Automobile Insurance Question
A friend of mine was in an accident with his three month old Lexus RX 350 SUV. The car has about $23,000 worth of damage, but is not totaled because it is such an expensive vehicle.
He was hit blindside by a vehicle that just cut across the road without looking. The other driver was at fault, and was cited.
My friend does not want to keep the Lexus now that it has been wrecked. The problem is that the dealers want to reduce the trade-in value because it has been wrecked.
He hired a lawyer, but the lawyer says he can not sue for diminished value. The lawyer says you can not sue for personal property in the state of Florida. If you can't sue for diminished value, how do you get it?
Thanks for any help...
He was hit blindside by a vehicle that just cut across the road without looking. The other driver was at fault, and was cited.
My friend does not want to keep the Lexus now that it has been wrecked. The problem is that the dealers want to reduce the trade-in value because it has been wrecked.
He hired a lawyer, but the lawyer says he can not sue for diminished value. The lawyer says you can not sue for personal property in the state of Florida. If you can't sue for diminished value, how do you get it?
Thanks for any help...
I didn't know lexus made an RX 350? I thought they only came in 300, 330, 400h?
His lawyer must be pretty incompetent if he can't think of some how to get the money. Tell him to get a new lawyer. A good lawyer should know at least 3 different ways to go about suing for the same thing.
His lawyer must be pretty incompetent if he can't think of some how to get the money. Tell him to get a new lawyer. A good lawyer should know at least 3 different ways to go about suing for the same thing.
His lawyer must be pretty incompetent if he can't think of some how to get the money. Tell him to get a new lawyer. A good lawyer should know at least 3 different ways to go about suing for the same thing.
Your friend should have an attorney send a letter on his behalf indicating they have 10 days or something to pay or you intend to file a lawsuit for the dim value, costs, fees, etc.
good question jb, id like to learn about this too.
the 3.5L v6 is their new engine so they are putting it in everything. they also have the 4.5L v8 coming out soon.
Originally Posted by filanj
I didn't know lexus made an RX 350? I thought they only came in 300, 330, 400h?
Florida G35 Club, General Member
iTrader: (6)
Joined: Apr 2004
Posts: 3,631
Likes: 0
From: Orlando, FL
His lawyer is incompetent. Case law says that you can obtain payment from a third party for diminished value in Florida. He can't get diminished value from his own insurance company, but he can get it from the other driver's.
He needs to get a letter from the car dealership stating how much the vehicle has depriciated now that it has been damaged and present it to the other insurance company.
I know this is true because I helped my mom get $1000 for diminished value when her Corolla was rear ended.
If you want, I can get a referral for your friend, or maybe one of the lawyers at my office can represent him if the other insurer isn't one of our clients.
Attached is a letter from a lawyer citing case law.
He needs to get a letter from the car dealership stating how much the vehicle has depriciated now that it has been damaged and present it to the other insurance company.
I know this is true because I helped my mom get $1000 for diminished value when her Corolla was rear ended.
If you want, I can get a referral for your friend, or maybe one of the lawyers at my office can represent him if the other insurer isn't one of our clients.
Attached is a letter from a lawyer citing case law.
Last edited by Gilley; Dec 21, 2006 at 09:03 PM.
Trending Topics
Originally Posted by Gilley
His lawyer is incompetent. Case law says that you can obtain payment from a third party for diminished value in Florida. He can't get diminished value from his own insurance company, but he can get it from the other driver's.
He needs to get a letter from the car dealership stating how much the vehicle has depriciated now that it has been damaged and present it to the other insurance company.
I know this is true because I helped my mom get $1000 for diminished value when her Corolla was rear ended.
If you want, I can get a referral for your friend, or maybe one of the lawyers at my office can represent him if the other insurer isn't one of our clients.
Attached is a letter from a lawyer citing case law.
He needs to get a letter from the car dealership stating how much the vehicle has depriciated now that it has been damaged and present it to the other insurance company.
I know this is true because I helped my mom get $1000 for diminished value when her Corolla was rear ended.
If you want, I can get a referral for your friend, or maybe one of the lawyers at my office can represent him if the other insurer isn't one of our clients.
Attached is a letter from a lawyer citing case law.
Thanks again!
Sean's the outside lawyer, I'm the inside insurance guy...
First thing from the carrier's perspective is that everything wrong with the vehicle needs to be repaired. If not, you won't get a diminished value claim paid in most cases. Secondly, the ratio of damages to you car relative to the value and resale is another factor. A $23k hit to a Lexus will make for a rather large DV claim.
The last thing to keep in mind is that it is just as subjective as evaluating an injury claim. Anyway, Sean and I do this all day for a living. I can give you exact details if you need them...
First thing from the carrier's perspective is that everything wrong with the vehicle needs to be repaired. If not, you won't get a diminished value claim paid in most cases. Secondly, the ratio of damages to you car relative to the value and resale is another factor. A $23k hit to a Lexus will make for a rather large DV claim.
The last thing to keep in mind is that it is just as subjective as evaluating an injury claim. Anyway, Sean and I do this all day for a living. I can give you exact details if you need them...
Originally Posted by w0ady
the 3.5L v6 is their new engine so they are putting it in everything. they also have the 4.5L v8 coming out soon.
(sorry for going off topic)
Originally Posted by r10apple
Sean's the outside lawyer, I'm the inside insurance guy...
Originally Posted by r10apple
First thing from the carrier's perspective is that everything wrong with the vehicle needs to be repaired. If not, you won't get a diminished value claim paid in most cases. Secondly, the ratio of damages to you car relative to the value and resale is another factor. A $23k hit to a Lexus will make for a rather large DV claim.
They have insurance and are getting the car repaired. Do you mean that they have to make sure the body shop repairs everything, or am I missing the point?
Originally Posted by r10apple
The last thing to keep in mind is that it is just as subjective as evaluating an injury claim. Anyway, Sean and I do this all day for a living. I can give you exact details if you need them...
Thanks again for your help!
[QUOTE=_jb]I appreciate the tips...
I'm not sure what you mean by "everything wrong with the vehicle needs to be repaired."
They have insurance and are getting the car repaired. Do you mean that they have to make sure the body shop repairs everything, or am I missing the point?QUOTE]
Um, who is repairing the vehicle--his OWN insurance carrier or the AT FAULT driver's? Diminished Value is almost guaranteed not to be covered under HIS OWN POLICY--IT MUST COME FROM THE AT FAULT CARRIER. What I mean is this: he's getting the car repaired; a shoddy repair job was performed and paint isn't blended well, parts are crooked, etc; the at fault carrier will send him back to get the paint adjusted and the door aligned and then when all the issues are basically worked out--or the repair shop quits trying--he makes his DV claim.
It helps to get three or more quotes from different dealers. It also helps to have an independent adjuster write a DV analysis. Remember, a dealer is going to shaft anyone with any vehicle--regardless of the condition--on a trade in--their total incentive is profit. Further, if Lexus is doing the repairs, there is less of a DV argument or quality issue as THEY are doing the repair.
Anyway, it's subjective and we can help the further along you get...
I'm not sure what you mean by "everything wrong with the vehicle needs to be repaired."
They have insurance and are getting the car repaired. Do you mean that they have to make sure the body shop repairs everything, or am I missing the point?QUOTE]
Um, who is repairing the vehicle--his OWN insurance carrier or the AT FAULT driver's? Diminished Value is almost guaranteed not to be covered under HIS OWN POLICY--IT MUST COME FROM THE AT FAULT CARRIER. What I mean is this: he's getting the car repaired; a shoddy repair job was performed and paint isn't blended well, parts are crooked, etc; the at fault carrier will send him back to get the paint adjusted and the door aligned and then when all the issues are basically worked out--or the repair shop quits trying--he makes his DV claim.
It helps to get three or more quotes from different dealers. It also helps to have an independent adjuster write a DV analysis. Remember, a dealer is going to shaft anyone with any vehicle--regardless of the condition--on a trade in--their total incentive is profit. Further, if Lexus is doing the repairs, there is less of a DV argument or quality issue as THEY are doing the repair.
Anyway, it's subjective and we can help the further along you get...
Florida G35 Club, General Member
iTrader: (6)
Joined: Apr 2004
Posts: 3,631
Likes: 0
From: Orlando, FL
Cass is right. florida case law from the Supreme Court prevents you from getting any DV from your own insurance carrier. DV must be claimed against the other carrier if it was their insured's fault.
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
gdaelemans
Audio, Video & Electronics
4
Sep 15, 2015 12:20 PM
johnadlertech
Private Classifieds
1
Sep 11, 2015 02:07 PM
New2Infinity
Audio, Video & Electronics
0
Sep 9, 2015 10:34 AM




