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Florida Justice Reform Institute

House Panel Rejects ‘Bad-Faith’ Insurance Reform Bill

January 25, 2012/in Sunshine State News

 

Sunshine State News

House Panel Rejects ‘Bad-Faith’ Insurance Reform Bill

By KENRIC WARD

January 25, 2012 – 6:00pm

A “simple” bad-faith insurance bill bogged down in complex legal arguments Thursday and failed to clear the House Civil Justice Subcommittee.

House Bill 427 set a 60-day time limit for insurers to resolve third-party claims.

Rep. Kathleen Passidomo, R-Naples, said her bill would have a “positive impact for small businesses by reducing ‘long-winded’ [court] cases.”

But the measure, a simplified version of a reform bill introduced last session, ran into heavy skepticism from Democrats and Republicans on the panel.

Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Shalimar, noted that only three bad-faith cases had prevailed at trial against insurance companies in the past three years in Florida. Two of the cases were against one firm, Nationwide Insurance.

“That seems to be a weak predicate for this bill,” Gaetz said.

Fred Cunningham, of the Florida Justice Association, called HB 427 “a draconian solution in search of a problem.”

Passidomo responded that Florida has developed a reputation as a “haven” for bad-faith lawsuits, with the state accounting for 20 percent of the country’s bad-faith insurance claims from 2004-2008.

Former state Supreme Court Justice Charles Wells, speaking on behalf of the National Federation of Independent Businesses, warned, “We are headed for unaffordable liability insurance. The current law forces almost every claim into litigation. Only attorneys benefit.”

On the eve of Thursday’s hearing, reform proponents circulated a poll that showed 85 percent of small-business owners agreeing with the statement: “There are too many lawsuits in Florida, and our elected leaders should work to reduce the number of lawsuits.”

Some 73 percent of the respondents agreed that the Florida lawsuit system is among the worst in the country.” The survey by Public Opinion Strategies was conducted in December and January.

It is an undeniable fact that bad-faith judgments against insurers drive up premium costs for all insureds,” said William Large, president of the Justice Reform Institute.

Explaining one facet of the problem, Large likened liability insurance to a pool of money, with the pool filled by premiums and drained by claims.

“When an insured purchases and pays premiums on $10,000 of insurance, but the insurer pays $5 million in claims, someone has to fill up the pool. Initially, this amount may come out of an insurers profits, but eventually small businesses are the ones whose premiums are increased,” Large said.

Despite a parade of insurance executives testifying in favor of Passidomo’s bill, critics chipped away at whatever support she might have had going into Thursday’s hearing.

In the end, Rep. Larry Metz, R-Eustis, acknowledged, “The bill is not as good as it could be, and not as bad as opponents say it is.”

A companion measure — SB 1224 — by Sen. Steve Oelrich, R-Gainesville, is pending in the Senate. But with Passidomo’s bill sidelined, SB 1224 is unlikely to get a hearing.

Bill Herrle, head of the Florida chapter of NFIB, told Sunshine State News that reform proponents will push ahead with reform legislation — if not this year, then next.

The overarching goal, Herrle said, is to “take away lawyers’ disincentive to settle [cases]. We closed the door on joint and several liability last time. This is the personal-injury lawyers’ new avenue to deep pockets.”

“We’re not giving up. This issue is only growing,” Herrle said.

Contact Kenric Ward at [email protected] or at (772) 801-5341.

See Full Article 

https://www.fljustice.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/fjri-news.jpg 800 800 RAD Tech https://www.fljustice.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Florida-Justice-Reform-Institute.jpg RAD Tech2012-01-25 15:57:542025-01-06 14:21:12House Panel Rejects ‘Bad-Faith’ Insurance Reform Bill
Florida Justice Reform Institute

Crashworthiness Passed in 2011; PIP to be Considered in 2012

January 4, 2012/in PolitiFact Florida

 

Poltifact

Crashworthiness passed in 2011; PIP to be considered in 2012

By Angie Drobnic Holan – January 4, 2012

Rick Scott made many promises during the campaign to help business, and one of those promises included tort reform.

Generally speaking, tort reform means putting new legal limits on attorneys that sue companies for damages. It can take many forms: It might be a law that says juries can only award plaintiffs a certain amount of money, or rules that require attorneys to meet tougher standards for evidence when they go to trial. It can also apply to specific areas such as medical malpractice, auto insurance, or product liability. Usually, tort reform has the result of putting restrictions on personal injury lawsuits.

We asked advocates both for and against tort reform how Scott was doing on his promise.

The business-backed Florida Justice Reform Institute, created by the Florida Chamber of Commerce to fight what it calls “wasteful” litigation, gave Scott a positive review.

“As far as I’m concerned, Gov. Scott has done an excellent job on leading these issues and using the bully pulpit,” said William Large, the institute”s president.

Trial lawyers, though, had a different take. The Florida Justice Association sees Scott’s actions as encroaching on consumers’ rights.

“If the measure is whether or not citizens have fewer rights when it comes to lawsuits against bad actors as a result of Gov. Scott’s term, I think the answer is yes,” said Steven Schale, a spokesman for the group.

Scott’s top accomplishment might be signing a law passed during the 2011 legislative session that affected lawsuits about car crashes and defective vehicles. The law, referred to as “crashworthiness,” said that jurors must consider other factors when determining fault for a crash, such as whether the driver was impaired or not.

The Governor’s Office pointed us to the “crashworthiness” law as evidence it was keeping its promise, as well as a few other measures that limit lawsuits.

This is all positive evidence that Scott is keeping his broad promise on tort reform. But we’re not ready to give him a Promise Kept just yet.

Both Scott and state legislators say they expect to take action in 2012 on Personal Injury Protection (PIP) insurance. Investigators say that PIP insurance is being abused by people staging car accidents and then filing bogus claims against auto insurers.

Possible changes to the law include caps on attorneys fees; limits on medical procedures; stricter regulation of pain clinics; and giving insurers more time to investigate claims.

We’ll wait and see if Scott ultimately signs a law to make such major changes. For now, we rate this promise In the Works.

https://www.politifact.com/florida/promises/scott-o-meter/promise/629/enact-tort-reform/

https://www.fljustice.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/fjri-news.jpg 800 800 RAD Tech https://www.fljustice.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Florida-Justice-Reform-Institute.jpg RAD Tech2012-01-04 15:49:452024-11-26 08:34:10Crashworthiness Passed in 2011; PIP to be Considered in 2012
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