Thanks Tom, and I have some catching up to do on your time at this...
GW, I am with you on this one.
Posted By GW Moco on 07/04/2008 1:23 AM
… he and the carrier he works for does is the ones paying, and if they feel as though this roof needs to be replaced to properly indemnify the 2-3 squares damaged, great, more for me come payday. …Well, the wind damage is there and the deterioration is right in the heart of it, can't work around it in this condition.
I understand. And like we were saying before, there are some examples of a non-pliable roof that will have grief doing a patch - but some salesman will try to apply that logic to every house on the street. Your example is the prize winner on the non-repairable thing, and I do see the wind damage. Obviously a roof that is beyond the grave is going to have tabs blow off all over the place where the neighbor subject to the same conditions has no missing shingles - and I look at those things when I am up on a roof.
The claims examiner you are working with is OK on replacing the entire roof as the covered scope of proper repair to the visible wind damage. The examiner's that David works with have a different interpretation of the policy - and that happens. That is part of the challenge of our job. It amazes me how court decisions don't come to the same conclusions. That's the world we live in.
If you working with one insurance company, and know who you are working with every day, this stuff gets aired out pretty quick. If you are an independent and take assignments from a variety of examiners, we still make our best recommendation but never a commitment subject to final approval of the carrier.
Posted By Ray Hall on 07/04/2008 1:27 AM
If you have recoverable depreciation, should this be in the judgment factor
Good point, you really can't let it cloud your judgment on the scope of repair.
Posted By Ray Hall on 07/04/2008 1:27 AM
The blue 3 tabs shown in the example had 0% value and no value can not be insured.
Although it is true that the garbage on his roof had no value, that is not a battle I would choose to fight. At some point they served their purpose, time marches on, they became garbage - and a prudent homeowner would have replaced his roof years before this windstorm. Maybe it's a rental property, no pride of ownership, but if someone was paying the premium for years and the agent never looked at the house after the first sign up, "here we are - what do we do now".
Some of these neglected houses have an old "fire policy" with non-recoverable depreciation from a non-admitted carrier. The wiring etc. is so old, no one else will insure it. The 30 year old shingles have depreciated 100%. Here in California a law went into effect in 2007 where we can only depreciate materials, so there would be a payable loss on this example. They would get the full value of removal and installation labor even if zero for the shingle materials...
Posted By Ray Hall on 07/04/2008 1:27 AM
To say the house will leak if the shingles are not replaced is not insurable. Its like a tree that is about to fall on the house.
Right. It's amazing that some of these old garbage roofs DON'T leak, because you are looking at the 3rd layer...