Accidental extermination insurance claim give somebody the third degree?
My father died 10 years ago from a accidental drowning accident while tubing at a river, he be not married at the time and I am his only child.Anyway I recently found a unintentional life insurance policy that has be in a box for 10 years since his death. I be 9 at the time of his death, and no-one was aware of this policy until only recently. I got contained by touch with the life insurance company and they sent me adjectives the claim papers to fill out and i sent them the police report and autopsy report and the death permit. what i was wondering is do you think they will money for a claim that has been file 10 years after his death being no-one know the policy existed until now?
Answers:
I think they have to, win the answer before you get a attorney though.
Doesn't matter. Per the contract, the insurance company is still obligated to discharge the claim. You'd be surprised at the amounts of unsettled claims some companies have because they can't locate the beneficiary or no one know the policy existed.
Yes I conjecture they will. I don't think they would ask for the paperwork if there be no chance. They could have said that here was no way and not asked for proof.
If the company is still operational, then yes they will probably retribution given the circumstances
yes, they are legally required to honor the claim if the policy be current at the time of death and met the conditions of the policy for payout.
There should not be a problem. but if you have questions you should ring up a lawyer and ask they will usually give a free consultation
There may not be a time limit, but are you sure no one else collected it? At age 9, at hand must have been some other adults that handle the funeral and other details at the time. It could be they were aware of the policy and it was salaried out.
Yes - here isn't a time limit to submit a claim.
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Answers:
I think they have to, win the answer before you get a attorney though.
Doesn't matter. Per the contract, the insurance company is still obligated to discharge the claim. You'd be surprised at the amounts of unsettled claims some companies have because they can't locate the beneficiary or no one know the policy existed.
Yes I conjecture they will. I don't think they would ask for the paperwork if there be no chance. They could have said that here was no way and not asked for proof.
If the company is still operational, then yes they will probably retribution given the circumstances
yes, they are legally required to honor the claim if the policy be current at the time of death and met the conditions of the policy for payout.
There should not be a problem. but if you have questions you should ring up a lawyer and ask they will usually give a free consultation
There may not be a time limit, but are you sure no one else collected it? At age 9, at hand must have been some other adults that handle the funeral and other details at the time. It could be they were aware of the policy and it was salaried out.
Yes - here isn't a time limit to submit a claim.
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