> > Sorry I am not sure whether this question is proper here...
> >
[quoted text clipped - 18 lines]
> might as well claim it, but nowadays they treat an inquiry, even if you
> make no claim, like a claim.
>I have given them my insurance information, and have told them to give
> me the estimate before they repair it, so that I can decide whether to
[quoted text clipped - 8 lines]
>
> Thanks!
If this is your first and only claim on your policy, I'd let the insurance
company handle it.
They May or May Not increase your premium, but even if they do, it's likely
that the increase
will be a lot smaller than if you have to pay for the repair yourself. and
the way the owner
is acting, wanting to rebuild his structure because of a little bend in the
pipe, I'd let the insurance
carrier know that he's liable to inflate his claim for the damage. Go with
the insurance...
isn't that why you HAVE insurance?
>> > Sorry I am not sure whether this question is proper here...
>> >
[quoted text clipped - 18 lines]
>> might as well claim it, but nowadays they treat an inquiry, even if you
>> make no claim, like a claim.
mrdarrett@gmail.com - 30 Aug 2006 23:45 GMT
> >I have given them my insurance information, and have told them to give
> > me the estimate before they repair it, so that I can decide whether to
[quoted text clipped - 20 lines]
> the insurance...
> isn't that why you HAVE insurance?
I agree.
Last winter, I had (my first) homeowners insurance claim - I installed
a toilet incorrectly, and ended up with 1-2 inches of (clean) water
flooding the whole house (woke up at 4am to the sound of water gushing
from the bathroom). All carpet had to be removed and replaced, at a
cost of about $4,000.
My friends said "don't involve the insurance company". I decided to
take a chance, and had the insurance take care of it. Glad I did. The
premium didn't seem to rise much, but then again, they sent me the
premium bill while the claim was still open, maybe it wasn't reflected
yet...
Good luck,
Michael
zhi - 30 Aug 2006 23:56 GMT