Q: "My insurer asked me to attend an `examination under oath.' Can they make me do this?"
A: The company has the right to request that you be examined under oath, but it's your decision whether to actually attend and participate. So you can refuse. But keep reading.
Here's the big caveat: As the insured person, you have a responsibility to cooperate with your insurer during an investigation and to provide support for your claim. If you refuse to attend an examination under oath -- these are often known by the shorthand "EUO" in insurance documents -- your insurer has the right to deny your claim and close their case based on what they will call non-cooperation.
The upshot: We recommend that you attend an examination under oath and that you cooperate with your insurer in support of your claim.
After your insurer has the information it's requested and has completed the exam, then it's their responsibility to provide you with a timely coverage decision. If they deny your claim, they need to clearly explain to you why they made that decision.
If you live in Washington state and have insurance questions or want to file a insurance complaint, you can reach us by e-mail or call us at 1-800-562-6900. You can also file a complaint 24/7 through our new online complaint form.
If you live in a different state, here's how to reach your state's insurance regulator.
Blog Archive
-
▼
2013
(214)
-
▼
March
(23)
- Our Canary Died
- Landslides: Does homeowners insurance cover that?
- "Wait a minute -- I thought insurance companies ca...
- Report: Claims cost of individual health insurance...
- Tacoma man arrested for insurance fraud
- ChainLadder 0.1.5-6 released on CRAN
- Q: "My homeowners insurer sent an inspector to loo...
- Submit a talk for the first R in Insurance conference
- Job opening: Deputy insurance commissioner for leg...
- Insurance questions: "What's an `examination under...
- "An accident drove up my insurance rates, but I wa...
- googleVis 0.4.2 with support for shiny released on...
- "I got the check for my car repair, but it doesn't...
- Disappointed
- Jury convicts Spokane man of fraud in case of $200...
- Hearing: Proposed acquisition of Western United Li...
- How to use optim in R
- "My agent said I had `full coverage' but won't pay...
- What does insurance have to do with climate change?
- Create an R package from a single R file with roxy...
- "Why do I have to do the insurance company's work ...
- What you can do when your health insurer says no
- Large health insurer surpluses could help ease pre...
-
▼
March
(23)
Popular Posts
-
Before we get started, this is the one hundredth post of this blog. It started in February 2009 as one of my leadership tasks as president o...
-
Earlier this month, the Washington Healthplanfinder (our state's health insurance exchange) opened its toll-free hotline to start answe...
-
I broke the news to Evelyn. My aunt, Jean Davis, died early Saturday morning. It was my duty to call all of her friends, make the final arra...
-
<$BlogPageTitle$> <$BlogItemBody$>
-
Version 0.1.6 of the ChainLadder package has been released and is already available from CRAN . The new version adds the function CLFMdelta...
-
<$BlogPageTitle$> <$BlogItemBody$>