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#32
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Rick Durden wrote: Yes, some owners have structured their assets to get them beyond reach of a lawsuit, or they think they have. This part I agree with. I know several people who have a corporation as the registered owner of the plane. They are the only officer of this "corporation". They think this will protect them from a lawsuit. It never does. |
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#33
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#34
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Nathan Young wrote: So lets say the pilot has an estate of $1M and the $1M smooth coverage. Won't the victims just go after both? Yep. |
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#35
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"TripFarmer" wrote in message ... IMHO, you should have enough to cover your assets. Then you should make sure you have enough to cover any future earning you don't want to give up. If you have $1-2M and are an average guy you should have enough. Trip You cannot cover your assets with liability insurance. Best you can do is hope they go after your liability insurance and leave you assets alone. Fact is your assets are fair game in addition to what liability insurance might provide. |
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#36
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Dave Stadt wrote: "TripFarmer" wrote in message ... IMHO, you should have enough to cover your assets. Then you should make sure you have enough to cover any future earning you don't want to give up. If you have $1-2M and are an average guy you should have enough. Trip You cannot cover your assets with liability insurance. Best you can do is hope they go after your liability insurance and leave you assets alone. What...they "forget"? |
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#37
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#38
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#39
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Newps wrote
Nathan Young wrote: So lets say the pilot has an estate of $1M and the $1M smooth coverage. Won't the victims just go after both? Yep. Well, hold on a sec. If the insurance company offers to settle at policy limits, the victim has a choice. He can accept the $1M insurance - a sure thing - but then he CAN'T go after the estate. That's a condition of settlement. Or he can go after both - but now the insurance company will defend the case. He may get nothing. He may get less than $1M. He may get more than $1M at the jury trial, simply to see it reduced on appeal. If the case is ironclad (meaning you were very obviously at fault and the damage is huge) then NO AMOUNT of insurance you can buy will ever be enough. However, the reality is that in most cases it's not so cut and dried. That's where a plaintiff is likely to settle for the part (the insurance) rather than going for the whole. Because in most cases the plaintiff is represented by a lawyer working on contingency (few can afford the fees out of pocket, and the ones who can are not likely to sue in the first place) the plaintiff's lawyer will almost always recommend a settlement - it's easy money and a sure thing. Only time he's going to recommend not accepting a settlement is when he believes that he can win AND collect. And that's the rub - see my other posts. You can't get blood from a stone. The fact is, most owners of airplanes that cost less than six figures are NOT wealthy. They're just guys with jobs or small businesses, and after the plane is crashed, the defense lawyer paid, and the house (which you can't take) paid for, there's simply nothing left to collect. Michael |
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#40
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"Michael" wrote in message om... Newps wrote Nathan Young wrote: So lets say the pilot has an estate of $1M and the $1M smooth coverage. Won't the victims just go after both? Yep. Well, hold on a sec. If the insurance company offers to settle at policy limits, the victim has a choice. He can accept the $1M insurance - a sure thing - but then he CAN'T go after the estate. That's a condition of settlement. Or he can go after both - but now the insurance company will defend the case. He may get nothing. He may get less than $1M. He may get more than $1M at the jury trial, simply to see it reduced on appeal. If the case is ironclad (meaning you were very obviously at fault and the damage is huge) then NO AMOUNT of insurance you can buy will ever be enough. However, the reality is that in most cases it's not so cut and dried. That's where a plaintiff is likely to settle for the part (the insurance) rather than going for the whole. Because in most cases the plaintiff is represented by a lawyer working on contingency (few can afford the fees out of pocket, and the ones who can are not likely to sue in the first place) the plaintiff's lawyer will almost always recommend a settlement - it's easy money and a sure thing. Only time he's going to recommend not accepting a settlement is when he believes that he can win AND collect. And that's the rub - see my other posts. You can't get blood from a stone. The fact is, most owners of airplanes that cost less than six figures are NOT wealthy. They're just guys with jobs or small businesses, and after the plane is crashed, the defense lawyer paid, and the house (which you can't take) paid for, there's simply nothing left to collect. Michael I don't believe your last statement at all. Certainly not true of the people I know. |
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