On September 30, 2014, Ontario’s government
proposed a new amendment to the accident benefit regulation that governs
the no-fault benefits available to car accident injury victims.
The regulation can be found here: http://www.ontariocanada.com/registry/view.do?postingId=15542&language=en
The regulation would further reduce the interest rate payable by
insurance companies if they deny a benefit to a car accident injury
victim and a later judgement/ruling finds that they made an error in
refusing to pay the benefit(s). It would also delay the start date for
the interest to run - from the date of the denial, to the date that a
financial services commission mediation proceeding is commenced.
It is submitted that this would not serve the interests of
justice. If an insurer denies a person’s benefits and that decision is
eventually proven wrong (by judgement/ruling) then interest should run
from the date of the denial, not a mediation proceeding that could take
quite some time to start.
As a practical example – If an insurer denies a physiotherapy
treatment plan expense and the injured person undertakes it because they
need it, the person may well be charged interest by the treatment
facility (that would be from the date of the treatment of course – not
mediation). The interest rate may well be higher than the prescribed
rate. The insured person would then be out of pocket for the additional
interest through the insurer’s wrong-doing.
As another example, if an insured person is denied income replacement
benefits to compensate them for loss of their wages from car accident
injury and takes a high interest loan because of that fact, then the
interest will of course run from the date of the loan and not the
mediation. The insured person could be out significant amounts of money
through the insurer’s error if they are limited in how much they can
claim from the insurer and the time-period that they can claim for.
If the new proposed regulation is passed, the government should also
protect the injured person by making it law that no-one may charge an
insured person any higher level of interest than the mandated amount
that they can recover from the insurer and should also say that no-one
may start interest running until after a mediation is commenced. That
way the insured is not out of pocket if the insurer’s decision is proven
wrong at a later date.
Of course, that would be extremely artificial and it would make a lot
more sense to simply amend this regulation to say that an injured
person is entitled to claim for reasonable interest actually incurred.
That would be the fair, just and reasonable result.
People pay into their car insurance for years and when they need it
they expect that the insurer will treat them fairly. This proposed new
law would say that when insurers are proven to have made an error in
denying benefits, the insured person is still required to bear a
significant amount of the loss despite the fact that they were entirely
innocent and relied on their insurer to make the right decision. In my
respectful opinion that is ludicrous and completely unjust.
Source: http://www.personalinjurylawlawyer.ca/proposed-accident-benefits-amendment-interest-rates-car-accident-injury-victims/
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