“At Least Two Quotes”: Netizen Maliciously Complies With Insurance Company’s Demands

Spread the love

Despite the premiums we all pay them month after month, insurance companies can be shockingly stingy when it comes to actually helping us. They will wheel and deal, nitpick and obfuscate, in the hope that we simply give up or take the crumbs they offer us.

But one netizen had the chance to flip the script and make the insurance company eat its own word when they were told to come back with another quote. OP maliciously complied and did exactly as asked. Readers shared their enjoyment of someone sticking it to a hostile insurance agent and really getting their money’s worth.

Insurance companies will bend over backwards to try and limit the payouts we are entitled to

Image credits: Enver GÜLMEZ  (not the actual photo)

So one netizen saw an opportunity for malicious compliance and decided to take it

Image credits: Karolina Grabowska (not the actual photo)

Image credits: u/No_Builder7010

Insurance and boats have a long history together

Image credits: Scott Graham (not the actual photo)

OP isn’t the first and won’t be the last person to have to deal with an insurance agent that will go out of their way to prevent a claim from being honored. Often, insurance companies will maintain somewhat confusing policies or complex contracts in order to limit their own risk, often at the cost of providing good services to their customers. Even if one is using a reputable broker, it’s important to remember that most brokers get the majority of their fees from the insurance provider, not the client that they ostensibly represent. It’s not hard to see the conflict of interest here.

It’s symbolic that OP’s case involved a boat, as many of humanity’s earliest laws around risk prevention and insurance started with ships. For example, one of the oldest law codes in the world, the Codex Hammurabi, had multiple stipulations around the responsibility of ship captains and cargo losses. The Corpus Juris Civilis, which was commissioned by Justinian to codify a thousand years of Roman law, references marine insurance principles written by the city-state of Rhodes and even the Phoenicians around 1000 BCE.

Indeed, until the 14th century, most insurance laws, policies, and concepts were all tied up in ships and cargo, as the sea was still a dangerous, fickle place. No doubt ancient shipowners could relate to OP’s misfortune to have their vessel damaged while at shore. While it’s a modern misconception that contracts are a relatively recent development, it’s quite likely that OP’s story had its own versions even two thousand years ago. While unfortunately, we do not know, arguing with an insurance agent might be more of a time-honored human tradition than we might think.

Insurance companies are often too paranoid about fraud

Image credits: René Ranisch (not the actual photo)

To play the devil’s advocate, vehicle insurance fraud is still quite commonplace. Between 1999 and 2006, there were over 20,000 suspected fraudulent accidents in the UK, where people staged collisions to get overcharged for repairs. This is a shockingly high number, given the amount of cameras and general car knowledge that the average person has. These sorts of scams are perhaps why the agent in OP’s story demands two quotes, as it’s pretty easy to see how a person may collude with a mechanic or boatyard.

Given that the average person doesn’t own a boat and repair facilities are significantly less common than mechanic shops, it may seem that OP was attempting to scam this insurance company. After all, the one thing most of us know about boats is the frequent expenses they incur on their owners. As the saying goes, the two happiest days in a boat owner’s life are the days they buy it and the day they sell it. It may not be that hard to stage an exaggerated claim with a boat, but the agent went overboard by calling a client a scammer without a shred of evidence.

However, the agent should have considered the facts. The US has pretty heavy laws around insurance fraud, including prison sentences of up to twenty years in extreme cases, as well as fines and other punishments. It seems a bit strange for a person with no previous history of scams to risk all that over $2500.

OP answered some reader questions

Other commenters shared  similar stories

The post “At Least Two Quotes”: Netizen Maliciously Complies With Insurance Company’s Demands first appeared on Bored Panda.

from Bored Panda https://ift.tt/PLzOUES
via IFTTT source site : boredpanda

,

About successlifelounge

View all posts by successlifelounge →