Yes, if your parents claim taxes on you, you can hide the name of the company from them.
A claim is a liability on part of the insurance company. If a customer makes a claim it means that the insurance company has to pay the customer for the amount is eligible to claim and hence it is a expenditure on the balance sheets of the insurance company.
That's not very likely. The insurance company does not file your claim, they accept your claim notice from you. You have to file your claim with the company, not the other way around.
no, once you claim someone you cannot be claimed yourself
No, they will file a claim with their insurance company and their company will talk to your company. Assuming you swapped insurance details.
that you are lazy.
are lazy
no
Company A holds your primary insurance coverage and A is involved in a claim situation with B--whether an individual or company. Company A can pay for the claim or its responsible portion of the claim and subrogate in suit against Part B so that the claim can be settled and ended for Client A.
Anytime you make a claim with your own insurance company against someone else's company or their company directly, the company taking the claim by law has to fully verify and investigate the claim being made. Not only that, no insurance company in their right mind would pay out insurance claims without checking them out first.
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Usually in a bad faith insurance claim the insurance company is in the wrong. A bad faith claim is when an insurance company fails to pay out what was promised on the claim. More than likely you could sue the insurance company and have a chance at winning your case.
It all depends on the state the claim is filed. If a state does not have a set amount of time of the company to investigate and make a decision on a claim, they are required to do it in a "reasonable" amount of time, depending on what time of auto claim it is.