Dallas insurance lawyers and those in Mesquite, Garland, Irving, Richardson, and other places will occasionally run across issues related to Personal Injury Protection (PIP) claims. In that regard, when it relates to an issue regarding lost wages, it would be good to know about the 1979, case, Slocum v. Union Pacific Insurance Company. This opinion was issued by the Houston Court of Appeals.

Here is what it tells us:

Slocum brought this suit to recover lost income based on the coverage afforded by the PIP clause of his automobile insurance policy. Union Pacific’s motion for summary judgment was granted on the sole ground that Slocum was not a wage earner or income producer.

Weatherford lawyers and those in Graford, Garner, Mineral Wells, Palo Pinto, and other places in Texas would need to understand how insurance companies work when a claim is made.

The New York Daily News published an article in January that gives some insight into what the companies are looking for. The article is titled, “Fraud is driving car insurance rates through the roof in New York City: Brooklyn prosecutor.” It tells us drivers in New York City pay among the highest automobile insurance rates in the nation because of fraudulent or inflated claims.

City drivers are faced with some of the highest car insurance premiums in the nation because of massive insurance fraud, district attorneys say.

Fort Worth insurance law attorneys and those in other parts of Texas should be consulted when a person has his insurance rates get increased without any apparent good reason. An article from the Boston Globe illustrates one of the games that insurance companies play when it comes to premium payments.

The title of the article is, MetLife Settles With Mass. Over Surcharges.” The article tell us MetLife will pay at least $50,000 in penalties and refund an undetermined amount of money to customers to settle allegations it imposed costly surcharges on Massachusetts drivers who were found not at fault in auto accidents.

State Attorney General Martha Coakley said Tuesday that some customers of Metropolitan Property & ­Casualty Insurance Co. — a unit of MetLife — who filed accident claims with the company were improperly ­penalized even after a state appeals board ruled they were not responsible for causing the crashes.

Weatherford Lawyers and those in Willow Park, Springtown, Aledo, Cool, Garner, and other places in Parker County need to know this insurance law.

It may be obvious in situations that a person was the insurance company agent and was acting as agent in that the person was licensed to sell the company’s policies. In Texas law, the statutes make clear that anyone engaging in the listed activities in Texas Insurance Code, Section 4001.051 on behalf of the insurance company will be treated as an agent for that insurance company.

As the Texas Supreme Court explained under predecessor statutes, agents are defined generally, and the statutes list various acts performed in the ordinary course of providing insurance, such as soliciting insurance; transmitting an application; receiving, collecting, or transmitting a premium; and adjusting a loss. Anyone who performs these acts “shall be held to be the agent of the company for which the act is done, or the risk is taken, as far as relates to all liabilities, duties, requirements and penalties set forth.

Weatherford attorneys and those in Hudson Oaks, Millsap, Aledo, Peaster, Brock, and other places in Parker County need to know how an agent is tied to an insurance company by statutes.

The Texas Insurance Code, Section 4001.051 provides an expansive list of conduct that constitutes “acting as an agent” for an insurance company. Here is what it tells us:

(a) This section applies regardless of whether an insurer is incorporated under the laws of this state or a foreign government.

The first step to determine whether an insurance company is vicariously liable is to determine whether the person who engaged in the conduct was acting as the insurance company agent.

Agency has been discussed by the Texas Supreme Court in many contexts. The Texas Legislature has helped by putting the definition of an agent into law as it relates to the insurance context.

The question; “Who are agents?” was answered in the past by one statute. It broadly defined agents to include any person who performed certain actions on behalf of insurance companies. This old law is now found in the Texas Insurance Code, Sections 4001.003 and 4001.051.

This writing gives some insight into how an attorney knows whether not an insurance company can be held responsible for the acts of it’s agents.

Insurance companies, like other entities that exist, can only act through agents. Insurance companies rely on agents to sell their policies, to underwrite potential insureds, and to investigate and adjust claims. The agents will not only sell the policy, but also explain the policy and hopefully, give the customer what they are looking for in a policy.

Insurance companies may be vicariously liable for another’s misconduct if that other person is the insurance company’s agent and if that agent acted within the scope of his or her authority. This has been stated repeatedly in case law by the Texas Supreme Court as well as the Houston Court of Appeals and other Courts throughout the state of Texas.

A 1994, Texas Supreme Court case styled, Celtic Life Insurance Company v. Coats, shows us how the courts look to find the agency relationship between the acts of an agent and an insurance company.

This case presents issues relating to an insurance company’s liability for its agent’s representations: first, whether the company’s liability depends on its authorization of misrepresentations; second, whether reliance on the representations is an element of recovery.

Kenneth Harrell, a duly-appointed agent for Celtic visited Aloha Pools and met with its owner, John Coats, to discuss health insurance for Aloha’s employees and their families. Coats stated that he wanted a policy providing benefits for psychiatric care that would be equal to or better than the $20,000 coverage provided by his current policy. Coats explained that he needed such coverage because his oldest son had previously required psychiatric care, and he was concerned that his younger son might require similar care. Harrell responded that he understood Coats’ needs fully, having experienced similar financial difficulties in providing psychiatric care for his own son.

Dallas insurance lawyers and those in Mesquite, Garland, Richardson, De Soto, Cedar Hill, and other areas need to know when an insurance agent or adjuster can be held responsible for the wrongs they commit.

Just as an insurance company is liable for its own misconduct, so too agents may be personally liable for their misdeeds, even when acting on the company’s behalf. In general, an agent is individually liable for his or her own tort or statutory violation.

Ordinarily, an agent is not liable for breach of contract based on the insurance policy, because the contract of insurance is not between the insured and the agent.

Dallas insurance attorneys and those in Duncanville, Carrollton, Farmers Branch, Garland, and other places in Dallas County need to know the laws regarding the liability of an insurance company.

The law in Texas is very clear, as the contracting party, the insurance company may be liable based on the contract with their insurance customer.

An insurance company may also be statutorily liable. For example, Texas Insurance Code, Section 541.151, tells us;

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