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4 answers

it is not a question about "fairshare' but rather " What does the policy provide?"

2007-04-06 22:35:54 · answer #1 · answered by TedEx 7 · 1 0

Depends on if you sign your rights over to them. Once you sign the dotted line you are waving your rights and allowing them by contract to make the decisions for you. You are in effect giving them power of attorney.

Of course, if you are having trouble with such a thing - there is always small claims courts depending on your situation. It would be advisable if the claim is large enough to get a lawyer.

2007-04-07 05:40:14 · answer #2 · answered by b4d_80i 2 · 1 0

Yes, sue them or report them to your state's insurance commissioner. In some states it is the attorney General or secretary of state, or a separate office.

Insurance agenies do this because they know people will let them get away with it. If you report them they will have to act appropriately.

2007-04-07 12:30:42 · answer #3 · answered by Dr. Luv 5 · 0 0

yep, called filing a lawsuit. just phone an attorney.

2007-04-07 05:40:17 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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