment, Dunmoyer said. Bob Daniels, an Allstate spokesman for the California region, said the company was disappointed that Gov. Gray Davis signed SB 1899 into law, but nevertheless, the insurer is fully complying with it. "When we receive claims, we investigate them in accord with SB 1899, as well as the California Claims Practices Act and relevant regulations, and in accord with the relevant insurance policy," he said. In the days and months following the Northridge quake, Allstate agents and employees "did a truly outstanding job of meeting the needs of our customers, settling more than 46,000 earthquake claims with an incredible level of empathy empathy Ability to imagine oneself in another's place and understand the other's feelings, desires, ideas, and actions. The empathic actor or singer is one who genuinely feels the part he or she is performing. , accuracy and speed;' he said. The company so far has paid out more than $1.7 billion in claims related to the earthquake, Daniels said. Last year, insurers and trade groups also tried to get the state Supreme Court to strike down the new law, but the court refused to consider the unusual motion, which didn't involve a specific dispute between a policyholder Policyholder An individual who owns an insurance policy. and an insurance company. "Our main concern is the law violates the contract clause of the U.S. and state constitution," Kraeger said. "Every insurance policy says in a certain amount of time, a claim needs to be brought. In this case, it was a year. Now they've revived re·vive v. re·vived, re·viv·ing, re·vives v.tr. 1. To bring back to life or consciousness; resuscitate. 2. To impart new health, vigor, or spirit to. 3. the one-year statute of limitations seven years later. It's a direct violation of contract law for no justifiable jus·ti·fi·a·ble adj. Having sufficient grounds for justification; possible to justify: justifiable resentment. jus reason." Since 1949, California state law has required insurers to include a oneyear statute of limitations for filing claims, Kraeger said, arguing that reopening Reopening Treasury offerings of additional amounts of outstanding issues, rather than an entirely new issue. A reopened issue will always have the same maturity date, CUSIP number, and interest rate as the original issue. old claims after seven years "invites potential fraud and raises issues of proof." Dunmoyer said the federation member companies "will explore all appropriate legal means to protect insurance contracts" but added that it's premature to say what they will have to do to protect themselves. "The bottom line is, if the insurance industry contracts can be rewritten by the Legislature, it's impossible for insurers to price and service their customers;' he said. Verdicts and Rulings While the industry continues to battle the new law, a few related verdicts and rulings are beginning to surface. Last June, for example, a Los Angeles jury awarded about $7 million in repair costs and bad-faith damages to a Culver City Culver City, city (1990 pop. 38,793), Los Angeles co., S Calif., a residential suburb of Los Angeles; inc. 1917. It is a center of the U.S. motion-picture industry, whose roots in the city date to c.1915. Its chief manufactures are rubber products and computers. , Calif., condominium condominium In modern property law, individual ownership of one dwelling unit within a multidwelling building. Unit owners have undivided ownership interest in the land and those portions of the building shared in common. homeowners association that had sued Scottsdale Insurance Co., a subsidiary of Nationwide. The group alleged that Scottsdale deliberately misled mis·led v. Past tense and past participle of mislead. them by first advising them that they had suffered no earthquake damage and then by low-balling and underestimating the damage once the homeowners renewed their claim under the new law. The jury also found Scottsdale guilty of fraud against the plaintiffs, the Tara Hill Tara Hill may refer to
Kabateck said the two sides are "in the process of trying to resolve this. It's in the discussion phase." Scottsdale could not be reached for comment. But Kraeger thinks this battle is far from over. "Ultimately I think the case will reach the California Supreme Court," she said, noting the large verdict awarded in the Scottsdale case "could certainly spark additional litigation." One of the cases already out there is the lawsuit that Kabateck filed in Los Angeles Superior Court in January on behalf of policyholders who, he said, filed timely property-damage claims stemming from the quake, but whose claims were allegedly mishandled by 21st Century. He is seeking class-action certification. Of all the earthquake insurers, 21st Century Insurance Group was particularly hard hit. The company nearly went bankrupt BANKRUPT. A person who has done, or suffered some act to be done, which is by law declared an act of bankruptcy; in such case he may be declared a bankrupt. 2. It is proper to notice that there is much difference between a bankrupt and an insolvent. after paying $1.1 billion in claims, then was saved by giant American International Group
American International Group, Inc. (AIG) (NYSE: AIG; TYO: 8685 ) is a major American insurance corporation based in New York City. Inc., which pumped $236 million into 21st Century and later took control of it. The complaint alleges that 21st Century took part in unfair and fraudulent The description of a willful act commenced with the Specific Intent to deceive or cheat, in order to cause some financial detriment to another and to engender personal financial gain. business practices to minimize the amount of benefits it had to pay to insureds who incurred property damage. Kabateck said more than 4,000 policyholders may be part of the class. He said the lawsuit alleges that 21st Century "deliberately low-balled policyholders" on the estimated damage from the earthquake or tried to attribute the damage to pre-existing conditions. Kabateck said the insurer also is alleged to have used unlicensed, uncertified un·cer·ti·fied adj. Not officially verified, guaranteed, or registered; not certified: an uncertified teacher. Adj. 1. or unqualified contractors, engineers and testing companies to assess and estimate damage and losses. When policyholders found more damage and contacted 21st Century to file additional claims, they were told the statute of limitations for filing had expired, Kabateck said. In a separate action on July 24, also involving 21st Century, a state appellate court A court having jurisdiction to review decisions of a trial-level or other lower court. An unsuccessful party in a lawsuit must file an appeal with an appellate court in order to have the decision reviewed. in San Francisco San Francisco (săn frănsĭs`kō), city (1990 pop. 723,959), coextensive with San Francisco co., W Calif., on the tip of a peninsula between the Pacific Ocean and San Francisco Bay, which are connected by the strait known as the Golden upheld the SB 1899 as an appropriate remedy for earthquake victims whose claims were previously denied by their carriers. The insurance company had argued that the statute is unconstitutional unconstitutional adj. referring to a statute, governmental conduct, court decision or private contract (such as a covenant which purports to limit transfer of real property only to Caucasians) which violate one or more provisions of the U. S. Constitution. because it changes the terms of a contract by voiding the one-year deadline for lawsuits. This case also is expected to go before the state Supreme Court. Scandal's Impact Amid this legal skirmishing, there's one thing that Davies and Kabateck do agree on, even if from different vantage points. It's about the impact that the Quackenbush scandal has had in the evolution of SB 1899 Quackenbush, once a rising political star in the Golden State, resigned in June 2000 after the state Legislature A state legislature may refer to a legislative branch or body of a political subdivision in a federal system. The following legislatures exist in the following political subdivisions: "Quackenbush was the catalyst," Kabateck said. "Legislators began noticing that people had been undervalued Undervalued A stock or other security that is trading below its true value. Notes: The difficulty is knowing what the "true" value actually is. Analysts will usually recommend an undervalued stock with a strong buy rating. in their earthquake claims." Davies noted that the uproar produced "a very heated, energized atmosphere" that not only swept Quackenbush from office, but helped pave PAVE Cardiology A clinical trial–Post AV Node Ablation Evaluation the way for enactment of the controversial Northridge bill as well as a string of bills introduced this year aimed at reforming the commissioner's office. "Sure, the Quackenbush scandal is a defining part of it," Davies said.
The 10 Most Costly Catastrophes in U.S. History
Reopened claims may push the Northridge earthquake into the No. 1
position.
($ Billions of insured loss) Cost at Time
Peril Date of Occurence
Hurricane Andrew August 1992 $15.5
Northridge Earthquake January 1994 15.3+
Hurricane Hugo September 1989 4.2
Hurrican Georges September 1998 2.9
Hurricane Opal October 1995 2.1
20-State Winter Storm March 1993 1.7
Loma Prieta Earthquake October 1989 1.7
Oakland Fire October 1991 1.7
Hurricane Iniki September 1992 1.6
Hurricane Fran September 1996 1.6
($ Billions of insured loss)
Peril In 1998 Dollars
Hurricane Andrew $18.0
Northridge Earthquake 17.2 *
Hurricane Hugo 5.5
Hurrican Georges 2.9
Hurricane Opal 2.2
20-State Winter Storm 1.9
Loma Prieta Earthquake 2.0
Oakland Fire 2.0
Hurricane Iniki 1.8
Hurricane Fran 1.7
(*)1999 Dollars
Source: Personal Insurance Federation of California
Earthquake, Top Writers--2000
2000 Direct Market Share (%)
Premiums Written % Change in
Group ($ Thousands) Premiums 2000
State Farm Group $141,065 -6.4 16.4
St Paul Companies 83,021 13.7 9.7
Travelers/Citigrp Co 74,042 25.6 8.6
Zurich/Farmers Group 48,107 -1.2 5.6
Ace INA Group 44,556 24.9 5.2
Safeco Ins Cos 42,011 -2.7 4.9
Nationwide Group 30,928 19.7 3.6
Allstate Ins Group 30,573 5.0 3.6
Allianz of America 23,087 -2.4 2.7
Liberty Mut Ins Cos 22,893 -8.4 2.7
Hartford Ins Group 22,056 -15.0 2.6
ICW Group 21,856 11.5 2.5
USAA Group 21,258 1.7 2.5
Chubb Grp of Ins Cos 19,617 9.9 2.3
Amer Intern Grp Inc 16,408 -4.6 1.9
Kemper Ins Cos 12,213 7.0 1.4
Markel Corp Group 11,546 14.7 1.3
Royal & SunAlliance 11,341 -4.0 1.3
Berkshire Hathaway 10,006 68.2 1.2
Assurant Group 9,726 164.1 1.1
Century-Nat Ins Co 8,605 -7.3 1.0
GE Capital Ins Group 8,086 670.5 0.9
Pemco Ins Companies 7,361 -1.9 0.9
Amica Mut Group 7,179 10.6 0.8
XL America Group 7,168 65.4 0.8
Total U.S. Cos. $859,768 6.5 100.0
Adjusted Loss Ratios
Group 1999 1998 2000 1999 1998
State Farm Group 18.7 20.1 18.2 2.3 2.2
St Paul Companies 9.0 5.8 0.3 -0.5 1.4
Travelers/Citigrp Co 7.3 3.1 -1.7 6.7 3.5
Zurich/Farmers Group 6.0 6.3 344.2 70.7 10.1
Ace INA Group 4.4 4.5 12.2 2.3 -1.2
Safeco Ins Cos 5.3 5.6 0.3 -0.6 0.3
Nationwide Group 3.2 3.3 2.8 3.8 1.8
Allstate Ins Group 3.6 3.6 -14.6 31.0 186.8
Allianz of America 2.9 3.4 -7.8 -3.1 26.1
Liberty Mut Ins Cos 3.1 3.3 -0.2 0.0 -10.2
Hartford Ins Group 3.2 2.9 35.5 54.4 0.6
ICW Group 2.4 2.9 -27.9 29.2 2.1
USAA Group 2.6 2.4 9.4 3.3 -6.2
Chubb Grp of Ins Cos 2.2 2.3 1.6 2.8 6.9
Amer Intern Grp Inc 2.1 3.0 4.3 169.0 80.4
Kemper Ins Cos 1.4 1.4 0.6 0.3 3.9
Markel Corp Group 1.2 2.8 -0.8 -52.2 37.8
Royal & SunAlliance 1.5 2.0 -4.1 -0.8 -1.2
Berkshire Hathaway 0.7 0.4 13.3 6.8 3.1
Assurant Group 0.5 0.0 4.3 6.2 0.0
Century-Nat Ins Co 1.1 1.5 25.6 5.7 -3.0
GE Capital Ins Group 0.1 0.1 36.2 -99.9 69.7
Pemco Ins Companies 0.9 1.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
Amica Mut Group 0.8 0.8 0.5 0.3 0.1
XL America Group 0.5 0.0 28.3 -0.2 9.0
Total U.S. Cos. 100.0 100.0 25.8 11.9 13.2
% of
Company
Group Premiums
State Farm Group 0.4
St Paul Companies 1.5
Travelers/Citigrp Co 0.7
Zurich/Farmers Group 0.3
Ace INA Group 1.6
Safeco Ins Cos 0.9
Nationwide Group 0.3
Allstate Ins Group 0.2
Allianz of America 0.5
Liberty Mut Ins Cos 0.2
Hartford Ins Group 0.3
ICW Group 7.3
USAA Group 0.4
Chubb Grp of Ins Cos 0.4
Amer Intern Grp Inc 0.1
Kemper Ins Cos 0.3
Markel Corp Group 1.7
Royal & SunAlliance 0.3
Berkshire Hathaway 0.1
Assurant Group 0.5
Century-Nat Ins Co 5.7
GE Capital Ins Group 0.3
Pemco Ins Companies 2.7
Amica Mut Group 0.8
XL America Group 0.8
Total U.S. Cos. 0.3
To access this statistical study online, Visit www.bestreview.com and
click on this story on this story. The full statistical report and
the data in spreadsheet format can be downloaded.
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