Counterclaims in Insurance: What You Need to Know
What is a Counterclaim?
A counterclaim is a claim made by the defendant against the plaintiff in a lawsuit. In insurance, it refers to a claim made by the insurance company against the policyholder in response to a claim originally filed by the policyholder. The insurance company initiates a counterclaim to recover costs or reduce the amount they owe to the policyholder.
Counterclaim Definition
A counterclaim is a claim by a defendant made against an opposing party in a civil lawsuit. It is initiated after the plaintiff makes the original claim. The defendant’s counterclaim acts as a separate legal action filed against the plaintiff within the same lawsuit. Usually, an insurance counterclaim refers to the insurer filing a counter lawsuit in response to the policyholder’s initial claim for damages or compensation. Through the counterclaim, the insurance company alleges that the policyholder is responsible for either all or part of the damages.
Types of Counterclaims
There are two main types of counterclaims under insurance law:
- A compulsory counterclaim that the defendant must bring in that lawsuit
- A permissive counterclaim brought at the defendant’s discretion
An insurer may file a compulsory counterclaim to recover compensation for damages or expenses if it relates directly to the policyholder’s original claim. They might also make a permissive counterclaim in situations like if there was policy fraud.
Counterclaim Example
Here is an example of how a counterclaim often works in insurance: 1. John has car insurance with ABC Insurance Company and gets into an accident. He files a collision claim, seeking compensation for $5,000 in repairs. 2. ABC Insurance investigates and alleges that John caused the accident. As per John’s policy terms, they file a counterclaim to deny his claim and recover $3,000 they recently paid out to fix damages on John’s car from an unrelated incident. So while John filed the initial claim, ABC Insurance responded with a counterclaim of their own against his claim.
Counterclaim vs. Cross Claim
A counterclaim differs from a cross claim, which is when one defendant sues another in the same lawsuit. An example is a car accident involving more than two drivers insured by different companies. If Driver A sues Drivers B and C, then Driver B could file a cross claim against Driver C, or vice versa.
Counterclaim in Insurance
Insurers may file counterclaims for reasons such as:
- Allegations the policyholder caused or is partly responsible for the damages in their filed claim
- Suspicions of fraud in the policyholder’s claim
- Recovering costs already paid out to the same policyholder
Some states limit the ability of insurers to bring certain counterclaims in bad faith. Nonetheless, many counterclaims end up valid and with merit.
Responding to a Counterclaim
If an insurance company files a counterclaim, the policyholder has a few options:
- Accept the counterclaim if valid and modify the requested compensation amount
- File a detailed reply refuting the counterclaim allegations
- Provide proof and evidence against the counterclaim
- Negotiate a settlement offer with the insurer
Having an experienced legal representative assist with responding can help. Settlements are common, but if negotiations fail, the court will decide the counterclaim’s outcome.
Proving a Counterclaim
The insurance company carries the burden of proof for their counterclaim allegations and must back them up with evidence like:
- Accident scene analysis showing factors under the policyholder’s control caused the damages
- Investigation records revealing material facts the policyholder omitted or lied about
- Documentation on previous claims paid and policy violations
In many cases, the counterclaim hinges on the specific liability clauses and compliance terms in the insurance policy. Hence both sides must evaluate the policy language closely when building their legal arguments.