Hurricane Irma damage to West Palm Beach home denied as under deductible - Roof paid in Appraisal
West Palm Beach, Florida - A two-story 3,000+ square-foot plantation-style home in the Southland Park neighborhood of West Palm Beach was damaged by hurricane Irma, resulting in water damaging several areas of the home's interior ceilings and floors. Due to the value of this home, it unfortunately carried a high deductible on its windstorm insurance. The homeowner (G.W.) contacted the public adjusters at VIP Adjusting before reporting the claim, and although it didn't start smoothly, the insured was paid enough to replace their roof, even after their deductible was applied.
The Loss - Hurricane Irma
Hurricane Irma had a hurricane-force wind field that exceeded the width of the entire state of Florida, and affected nearly the entire state as it traveled from south to north. Some homes escaped damage from the storm, while others suffered only minor damages. Many homeowners weren't so lucky and had severe damages to their homes.
Luckily for this homeowner, the hurricane damage to this home fell somewhere in between. After the storm had passed, the insured noticed there was some staining in a few areas of the home, including in some of the bedrooms, the downstairs tray ceilings in the main living area, and there was also damage in some areas of the wood flooring throughout the home.
The damages to the home
In order for the insured to have noticed the interior staining, there first had to be damages to the roof caused by the storm. VIP Adjusting's public adjuster got on that second story roof, and verified and documented the damages that allowed the water to come in.
On top of that, near the children's bedrooms, there was a musty odor and it was verified that some areas of mold did develop in the aftermath of the storm while most homes were without power.
The Insurance Claim and Outcome
Our public adjusters reported the claim on the homeowners' behalf and documented the damages while also preparing estimates of the damages. The insurance company's original inspector, perhaps in the post-storm haste, took a look at the policy's huge deductible and simply declared that the damages wouldn't exceed it. To be fair, this property's deductible was larger than most other homeowner's insurance claim value entirely.
In any event, our public adjusters persisted, submitting our estimate to the insurance company and demanding appraisal.
The appraisal process
Some insurance policies require an insurance appraiser to be neutral or disinterested in a claim. Other times it's a tactical decision to use an outside appraiser to lend credibility to the claim. In this instance, a licensed and insured general contractor with extensive insurance appraisal experience was selected as the homeowner's appraiser.
The insurance company inexplicably selected an out-of-state vice-president of a large national construction company who didn't appear to have any ties to Florida, nor had any of the reputable appraisers or umpires our public adjusters have built relationships with even heard of the guy. This struck us as odd for an insurance company marketed as a luxury homeowners insurance company, but an insurance company’s choice of appraiser isn’t up to the insured or the public adjuster. Little did we know that was only the beginning...
We initially tried to reach out to the appraiser for the insurance company, proposing umpires, only to be completely ignored. When we reached out to the insurance company after a more-than-reasonable timeframe had passed, the appraiser responded, lying that he had responded, when he had done no such thing. The insurance company's appraiser elected to carry that unprofessional behavior throughout the rest of the appraisal process.
The insurance company's appraiser was incredibly rude to our insured's appraiser, and elected to bring in "experts" whose credentials we verified did not qualify them to provide the opinions they were offering, including unlicensed contractors and individuals from out of state who were unfamiliar with Florida building practices and Florida building code.
As a result of the ongoing dispute, the umpire was invoked and an additional inspection was conducted with both appraisers and the umpire. At the umpire meeting, the insurance company's appraiser started yelling at our appraiser in the insured's home in front of the insured who had to excuse themselves from their own home.
The umpire cut that behavior off quickly, but not before the insured had to be subject to such an unprofessional outburst from their insurance company's representative.
Ultimately, the umpire agreed with our appraiser and issued an award of more than $110,000. Despite the high deductible and previously having been offered $0 by the insurance company, our client was able to replace the roof and adequately repair the interior water damages to the home.
Post-appraisal follow up
In addition to the favorable award, the insurance company was notified of the unprofessional behavior by their representative in the insured's home, and were apprised of all of this insurance company’s core values that this behavior goes against. This so-called “luxury” insurance carrier offers insurance policies that waive hurricane deductibles, and also had waived hurricane deductibles in the northeast after Superstorm Sandy, so we requested that be done here, as well as refunding the insured the costs associated with the umpire, since the dispute could have easily been resolved with a reasonable and qualified appraiser on behalf of the insurance company, as evidenced by the appraisal award in our favor. The insurance company's representative declined the deductible refund, however did agree to provide compensation for the behavior including the costs of the umpire.
St Lucie Plumbing Leak - Broken Tiles - Successful Appraisal
St. Lucie County, Florida - A single family homeowner (R.Y.) in Port St. Lucie had a burst supply line inside the slab of his home. Water was coming out of the slab in multiple locations causing significant damage.
The homeowner contacted the public adjusters at VIP Adjusting to assist him with the insurance claim process and to make sure he was fairly paid for his homeowners insurance claim.
The Loss - Supply Line Plumbing Leak - Burst Copper Pipe
A copper supply pipe inside the slab of this home burst and resulted in water damage in the insured's garage. The homeowner immediately contacted a plumber who turned off the water supply and located the break between the home's main and the kitchen, as well as a leak between the plumbing manifold and the master bathroom. The plumber noted water coming from the slab in multiple locations. In order to restore the use of the home's plumbing, the plumber performed a plumbing re-route, which is typically covered by most homeowners insurance policies.
The Damages to the home from the plumbing leak
While the homeowner initially only noticed water in the garage, during the leak detection process, the plumber noticed water escaping in multiple locations from the slab, often ending up inside the slab and escaping in other locations.
The use of a moisture meter during the inspection showed damage to drywall in several rooms, including multiple bathrooms and the kitchen, damage bathroom vanities, and damage to kitchen cabinets. In addition to the use of a moisture meter, there was also visible damage to exterior stucco where water was escaping, and multiple popped tiles and cracked tiles in the home that were not damaged prior to this plumbing leak.
The homeowner hired a water mitigation contractor to provide restoration services to the home, including removal of wet drywall, and the use of fans and blowers to dry wet materials in place, including the damaged cabinets and vanities, all to prevent mold growth. This type of water remediation was required under the homeowner’s insurance policy as part of his post-loss duty to protect the property from further damage.
The Insurance Claim and Outcome
VIP Adjusting's public adjusters reported the claim on the homeowners behalf and documented the damages while preparing an estimate on his behalf. Based on the public adjuster's presentation of damages to the insurance company, insurance initially paid $41,000 for the damages to the home, including repair to damaged drywall, replacement of tile flooring in the kitchen (but not all of the tile flooring), and a minimal repair for refacing of the cabinetry. The insurance company also paid for content manipulation, packout, and storage, including the difficult area in the garage.
VIP Adjusting's estimate prepared by our licensed public adjusters included replacement of the bathroom vanities, replacement of the damaged kitchen cabinetry, and replacement of the tile flooring throughout, including the visibly broken tiles that the insurance company did not believe were caused by the water damage.
Our public adjusters disagreed with the insurance company’s evaluation of the flooring, since the homeowner indicated it wasn't damaged prior to this leak, the cracks to the tile looked new, and not old or worn, and the damage was consistent with the dampening and drying, expansion and contraction of the slab and mortar underneath.
Resolving the claim through the appraisal process
Ultimately, as a result of the dispute for the proper payment of this claim, it ended up in appraisal. We wrote recently about the strengths and weaknesses of resolving insurance claims through the appraisal process.
For this claim, we selected an impartial third-party general contractor to act as the appraiser on behalf of the homeowner. Our appraiser and the insurance company's appraiser were able to come to agreement on the majority of the damages and reached a final appraisal award of over $85,000, more than double the initial claim payment. When all was said and done, our client was able to perform the significant renovations that restored him to his pre-loss condition.
If you've found yourself with water on the floor in your home, let VIP Adjusting's public adjuster's perform a free claim evaluation for you. Sometimes, when you think there's just a little bit of water on the floor of your garage, there can be a lot of hidden damage that can result in costly repairs. If this homeowner had waited until he started trying to make repairs to report his claim, he might have had his claim denied!
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More about damage caused by plumbing leaks
What’s covered by your insurance policy when you’ve had a plumbing leak