Yes. The attorney works for you and your interests such as personal property, medical expenses, lost wages and settlements for pain and suffering. The insurance company, either yours or theirs, works for the insurance company and will give you only the minimum required by law based on a scale which computes market value of personal property, exact costs of medical expenses, exact lost wages from time off of work due to injury and as close to zero that they can legally come to in settling pain and suffering compensation.
An insurance denial attorney will fight for you, should your claim be denied by your insurance carrier.
You would need to sue the other party in the accident and not the insurance company itself. It was the other party that caused your injuries and not the carrier.
Amica insurance does offer insurance in the state of North Dakota. They are full service insurance carrier and offer auto, home, life, renters, disability, retirement, long term care, structured settlement, and condo insurance.
What is the question? An insurance carrier is an "insurance carrier." Some government programs may not use the term "carrier" but the effect is the same if you are covered and have a loss.
If you are having a problem getting funds from them for your disability then you may need a lawyer. Otherwise you may not.
An insurance carrier, whether a private carrier or a government program, is referred to as
can you help me find a person's automobile insurance carrier?
Yes, you have the right to retain you car at salvage price at time of settlement.
Even if the company is now bankrupt they probably had insurance when they were in business but you will have to find out the insurance company. Try to contact the attorney that is handling their BK and notify him that you have a claim. Your best action is to file a claim with your insurance carrier and let them go after the other party. How this will affect your rates depends on the policies of your carrier. Ask your insurance agent.
Assuming that you are talking about in the case of an accident, you should only talk to your insurance carrier. They will contact the other person's insurance carrier.
Yes
yes they are. basically, if you are waiting for a lump sum settlement, then you have already been delared permanent and stationary(injury will get no better, or no worse). once the insurance adjuster receives all of your paperwork from the doctor who released you, your weekly payments will most likely be alot smaller than before. this is in preparation for your lump settlement. depending on the carrier, you may be able to receive small advances on the end amount if needed though.