On the other hand, when involved in a catastrophic loss, the insurance provided lawyers try to do what is necessary to avoid the potential 'nuclear' judgments.
I had an operator involved in a fatality. Now the FMCSA CDL rules state that a CLD holder CONVICTED over a fatality looses his CDL for a year.
New Jersey decided, without charges, let alone a conviction, that they wanted to suspend his CDL for fourteen months. The lawyers went above and beyond to support the driver at his hearing to determine if the suspension was warranted and proved that he was NOT responsible.
The LAST thing they wanted was to go to court with the driver's suspension hanging over them.
They were successful. Some of the evidence they used also convinced the marine terminal AND their security provider to step up and each be responsible for a third of the proposed settlement.
Our third was $800,000.00 against the insurance reserve of one million which was the maximum of our liability coverage.
Had the insurance lawyers not been so diligent in defending the driver and looking at the facility and security companies involvement AND proved how the other two parties WERE partially responsible; we would have been on the hook for the 1.4 million that was beyond our coverage limit.
Settlement was reached ten days before the court date...the closest of ANY lawsuit where I was involved.
Civil Lawsuit protection / Is there insurance a driver can get while driving as company driver.
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by PWAROAD, Apr 24, 2020.
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In reality .....the job is not worth the risk .
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I was going back through the comments on this thread and took extra note of the ones I will quote below.
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Reading these responses makes me laugh......like a TS diner....listening to all the experts.
Yes, drivers can be sued individually while driving a company owned power unit.
The company insurance policy covers the Named Insured AND employee drivers, while operating within the scope of their employment.
Where drivers get sued individually is typically when there is gross negligence on behalf of the driver. While the company policy will cover liability up to the policy limit, and due to the Cumis decision they are entitled to a defense separate from the Named Insured. Defense costs are outside the limit of liability.
The way we would cover a driver who wanted his OWN insurance and own defense is to do a Named Driver policy, where driver is covered for any commercial vehicle he operates under his CDLPWAROAD Thanks this. -
PWAROAD and Socal Xpress Thank this.
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Considering a considerable segment of this industry self underwrite, I am pretty sure getting a policy is possible. I'm just not sure how much a driver will be forced to pay for it. Just with insurance on a POV, I was talking to one of my neighbors who uses his car as a part of his job. His routes were changed and when he was recently asked about where he went to and how many miles he drove, his insurance carrier almost doubled his premium.
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Well I'd consider 52 years underwriting trucking business as someone who knows more about the subject than you......so laugh on and show your ##*
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