Investigating the Extent of a Property Loss

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How the Adjuster and Insured Agree to Amount of Loss


Read the full article at https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/investigating-extent-property-loss-barry-zalma-esq-cfe and siJDEwRp9N84 and at https://zalma.com/blog plus more than 3900 posts. 


To aid the insured in his or her obligation to prove the loss, the adjuster must, on the first visit, establish with the insured a detailed scope of loss. This means that the adjuster and the insured (or the insured with his or her Public Insurance Adjuster (PA)) must walk through the insured’s house or business and agree to exactly what was damaged and destroyed as a result of the peril insured against.


The adjuster can get this agreement orally with a tape recorder or write it down on paper. The scope of loss must be detailed. Descriptions, including room dimensions; materials like moldings, flooring, wall coverings, and fixtures; information about special features, openings, casements, detailing, moldings, and other architectural features must be part of the scope of loss. The scope of loss must be as complete and accurate as possible on a first inspection.


The adjuster must never, at the time of the first inspection of the damaged property:


   1. take a quick look around and ask the insured to fill out a property loss form at his convenience;

   2. leave the insured with blank forms, except for supplemental items learned of after the initial scope was completed;

  3. take a partial scope and attempt to do the rest later;

   4. rely on the expertise of the insured’s public adjuster; or

  5. rely on a reconstruction contractor to establish the scope.


The adjuster should never make promises that cannot be kept. The adjuster must advise the insured that the adjuster will – if necessary – be retaining experts in the valuation and repair of the type of property that is involved. These experts will bid on the repair and replacement from the agreed scope. The adjuster should explain to the insured that the scope of loss may change when some demolition is done or when an expert examines the property, to change the extent of the scope and that it is just a first evaluation based only on visible damage.


Before any estimates for repair are prepared the adjuster must present the insured with a copy of the agreed scope and inform the insured that he may, if he wishes, obtain similar opinions based on the same agreed scope.


The adjuster then should prepare an estimate of the cost of repairs for comparison with the estimates made by the contractors using the scope of loss and estimating programs like Xactimate, Marshall and Swift or Boekhs.

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