Yes, it is possible to provide two separate claims for the same accident. Each claim may focus on different aspects of the incident, such as property damage and personal injury, allowing for separate compensation for each.
No, you cannot file two separate claims for the same accident with different insurance companies. This is considered insurance fraud and is illegal.
Depends on several things. What type of accident, are the people residing in the same residence, etc.
Yes if the damage happened at two separate times. You would have to pay two separate deductibles.
If you've had two separate accidents then your rates will go up again. If It's for the same accident as in trying to "get paid twice", it could be automatically declined because that would be Felony Insurance Fraud.
The term "accident insurance" applies to life and health insurance policy's that will only pay claims that result from an accident. Example: A person who owns an accident-only disability policy falls ill from cancer. The policy will not pay any claims as a result of the cancer. If the same person fell down a flight of stairs, the policy would pay.
The claims process should be quite a bit easier. What some companies do is waive your deductible for both parties.
same word(Accident).
you spell accident in french the same way you spell accident in english; accident
MLB 3rd baseman Andy Marté was 33 years old when he was killed in a traffic accident on January 22, 2017 (birthdate: October 21, 1983).*Dominican pitcher Yordano Ventura was killed in a separate accident the same day.
Equivalent Claims
Equivalent claims
You get auto insurance for accident prone drivers the same way as normal drivers. You will need to provide relevant car details and your driving history information and then receive insurance policy quotes. Insurance premiums for accident prone drivers are generally much higher.