This phrase means that medical expenses will be paid as the bills come in. It is impossible to know how much debt a person will have with medical expenses so it usually demanded that a party pays them as they happen.
To family court it means that any medical expense incurred which comes directly out of your pocket, and is not ever going to be paid back to you by an insurance company, benefactor and or government agency.To the IRS, it means, any medical expenses incurred which comes directly out of your pocket, and is over 7.5% of your gross income and is not ever going to be paid back to you by an insurance company, benefactor and or government agency..
Incurred Actual normally refers to costs or expenses and their actual value i.e. Incurred actual could be the actual cost of a licence to trade.
Preliminary expenses are all those expenses which company incurred before starting of basic busines activity or production of volume of units like legal expenses etc.
Preliminary expenses are all those expenses which company incurred before starting of basic busines activity or production of volume of units like legal expenses etc.
Board able medical expenses are medical expenses that include therapy; whether it's physical or any other kind of therapy. They are non-speculative.
Indirect Expenses are those expenses which are incurred after the manufacturing process is over, e.g. selling and distribution expenses, all the administrative expenses, carraige outward, advertisement expenses because they are related indirectlt with the product manufacturing and sales.
This does mean expenses are not covered by insurance. If this is what the divorce decree says, then you are responsible for these bills.
It means each person pays for his/her own food and drink or tickets or whatever other expenses are incurred.
You should be able to claim the medical expenses against your income tax, but there are limitations. You may have to claim them for the year that they were incurred. Which may mean you have to re-file taxes for that year. And Medical deductions are subject to a percentage offset. Consult your attorney, who should tell you when you get your award, or consult a tax expert. I gather what happened is you had medical expenses that were originally paid by (say your) insurance company. And instead of subrogation, you continued the lawsuit and won. The money you won had to be returned to the insurance company that already paid you for it (recovered). It is all going to offset - you can't deduct the medical expense unless you claim the income from the insurance company paying you for the lawsuit. But, the easiest handling would be just like any other covered medical expense...your insurance deductible and such costs are income tax expenses if they are above the minimums (unlikely).
This is not a State Farm specific guideline. the long and short of it is, many insurance policies offer a no fault coverage for medical expenses incurred. This endorsement basically states that a person who is injured on a property should have access to this no fault coverage before having to submit medical claims to Medicare.
It's secondary or tertiary insurance that is held to cover any medical expenses the primary insurance policy does not cover or does not cover completely.
that theyre beutiful