Richmond Woman Sues Allstate
INSURANCE FIRM PREYS ON VICTIMS OF LOW-IMPACT CRASHES, ATTORNEYS SAY
By
Brandon Ortiz

HERALD-LEADER STAFF WRITER
Allstate Insurance Co. is engaging in a systematic and fraudulent scheme to make obtaining fair offers for damage claims so difficult that victims accept low offers rather than pursue costly and time-consuming litigation, attorneys for a Richmond woman argued yesterday in Fayette Circuit Court.
Attorneys for Geneva
Hager, who suffered neck and lower back injuries after being rear-ended by a
2.5 ton truck insured by Allstate in 1997, asked Judge Thomas Clark to allow
them to proceed with an $800 million, class-action lawsuit against the
company. The lawyers are seeking $6 million in damages for Hager alone.
If the lawsuit is given
class certification, it could affect thousands who have been injured in
wrecks with minimal property damage and filed claims against Allstate in the
last 10 years.
At issue is not how much
Allstate owes Hager for her claim. The insurance company paid Hager $25,000
-- the policy limit for the truck's driver, Thomas J. Lapointe Jr. -- more
than five years ago. But Hager's attorneys argue it was only offered days
after Clark set a trial date over her claim.
What's in dispute is
whether Allstate acted in good faith while negotiating Hager's claim -- and
whether its protocol for handling what the company calls "minor impact, soft
tissue" claims violates Kentucky's Unfair Claims Settlement Practices Act.
The plaintiff's lawyers
say Allstate illegally singles out cases with about $1,000 in property
damage, trains adjusters to assume such wrecks can't result in severe
injuries and drags out those cases so claimants will give up.
Allstate, however,
contends it looks at each claim individually. It said separating low-impact
wrecks is a legitimate way of weeding out fraudulent claims.
Defense attorney Mindy
Barfield said Hager and her attorneys are motivated by greed and started
plotting a lawsuit soon after the accident. "Their claim for ... relief is
just a setup to get the money," she said.
Hager's attorneys say her
case is proof that Allstate does not negotiate in good faith. Her injuries
were so apparent the claim should have been settled quickly, they say.
Instead, Allstate forced
her to file a lawsuit and dragged her claim out for 21/2 years, said
attorney Dale Golden of Lexington.
Golden said that such
delaying tactics are part of a coordinated strategy outlined in internal
company documents that Allstate's lawyers successfully argued to have sealed
in court records. Some of those documents were publicly disclosed at
yesterday's court hearing.
Excerpts of the internal
documents, which provide a blueprint for claims handling, were projected on
the courtroom wall by Hager's lawyers. The documents described claims
handling as a "zero-sum economic game" that Allstate must win and "others
must lose."
"In order for Allstate to
benefit, it must take the money from the injured victims and it's got to put
it in its own pocket," Golden said in court. "That's exactly what Allstate
set out to do, and it made no bones about it."
Executives knew hardball
tactics would result in more bad-faith lawsuits, but accepted that as a cost
of doing business since legal fees and damage awards would not outpace cost
savings, Golden said.
"They are manipulating
the justice system," he said. "They are taking advantage of the people who
are most vulnerable."
Golden said Allstate
singled out low-impact claims because they are typically not represented by
lawyers who "are willing to go to the wall." Those attorneys tend be less
experienced and more malleable, he said.
The documents called for
Allstate to pull out the "boxing gloves" for claimants who retain a lawyer.
Those who settled quickly were in "good hands."
By pounding opposing
lawyers, the company set out to make it so expensive to get fair claim
offers that law firms would refuse to take up soft-tissue injury cases,
Golden said.
The company's projections
showed the strategy could create an additional half-billion dollars a year
in profits by 1998, he said. Allstate tied claims adjusters' compensation to
their ability to stay within projected baseline payouts, Golden said.
He likened it to telling
a meteorologist he could only forecast so many days of rain a year.
"The only way that can
happen is if the weatherman says, 'OK, I'm going to predict rain regardless
of whether it is going to rain or not,'" he said.
Neither party in the case
will be able have the benefit of testimony from the adjuster who initially
handled Hager's claim. Sarah E. Howard killed herself in Allstate's
Lexington office in August 1999.
A few weeks later her son
filed a lawsuit on her estate's behalf, alleging Allstate drove her to her
death. It said Allstate overwhelmed Howard with work and belittled her after
she filed a workers' compensation claim in 1998 and later when she asked for
medical leave. The suit was settled out of court.
Golden made reference to
Howard's case in his opening remarks yesterday.
Four days before Hager
filed her lawsuit in July 1998, Allstate classified Hager's wreck as a more
serious accident. Why that happened is a point of contention between the two
parties.
Barfield said it was
because claims adjusters realized her injuries were legitimate. That's
evidence Allstate judges each case on its merits, she argued.
But Golden said Allstate
"fraudulently" changed the classification after it caught wind of the
lawsuit. He says the insurance firm would not have changed its stance if
Hager had not hired a lawyer.
Allstate's lawyers
vigorously defended the company's claims handling, saying it is a way to
crack down on fraudulent claims that drive up insurance premiums. Allstate
notes that Kentucky's Department of Insurance found the practice to be
legal.
The company also accused
the plaintiff's lawyers of selectively quoting and distorting its internal
documents.
Barfield said Hager's
lawyer Paul Kaplan, who is working with Golden on the case, dragged out the
claim by refusing to hand over medical records of a prior medical condition.
She said Allstate was justified in originally classifying the wreck as a
minor accident, since Hager's vehicle only had a small dent on the rear
bumper.
Allstate is also opposing
Hager's motion to seek class-action status, saying her claim is not
representative of passengers in low-impact accidents. Barfield also said
there are so many individual factors in each accident that a class-action
suit "would be a nightmare."
"Thousands of mini trials
would have to take place," she said.
Both sides are waiting
for Clark's ruling on the class-action issue. He gave no indication
yesterday when that might come. Hager's trial is scheduled for September.
http://www.wkyt.com/Global/story.asp?S=3340712
Judge
considering class-action status for lawsuit
LEXINGTON, Ky.
Attorneys have asked a judge to grant class-action status to a lawsuit filed by
a Richmond, Kentucky woman against Allstate Insurance Company.
Geneva Hager
alleges Allstate forces claimants to file costly and time-consuming litigation
to get a fair offer for damage claims. If the lawsuit
is given class certification, it could affect thousands who have been injured in
wrecks with minimal property damage and filed claims against Allstate in the
last decade.
Hager suffered neck and lower back injuries after her vehicle was rear-ended by a truck insured by Allstate in 1997. The insurance company paid Hager 25-thousand dollars more than five years ago. That was the policy limit for the truck's driver, Thomas Lapointe Junior. But Hager's attorneys argue it was only offered days after Fayette Circuit Court Judge Thomas Clark set a trial date over her claim.
Hager's
attorneys argue that Allstate did not act in good faith and they question
whether Allstate's protocol for handling what the company calls "minor impact,
soft tissue" claims violates Kentucky's Unfair Claims Settlement Practices Act.
Allstate
contends it looks at each claim individually. It said separating low-impact
wrecks is a legitimate way of weeding out fraudulent claims.