
PROPERTY
OWNERS AFFORDED ADDITIONAL RIGHTS
IN INSURANCE CLAIMS
In
a case with mixed implications for property owners in California,
a State Appellate Level Court has ruled that a homeowner can file
an insurance claim well after a catastrophic event.
In
the case of Kapsimallis vs. Allstate Insurance Company,
the Court ruled that an insurer cannot rely solely on the date
of a disaster to start the statute of limitations for a claim
under the policy. The Court, who was deciding a claim arising
from the Northridge earthquake, held that the clock
begins for a statute of limitations defense to a claim under the
policy only when a reasonable policyholder would have discovered
the damage.
Stated
succinctly, the Kapsimallis decision means that a property
owner may make a claim for damage arising from a catastrophic
event literally years after the fact.
While
the decision, on its face, would appear to favor property owners,
the decision will likely result in even higher insurance premiums
for policyholders statewide, and particularly in regard to earthquake
insurance.
Of
course, time will only tell. In the meantime, property owners
would be well advised to retain their policies and to carefully
investigate the basis of any property claim, particularly in the
event the property may be set for sale in the not too distant
future. 

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