Beaumont Virginia Auto Insurance

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Beaumont auto insurance

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Insurance Information
Mail Order Insurer
Type of insurance company that sells policies through the mail or other mass media, eliminating need for agents.

Manual Rate
A loose-leaf manual, periodically updated or revised, that contains rules, rates and other information prepared by an insurance company or rating bureau to develop premiums for insurance policies. Hard-copy manuals have been supplemented or replaced by electronic data (CD-ROMs, computer disks, electronic networks).

Manuscript Policy
An insurance policy designed or tailored for a large commercial insured; a unique coverage written at the request of a broker or a risk manager.

Marital deduction
A reduction of an estate for estate tax purposes, which is available if the decedent is survived by his or her spouse, can be as large as the administrator or executor elects so long as it does not exceed the value of qualifying property passing to the surviving spouse.

Market Price
The price at which a security can be bought or sold at any particular time.

Master Policy
An original, complete insurance policy contract that is issued by an insurer with the understanding that certificates of insurance or underlying policies will be issued to others; for example, a master group health policy is issued to an employer while certificates are given to the employees. A master policy and underlying policies may be issued to a property owner to comply with requirements of a mortgage holder.

Material Damage
Insurance against damage to a vehicle itself. It includes automobile comprehensive, collision, fire and theft. Material damage and physical damage are terms that often are used inter- changeably.

Maximum family benefit
The largest amount in Social Security benefits that will be paid to any family unit.

McCarran-Ferguson Act
Federal legislation (U.S. Code Title 15, Chapter 20) enacted in 1945 to permit the states to continue regulating the insurance business after the Supreme Court, in U.S. v. South-Eastern Underwriters Association, overruled the decision in Paul v. Virginia, declaring insurance to be interstate commerce and therefore within Congress's constitutional authority to regulate. Under the Act, insurance is exempt from some federal antitrust statutes to the extent that it is regulated by the states. The exemption primarily applies to gathering data in concert for the purpose of ratemaking. Otherwise, antitrust laws prohibit insurers from boycotting, acting coercively, restraining trade, or violating the Sherman or Clayton Acts.

Medicaid
A state medical benefit program for persons, regardless of age, whose income and resources are insufficient to pay for health care. As of January 1, 1966, federal matching funds were provided to the states under Title XIX of the Social Security Act.

Medical Examination
The examination given by a qualified physician to determine to the insurability of an applicant. A medical examination may also be used to determine whether an insured claiming disability is actually disabled.

Medical Payments Insurance
A coverage, available in various liability insurance policies, in which their insurer agrees to reimburse the insured and others, without regard for the insured's liability, for medical or funeral expenses incurred as the result of bodily injury or death by accident under specified conditions.

Medicare
A federally administered program of hospital insurance (Part A) and supplementary medical insurance (Part B) primarily for people over 65, created by 1965 amendments to the Social Security Act. It also covers people of any age with permanent kidney failure and certain other disabilities. The Health Care Financing Administration in the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services reimburses hospitals and physicians for services to qualified patients. Part A (hospital insurance) coverage is automatic for all eligible people and is financed by a payroll tax on employers and employees. Part B (supplementary medical insurance) is a voluntary program of government-subsidized insurance requiring participants to make premium payments.

Medigap
Private insurance purchased by Medicare participants on a voluntary basis that is designed to fill the gaps in Medicare, such as coinsurance, deductibles and noncovered services (e.g., hospital stays beyond a certain length).

Minimum Benefits
A provision that a minimum amount of annuity will be paid if the regular benefit formula produces less. This minimum is usually payable only if certain service requirements are met at retirement.

Minimum Group
The minimum number of persons required to form a group insurance program under state law; the minimum number that an insurance company requires to issue a group policy.

Miscellaneous Expenses
Expenses involving hospital care other than room, board and doctors' fees, such as lab tests, drugs and radiology. Most hospital policies limit coverage for these expenses by scheduling the amounts covered or combining them for a an aggregate limit.

Misrepresentation
A false, incorrect, improper, or incomplete statement of a material fact, made in the application for a policy.

Moral Hazard
Circumstances of morals or habits that increase the probability of a loss from an insured peril. Example: An insured previously convicted of arson.

Morbidity
The frequency of the incidence of disease, illness or sickness.

Morbidity Tables
A table showing the number of individuals exposed to the risk of illness, sickness, and disease at each age, and the actual number of individuals who incurred an illness, sickness, and disease at each age.

Mortality Table
A table that indicates the number of individuals within a specified group of individuals (males, females, airline pilots, etc.), starting at a certain age, who are expected to be alive at succeeding ages. It is used to derive the "natural premium" for an individual life policy.

Motor Vehicle Records
The record maintained by a state motor vehicle department of a driver's accidents and traffic violations.

Motor Vehicle Report
Report that lists the moving violations and accidents that a driver has had in the past several years.

Multi-Peril Policy
A package policy which provides protection against a number of separate perils. Multi-peril policies are not necessarily multiple line policies, since the combined perils may be all within one insurance line.

Multiple Employer Trust (MET)
A legal trust formed by a health benefit plan sponsor to combine a number of small, unrelated employers for the purpose of providing group medical coverage on an insured or group self-insured basis.

Mutual Insurance Company
An insurance company that has no capital stock, but is owned by its policyholders, who elect a board of directors or trustees through whom business is conducted. Any earnings belong to the policyholders and may be distributed to them as policy dividends or educed premiums.

Insurance Information
Lapse
Insurance policy termination due to the insured's failure to make premium payments.

Larceny
Theft other than one involving a forcible entry (burglary) or an actual or threatened bodily harm (robbery). Many jurisdictions prefer the term theft.

Last Clear Chance Rule
The last reasonable opportunity to avoid an accident or injury. One who has the last clear chance to avoid an injury and fails to do so is usually held solely responsible, notwithstanding the injured person's own contributory negligence.

Law of Large Numbers
A principle that the larger the number of exposures considered, the more closely will reported losses equal the true probability of loss. This is the basis for the statistical expectation of loss, which determines premium rates.

Legal Reserve
Minimum reserves required by state law or regulation that life insurers must maintain to operate in that state.

Liability
An actual or potential legal obligation, duty, debt, or responsibility to another person; the obligation to compensate, in whole or part, a person harmed by one's acts or omissions. Liability insurance policies provide coverage for an insured's legal liability, excluding criminal acts, most intentional torts, and breach of contract.

Liability Insurance
Insurance that provides indemnity or compensation for a harm or wrong to a third party for which the insured is legally obligated to pay. Usually, the injury or damage is caused by the insured's negligent acts or omissions, but in some situations the law imposes strict liability without regard to negligence, and this may also be covered by liability insurance.

Liability Limits
The stipulated sum or sums beyond which an insurance company is not liable to protect the insured.

License
Legal authority granted by the state for a specified activity or business enterprise. State insurance departments grant licenses to insurance companies, agents, brokers, and other entities to transact insurance-related business within its borders.

License Bond
A bond guaranteeing that a person who has been issued a license will comply with the laws, regulations, and ordinances associated with the issuance of the license.

Lienholder
The financial institution that holds title of a vehicle until the loan is paid off.

Life Expectancy
The length of time a person of a given age can be expected to live, based on mortality tables.

Limited Collision
Physical damage protection for the insured's vehicle when damage results from impact with another object or upset. Paid ONLY if insured is LESS than 50% at fault. No deductible applies. Coverage only available in state of Michigan.

Liquidation
The conversion of an insolvent organization's assets into cash in order to pay creditors. An insurance department takes this action after it has determined that an insolvent insurer cannot be rehabilitated. Its business is wound up, and any remaining assets are used to pay policyholder claims and other creditors.

Liquor Liability Law
State or local statutes ("dram shop acts") that establish the liability of a business that sells or serves alcoholic beverages to customers for injuries caused by intoxicated customers to third parties. Laws sometimes also include people who serve alcohol to guests.

Living Trust
An ordinary trust established by a person while living to manage and distribute assets to other living persons.

Long-Term Care
Custodial care provided by a rehabilitation facility, nursing home or mental hospital on a continuum basis for chronically ill, disabled or retarded individuals. The care may be on an inpatient, outpatient, or at-home basis.

Loss
The happening of the event for which insurance pays. The amount the insurer is required to pay because of a happening against which it has insured.

Loss Avoidance
The elimination of a loss exposure by ceasing or never undertaking an activity that produces the exposure. In making this decision, the person or organization must weigh the potential value of the activity against the potential loss.

Loss Control
Prevention and reduction of losses. An insured, often in consultation with an underwriter or loss control specialist, takes measures to reduce the frequency of losses and to minimize the financial impact or severity of a loss.

Loss Expense - Allocated
An expense assigned to and recorded with a specific claim, including defense and investigation costs. Allocated claim expenses have more significance in liability insurance because of the legal costs involved in defending liability claims.

Loss Expense - Unallocated
An expense that cannot be assigned to and recorded with a specific claim. This includes claim department operating expenses such as rent, heat and electricity, and other overhead expenses.

Loss of Use / Services
Applies to a policyholder's exposure to financial loss if the part of the residence premises where the insured lives is damaged so badly that it is "not fit to live in".

Loss Payable Clause
A property insurance policy provision that authorizes the insurer to make a loss payment to a person (loss payee) other than the insured to the extent that the loss payee has an insurable interest in the property.

Loss Prevention
Measures designed to reduce the probability that a loss will occur. See also loss prevention services and loss reduction.

Loss Prevention Services
Survey, consultation, or loss control management services provided to policholders by an insurer to reduce the likelihood of accidents.

Loss Ratio
A formula used by insurers to relate loss expenses to income. Formula: (incurred losses + loss adjustment expenses) divided by earned premiums. See also accident year statistics, burning ratio, expected loss ratio, insured loss ratio.

Loss Reduction
A loss control measure designed to reduce the severity of loss occurrences.

Loss Reserve
An insurer's estimate of the amount an individual claim will ultimately cost. On an insurer's financial statement, it is the amount of estimated liabilities for known claims not yet paid and incurred but not reported claims.


Insurance Information (cont'd)
Occupational Hazards
Occupations which expose the insured to greater than normal physical danger by the very nature of the work in which the insured is engaged, and the varying periods of absence from the occupation, due to the disability, that can be expected.

Occurrence
An accident, including continuous or repeated exposure to substantially the same general, harmful conditions, that results in bodily injury or property damage during the period of an insurance policy.

Occurrence policy
A liability insurance policy that covers claims arising out of occurrences that take place during the policy period, regardless of when the claim is filed.

Ocean Marine Insurance
Insurance for sea-going vessels, including liabilities connected with them, and their cargoes.

Ocean Marine Insurance
Coverage on all types of vessels, including liabilities connected with them, and on their cargoes.

Operating Ratio
The sum of expenses and losses expressed as a percent of earned premium.

Optionally Renewable Contract
A contract of health insurance in which the insurer reserves the right to terminate the coverage at any anniversary or, in some cases, at any premium due date, but does not have the right to terminate coverage between such dates.

Ordinary Life
Synonymous With Whole Life and Straight Life - The three terms are applied to the type of policy which continues during the whole of the insured's life and provides for the payment of amount insured at this death.

Ordinary Life Insurance
Life insurance usually issued in amounts of $1,000 or more with premiums payable on an annual, semi-annual, quarterly or monthly basis.

Over-the Counter Market
A means of buying and selling securities that are not listed on a stock exchange. Negotiations are carried out by telephone or computer network.

Overhead Expense Insurance
A special form of health insurance designed to help offset overhead expenses such as office rent, utilities, employees' wages, and auditors' fees, incurred during total disability. The monthly payments during disability is not a fixed amount of indemnity as on regular disability polices, but the amount of overhead expense actually incurred, or a percentage thereof, up to the limit specified in the policy.

Overhead Insurance
A type of short-term disability income contract that reimburses the insured person for specified, fixed monthly expenses, normal and customary in the operation and conduct of his/her business or office.

Overriding Commission (Overwrite)
A commission paid to general agents or agency managers in addition to the commission paid the soliciting agent or broker.


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