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Hot Topics in Personal Lines



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Hot Topics in Personal Lines

While classroom courses are currently unavailable, Big I NJ still offers tailored in-house classes for your agency. Additionally, you can earn CE credits by attending ABEN or select CEP webinars. My Agency Campus continues to support your agency's employee onboarding, training, and advancement. Please feel free to contact us at any time with questions.

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Hot Topics in Personal Lines

Tuesday, March 4, 2025

Description

Are you NEW to ABEN? Use Code 1stABEN40 at checkout to receive your 40% discount! It can be used on the purchase of multiple classes, as long as they are included in the same transaction. ABEN offers high-quality CE and professional development Webcasts via live-streaming video.

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This seminar begins with a practically oriented inquiry into how losses are adjusted on a day-to-day basis.  The seminar introduces not only the two key adjustment valuation measures – “actual cash value” and “replacement cost” – but also stresses to the students that the concepts are not as uniform and concrete as industry practice may suggest.  It then explains why this matters and includes practical illustrations of loss adjustment scenarios in which it is either impractical, impossible or at least implausible to recreate precisely what the insured had prior to the loss.  These situations include older homes with ornate or impossible-to-replace materials; farm structures that cannot be rebuilt; and similar instances in which loss adjustment or settlement is complicated.

The seminar then turns to the increasingly frequent and vexing problem of who is a “resident” of a household for insurance purposes.  For nearly two decades, states such as Indiana have used formulations such as, “[O]n the whole, the person will be a resident if all the facts demonstrate that he or she has maintained a ‘fixed abode’ in the household for some continuous time.”  (Allstate Insurance Co v. Shockley (S.D. In. 1991)).

Practically speaking, this is not of much assistance to producers.  The section (and the problem) is illuminated by examining some of the other rules for “residency,” such as:

  • The person need not be a permanent member of the household.
  • The person must possess the subjective intent to stay for more than a “transitory” period;
  • That subjective intent may be found in objective words and actions.

The seminar then turns to issues connected with having personal lines insured operate a business out of the insured home.  This section discusses the prevalence of such arrangements, and also how those arrangements are treated under industry standard forms.  This section concludes with a discussion of case law. 

Approved for 2 NJCE Credits

ABEN
Event Contact
Jennifer Kacmarsky
(609) 587-4333
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Tuesday, March 4, 2025
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