This form for use in litigation against an insurance company for bad faith breach of contract. Adapt this model form to fit your needs and specific law. Not recommended for use by non-attorney.
This form for use in litigation against an insurance company for bad faith breach of contract. Adapt this model form to fit your needs and specific law. Not recommended for use by non-attorney.
A Notice of Intention to File a Claim is an optional document that a potential claimant may serve upon the defendant to extend the time period to serve and file a claim.
Instructions for service on NYCTA, MaBSTOA, and SIRTOA: E-mail this form to serviceclaims@nyct within 90 days of the incident. If your claim is not resolved, you will have one year and 90 days from the date of the incident to commence a legal action.
A Notice of Intention to File a Claim is an optional document that a potential claimant may serve upon the defendant to extend the time period to serve and file a claim.
A “Notice of Insurance Claim” is a formal written notice that the claimant (you) sends to an insurance company (the “insurer”). It informs the insurer about your intention to file an insurance claim for an injury caused by their policyholder (the “insured”).
You must file tort claims against the City with the City Comptroller. By law, claims must be filed within 90 days of the incident. The New York City Comptroller's Office is responsible for overseeing the resolution and settlement of claims filed against or on behalf of the City of New York.
Help Hotline: (212) 669-3916 Call the Comptroller's Office Help Hotline for assistance with quality of life issues, NYC pension inquiries, complaints with City agencies, ideas to improve government, to suggest audits, file a claim, and more.
The General Municipal Law requires that a Notice of Claim be served within 90 days after the claim arises. Section 50-e2 The claim will normally arise on the date of the accident (e.g., slip and fall) or the event (e.g., assault) that has given rise to the claim.
During the subrogation process, your insurance company expects your cooperation. Notify your insurer if you intend to agree to a settlement with the at-fault person or their insurance company.
When factoring comparative negligence and improper referrals, the recovery rate should be somewhere in the range of 85-90%. This requires adjusters properly identifying subrogation, assessing comparative negligence and pursuing only what they are entitled to.
You will want to immediately notify your own insurer to determine how they can assist you. A subrogation claim is not going to go away on its own. If you ignore the letter, the insurer will file a lawsuit against you, the party being held responsible, and the insurer will win, almost every time.