- Sharing information to improve filing and responding effectiveness.
- Answering questions attendees have regarding filing and responding workflows and procedures.
Revisits
- The allowance of revisit evidence was added, based on member feedback, after the initial development of TRS.
- The filing company gets the last word when damages are disputed.
- Companies must attach damage evidence to the damage section in the Auto forum.
- Rules 2-1 and 2-5 address the companies’ responsibilities related to shared evidence.
- This evidence is viewable to all companies.
- Supporting evidence is evidence that supports the amount sought.
- If auto damages are sought, supporting evidence would typically be the final estimate.
- For rental, the rental invoice would be supporting evidence.
- Revisit evidence directly refutes the responding company’s damage dispute and may include the following:
- An estimate to prove the damages warranted the vehicle being declared a total loss.
- Invoices that provide a breakdown for towing and storage damages or sublet operations.
- This is allowable when evidence was initially provided to support the amount sought.
- Provide the applicable policy language and note the page number for the arbitrator.
- Highlight or underline the policy language to review.
- Ensure that it is the correct coverage area (i.e., liability or collision coverage).
- If part of the damages are excluded, this can be raised as a damage dispute.
- A denial of coverage related to primacy of coverage won’t remove jurisdiction.
- There is no jurisdiction if no liability policy is in effect or a complete denial of coverage has been issued.
- Half of the PDIs filed do not meet the criteria for a PDI.
- Refer to Rule 4-2 in the Reference Guide to AF’s Agreements and Rules for important details about what AF can change in a published decision.
- Do not file a PDI if you:
- Disagree with the arbitrator’s decision.
- Believe the arbitrator misunderstood the facts.
- Think the arbitrator misread the evidence (except switched companies).
- Feel the arbitrator did not comment on specific evidence.
- Want credit for a payment that was not shown as cashed for the arbitrator.
- Think the arbitrator made the “default decision” when the responding company answered the filing.
- AF articles should not be submitted as evidence. Please use the current AF Reference Guide or the Guide For Arbitrators for the most relevant information on how AF Rules are interpreted.
- Use embedded evidence judiciously (no more than three items when necessary).
- Prior payments
- Don’t submit payments that are not cashed.
- Don’t include prior award payments in supplemental damage filings.