Murder Victim's Claim Denied for 'Pre-Existing Condition' 16
Stephanie McCraw, widow of Curtis McCraw, is suing Settlers Life Insurance after they refused to pay because Mr. McCraw had a "pre-existing condition," unrelated to the cause of his death. Curtis McCraw, who had hepatitis C, was gunned down by unknown assailants last April in Knoxville, Tennessee. "Mrs. McCraw lost her husband and wants this life insurance company to pay what is owed her. The policy is not specific as to whether there is a difference as to how you die. It does not even say you won't get paid if you have a pre-existing condition. Yet, the company is denying this claim because her husband had Hepatitis C, something totally unrelated to the way he was killed," said Curtis's lawyer, William Hotz.
And yet... (Score:1)
Doesn't the law include certain 'good faith' clauses so that someone can't be penalized after the fact for failing to reveal information they didn't even have in the first place?
Basically, it just boils down to a cheap@zz insurance conjob, err, company trying to find any excuse not to have to fulfill it's end of the contract.
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Not if Settlers Insurance can prove that the late Mr. McCraw knew that he had Hepatitis C. This isn't really about the cause of death it's about lying on the life insurance application. From TFA;
"The law in Tennessee is clear that the cause of death is not relevant," [Company President] Lowe said. "What is relevant is whether the insured truthfully informed the company of his health at time of his death. If an applicant lied, the company has a right to
The pre-existing condition is a claim of fraud. (Score:2)
Hepatitis C eats your liver. It's incurable and fatal. This guy had numerous drug convictions and had really low chance of getting a liver transplant even if he could afford it, which of course he couldn't, him being a junkie and all. He was a walking dead man. If he knew he had hep C, or even merely that his liver was failing, not that hard since it turns your skin bright banana yellow, the chances that this is insurance fraud is very very high. I'm with the company on this one.
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Disclaimer: I really don't know what I'm talking about, just hit some weird red flags.
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Hepatitis C eats your liver. It's incurable and fatal.
Hepatitis C is curable. Depending on the variant, treatment with alfa interferon + ribavirin is effective in 50% to 90% of cases. I got it from a finger stick when I was working in neurosurgery. I was put on a 24 week treatment series. My viral load was zero after 16 weeks, but the treatment continued in case there were dormant viruses. I'll always carry the RNA of the virus, much like carrying the antibodies against a previous infection, but I am cured. There are people getting treated successfully after c
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not that hard since it turns your skin bright banana yellow
Not trying to be racist, just making an observation, but I don't think that particular person's skin was going to turn "bright banana yellow". But if it did, then I'd agree it would tend to draw serious attention.
lawyers lining up for this one (Score:2)
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uberrima_fides [wikipedia.org]
She would have to prove that he had no knowledge of any relevant risk factors that he did not disclose when obtaining the insurance.
Even if he hadn't been tested for Hepatitis C at the time, his drug use alone may be enough to invalidate the claim.
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They did copy a lot of text but it seems that TFA does have more than the /. summary