- Sharing information to improve filing and responding effectiveness.
- Answering questions attendees have regarding filing and responding workflows and procedures.
Pending Total Losses (Rule 2-2)
If the total loss is paid by a responder but the salvage is pending, please follow the steps below:
- Under Feature Information in the workflow:
- Select “Yes” for Total Loss under Company-Paid Damages.
- Select “Yes” for Salvage Pending.
- Enter known itemized damages for the total loss.
- A responder cannot enter the previously paid total loss claim later if this process is not completed in the initial response.
- If filed as a supplement instead, a jurisdictional exclusion can be raised, placing the recovery out of jurisdiction (under Rule 2-4 for rule infraction).
Under Article First: Compulsory Provisions in the Reference Guide, insurers and self-insureds cannot recover:
- Insurer and self-insured operating expenses (associated with investigating and adjusting losses).
- Insured out-of-pocket expenses.
- Insurer or self-insured administrative fees as “costs” for pursuing a loss.
- Costs that could apply to both insurers and self-insureds
- Costs related to adjusting the claim (investigation fees, adjuster fees, accident reconstruction, appraisals, etc.)
- Self-insured administrative fees that are costs associated with pursuing the loss.
- Costs that are not insurer or self-insured operating costs include:
- Tow company charges (gate fees, cleanup, dolly fees, administrative fees, etc.)
- Body shop fees (administrative fees, storage, vehicle wrapping, etc.)
- Other third-party charges
- Be sure to include all applicable and pertinent evidence.
- Offer explanations of items that may be confusing, such as negative supplements.
- Include formal, detailed quotes and estimates.
- For prior payments, include evidence showing the payment was cashed/cleared.
- Embed and/or highlight the specific section of lengthy evidence for the arbitrator to focus on.
- The burden of proof is the same for all parties.
- For liability and damages, the filer must prove a prima facie case.
- If the responding company makes a dispute, they must prove their case.
- In damage disputes, the filer can rebut a challenge through a request to revisit and will get the last word.
- There will be times when a responder will not have evidence to support their damage position, such as a specific itemized invoice that was not provided, which does not invalidate the dispute.
- The recovering company must only seek the supplemental damage amount and not include the damages from the prior hearing.
- The responding company must not declare a prior payment for the amount of the award from the prior hearing unless the filer has included that amount as part of the supplemental hearing.
- The filer should include all damage evidence, since arbitrators are not required to review evidence from the prior hearing(s), which may already be purged.
- AI is used by some members to intake fact of loss information, which is being provided as evidence.
- When submitting this evidence, it is best to reference the page on which the information relevant to the liability determination is located.
- Highlighting the relevant information is also recommended.
- If the intake information is confusing, it may be helpful to include an adjuster note summary of the intake information as well.
- Do not use outdated versions of the AF Reference Guide or Guide for Arbitrators.
- Do save the Reference Guide to AF’s Agreements and Rules and the Guide for Arbitrators as favorites in your browser, if permissible.
- Do note that the AF guides are updated on a regular basis.