She should get half the insurance settlement, assuming he got a settlement. The insurance company cannot give just him a check since he's not the only name on the title - she had to sign the title over, too! Now, assuming he only had liability insurance on the truck and he was responsible for the accident...oh well! Time for Judge Judy!
file a collision claim with your insurance company once all is settled they will go after (subrogate) the uninsured (assuming they are at fault) party to recoup theirs and your money.....
We will recoup our losses.
Typically, when an insurance co. pays you for a totaled car you surrender the car and the title to them so it's weird that you still have the car at all! Once you surrender the car to the insurance co. they report it as totaled and usually auction the car off to recoup some of their money. Your situation is odd.
I was unable to recoup my losses in the stock market.To recoup means to get (something) back that you "bought" in some way.After my bad 14-year marriage, I felt I could never recoup or recapture the time I wasted.
That is the correct spelling of recoup, meaning to recover something that was lost.
Yes it is.
In "I am Laertes' son...", it took Odysseus and his crew two days and nights to recoup from the attack.
To recoup means to get something back, usually money, as in, with my new business deal I will recoup the losses from the previous deal. A recoupment would be the process of recouping something.
To recoup means to get something back, usually money, as in, with my new business deal I will recoup the losses from the previous deal. A recoupment would be the process of recouping something.
Because our bodies heel and recoup while we sleep.
No, but the government can.
Hopefully you carry uninsured motorists coverage on your own policy. If you have it, it will cover your expenses up to the policy limits. If not, it may prove difficult to recoup your losses from the uninsured driver directly. Also make sure you have a filed accident report. It might be helpful if you wind up in court later.