Customers protest tactics at state’s biggest private property insurer [The Palm Beach Post, Fla.]
| By Charles Elmore, The Palm Beach Post, Fla. | |
| McClatchy-Tribune Information Services |
The Wymans said
The justification: An old tax lien of less than
"I just think this company, they're horrible,"
In a statement, Universal declined to discuss individual customer cases but cited a "a long track record of providing competitively priced coverage" and prompt payment of claims.
"We believe our underwriting process not only complies with the Insurance Code but also is a fair and reasonable process that enables us to make needed coverage available to many Floridians," the statement said.
Universal, the state's largest home insurer after state-run Citizens with more than 550,000 customers, saw parent firm
President and CEO
A contract for Downes is set to pay him
Complaints about denied claims, price increases and dropped policies by <location value="LS/us.fl" idsrc="xmltag.org">Florida's private insurers are getting comparatively little attention in
But the state's
It's one thing to check out a customer's credit history and choose not to take premiums at sign-up, Westcott said. It's another to collect premiums for years and bring up a tax lien or bankruptcy when a customer files a substantial claim, she said.
"I have met with representatives from this company and expressed my deep concern about this business practice," Westcott told
Ask
"I felt like a rug had been pulled out from under me," Weiss said.
Universal refunded premiums to Weiss and the Wymans but is playing a game stacked in its favor, said
A tax lien in another state has no plausible effect on a claim, as he sees it.
"No, it wouldn't affect your claim, and it's unconscionable," said Goins, with
Universal's position: "The obligation to provide accurate information in support of his or her request for insurance rests with each applicant."
Some 730 complaints were filed against Universal in 2012 on matters including claim denials, delays or policy cancellations, according to the state's
Universal's complaint to customer ratio for last year was about four times higher than that of
The state's
Bogner said her office "cannot confirm nor deny the existence of an ongoing examination or investigation."
Bogner referred to a governing statute in state law, which says omissions in applications cannot be used to void policies except in certain cases, such as that they are fraudulent or "material," meaning relevant to the risk assumed by the insurer.
Westcott characterized Universal's tactics as "ignoring readily available information to your potential advantage (collecting premium) and using it only when convenient (denying the claim)."
Universal CEO Downes wrote a letter to the state's insurance office in November, obtained in a records request from
A half percent of the company's 550,000 customers would be about 2,750, though the letter stopped short of specifying how many people saw coverage dropped because of omissions on their applications that came to light when they filed claims. A company statement later said that although Universal did not generally track statistics of this type, its estimated number was probably closer to 200 a year.
Nothing so far has helped the Wymans, who say they have been forced to pay out of pocket for a five-figure loss.
"We replaced the floors at our own cost,"
Her husband said it has been a bitter shock.
"It was a horrible experience,"
___
(c)2013 The Palm Beach Post (West Palm Beach, Fla.)
Visit The Palm Beach Post (West Palm Beach, Fla.) at www.palmbeachpost.com
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| Wordcount: | 1238 |



Customers Protest Tactics At Universal
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