Glossary of Insurance Terms
Check the first letter of definition
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
The definitions appearing in this Glossary are provided
solely for general informational purposes. They are
not intended to be complete descriptions of all terms,
conditions and exclusions applicable to the products
and services defined. As well, in the case of any inconsistency
between the definitions in this Glossary and the definitions
appearing in the actual policy, the definitions contained
in the actual policy shall govern.
A
ACCIDENT – An unexpected
event, which happens by chance and is not expected in
the normal course of events.
ACT OF GOD – A sudden
and violent act of nature, which could not have been
foreseen or prevented. Examples: flood, earthquake
ACTUAL
CASH VALUE – The current cost of replacing an
article with a similar one in the same condition. Any
item has three basic values: original cost, actual
cash value, and replacement value. For example, if
you originally paid $400 for your living room couch;
its actual cash value might be $175. But if it's destroyed
in a fire, replacing it will cost you $800.
ADDITIONAL INTEREST INSURED – Another
person or company who may be liable for an accident involving
an insured or an insured vehicle and who has been named
as an Additional Interest Insured under the policy.
ADDITIONAL PREMIUM – An
extra charge for an alteration, during the policy period,
which increases the hazard or the Company's liability.
ADJUSTER – A person
who investigates a loss and negotiates settlement with
the claimant on the Company's behalf.
ALL PERILS – An optional
coverage designed to provide protection for your vehicle
for all types of losses except those specifically excluded
in your policy. All perils coverage is the most complete
coverage you can select to protect yourself from loss
or damage to your own vehicle. This coverage is optional
and may be purchased in addition to the mandatory coverages
required by law, and it is subject to a deductible.
ALL RISK – Coverage
against loss or damage from all perils except those specifically
excluded.
AMOUNT OF RISK – The
Company's total liability at a specific location
APPLICATION (APP) – A
form on which the prospective insured states facts requested
by the insurance company and on the basis of which (together
with any information from other sources) the insurance
company decides whether or not to accept the risk, modify
the coverage offered, or decline the risk.
APPRAISAL – A valuation
of property made for determining its insurable value
or the amount of loss sustained.
ARSON – The willful
and malicious burning of property.
ASSUMED LIABILITY – Liability,
which would not rest upon a person except that he has
accepted responsibility by contract expressed or implied.
This is also known as contractual liability.
ASSURANCE – Same as "insurance".
ASSURED – Same as "insured".
ASSURER – Same as "insurer" (insurance
company).
AUTHORIZATION – The
power or right to act on behalf of another.
AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE – Coverage
on the risks associated with driving or owning an automobile.
It can include collision, liability, comprehensive, medical,
and uninsured motorist coverages.
AVOIDANCE OF RISK – Taking
steps to remove a hazard, engage in an alternative activity,
or otherwise end a specific exposure.
B
BASIC RATE – The
standard charge for a given type of risk.
BI/PD – Bodily Injury
/ Property Damage Liability Coverage.
BINDER – A temporary
or preliminary agreement, which provides coverage until
a policy can be written or delivered.
BODILY INJURY – Term
used in Auto and Casualty policies meaning physical injury,
including sickness, disease, mental injury, shock or
death.
BODILY INJURY LIABILITY – Pays
when an insured person is legally liable for bodily injury
or death caused by your vehicle or your operation of
most non-owned vehicles. This coverage also pays for
your legal defense if you are sued.
BROAD FORM – Any of
the commercial or personal lines property forms which
provide coverage on a named perils basis. This form normally
adds the Extended Coverage and Vandalism and Malicious
Mischief coverages. This form is generally used for coverages
on a Homeowners Policy
BROKER – An independent
person or firm who acts on behalf of the insured in placing
business with the insurance company. Responsible for
the collection of premiums but having no authority to
give coverage on the insurance company's behalf without
their specific agreement. Compensation is on a commission
basis.
BURGLARY – Unlawful removal of property
from premises involving visible forcible entry.
BUSINESS INTERRUPTION – Insurance
against business expenses and loss of income resulting
from fire or other insured peril.
C
CANCELLATION – Termination
of an insurance coverage during the policy period by
the voluntary act of the insurance company or insured,
effected in accordance with provisions in the contract
or by mutual agreement.
CATASTROPHE – A sudden,
great disaster.
CIVIL LIABILITY – Liability
to other motorists, pedestrians and property owners that
you assume when operating your automobile on a public
roadway. CLAIM – Notice to an insurer that under the
terms of a policy, a loss may be covered.
CLAUSE – A term used
to identify a particular part of a policy or endorsement.
COINSURANCE – In property
insurance, a clause under which the insured shares in
losses to the extent that he is underinsured at the time
of loss.
COLLISION
COVERAGE – An optional coverage designed to
provide protection for your vehicle when damage occurs
as a result of a collision with another object. This
coverage is optional and may be purchased in addition
to the mandatory coverages required by law, and it
is subject to a deductible.
COMPREHENSIVE
INSURANCE – Comprehensive insurance reimburses
you for damage to your own car from causes other than
collision or overturning. The comprehensive portion
of your policy pays for loss due to perils like hail,
flood, theft, fire, glass breakage, falling objects,
missiles, explosions, earthquakes, windstorms, vandalism
or malicious mischief, riot or civil commotion, and
collision with a bird or an animal.
When you look at a policy's comprehensive coverage,
check for exclusions or limitations.
If you have a special audio system installed in your
car, for example, you should make sure your policy would
cover the cost of the equipment if it were damaged or
stolen.
It's also important to know if the policy pays for
the actual cash value of damaged
or stolen property (its current value after depreciation
has been subtracted or the full amount required to replace
it today.)
COMPULSORY INSURANCE – Any
form of insurance, which is required by law.
CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGE – A
loss, which is an indirect result of an accident or fire,
e.g. food spoiled through breakdown of a refrigerator.
COVER – To insure.
COVERAGE – Insurance.
D
DECLARATIONS (DEC SHEET) – A
term used in insurance for the portion of the contract
which contains information such as the name and address
of the insured, the property insured, its location and
description, the policy period, the amount of insurance
coverage, applicable premiums, and supplemental representations
by the insured.
- the types of coverage you have elected;
- the limit for each coverage;
- the cost for each coverage;
- the specified vehicles covered by the policy;
- the types of coverage for each vehicle covered
by the policy; and
- other information applicable to the policy.
DEDUCTIBLE – The portion
of a loss that you are required to pay before your insurance
coverage will respond. Deductibles can be used to reduce
your physical damage premiums. For example, if you owned
a policy with a $200 deductible and you suffered a covered
loss totaling $1,000, you would pay the first $200 and
the insurance company would pay the remaining $800. If
the loss were only $200, you would pay the entire amount
and the insurance company would pay nothing.
DEPRECIATION – Decrease
in the value of property over a period of time due to
use, wear, tear, and obsolescence. For example, if you
paid $500 for a television set five years ago, its current
value minus depreciation might be only $125, for example.
DIRECT LOSS (OR DAMAGE) – A
loss, which is a direct consequence of a particular peril.
Fire damage to a refrigerator would be a direct loss.
Spoiling of food in the refrigerator as a result of the
fire damage would be an indirect loss.
DIRECT WRITER – An
insurance company, which sells its policies through salaried
employees (licensed agents) who represent it exclusively,
rather than through independent local agents, who represent
several insurance companies.
E
EARTHQUAKE INSURANCE – Insurance
covering damage caused by an earthquake as defined in
the contract.
EFFECTIVE DATE – The
date on which an insurance policy or bond goes into effect,
and from which protection is furnished.
EMBEZZLEMENT – The
fraudulent use of money or property, which has been entrusted
to one's care.
EMPLOYERS LIABILITY INSURANCE – Coverage
against common law liability of an employer for accidents
to employees, as distinguished from liability imposed
by a workers' compensation law.
ENDORSEMENT – Amendment
to the policy used to add or delete coverage. Also referred
to as a "rider."
EXCLUSIONS – Certain
causes and conditions, listed in the policy, which are
not covered.
EXPIRATION – The date
upon which a policy will end.
EXPOSURE – Degree
of hazard threatening a risk because of external or internal
physical conditions.
EXTENDED COVERAGE (EC) – A
common extension of property insurance beyond coverage
for fire and lightning. Extended coverage adds insurance
against loss by the perils of windstorm, hail, explosion,
riot and riot attending a strike (civil commotion), aircraft
damage, vehicle damage, smoke damage and volcanic eruption.
F
FAIR MARKET VALUE – The
price that a willing buyer would pay a willing seller,
neither being under any compulsion to sell or buy.
FIRE – Combustion
sufficient to produce a spark, flame, or glow and which
is hostile (as opposed to friendly – i.e., not in the
place where it is intended to be, such as in a furnace.)
FIRE INSURANCE – Coverage
for loss of or damage to a building and/or contents due
to fire.
FIRE RESISTIVE CONSTRUCTION – A
building, which has exterior walls, floors, and roof
constructed of masonry or other fire-resistive materials.
FLOATER POLICY – A
policy under the terms of which protection follows moveable
property, covering it wherever it may be.
FLOOD INSURANCE – A
form of insurance designed to reimburse property owners
from loss due to the defined peril of flood. Usually
sold in connection with a government Flood Insurance
plan.
FORGERY – In general,
any false writing with intent to defraud.
FORM – An insurance
policy itself or riders and endorsements attached to
it.
FORTUITOUS EVENT – An
unforeseen accident.
G
GARAGING LOCATION – The
postal code where your vehicle is parked or garaged when
not in use. This is usually your primary residence.
GRACE PERIOD – A period
after the premium due date, during which an overdue premium
may be paid without penalty. The policy remains in force
throughout this period.
H
HAZARD – A specific
situation that increases the probability of the occurrence
of loss arising from a peril, or that may influence the
extent of the loss. For example, accident, sickness,
fire, flood, liability, burglary, and explosion are perils.
Slippery floors, unsanitary conditions, shingled roofs,
congested traffic, unguarded premises, and uninspected
boilers are also hazards.
HOMEOWNER INSURANCE – An
elective combination of coverages for the risks of owning
a home. Can include losses due to fire, burglary, vandalism,
earthquake, and other perils.
HOUSEKEEPING – The
general care, cleanliness and maintenance of an insured
property.
I
IMPROVEMENTS AND BETTERMENTS – Additions
or changes made by a lessee at his own cost to a building
that he is occupying, which enhance its value. These
become part of the realty and require special insurance
consideration.
INDEMNIFY – To restore
the victim of a loss, in whole or in part, by payment,
repair, or replacement.
INDIRECT LOSS (OR DAMAGE) – Loss
resulting from a peril, but not caused directly and immediately
thereby. For example: Loss of property due to fire is
a direct loss, while the loss of rental income as the
result of the fire would be an indirect loss.
IN-FORCE – Insurance
on which the premiums are being paid or have been fully
paid. In life insurance, usually refers to insurance
by face amount. In health, usually refers to premium
volume being paid to insurance company or insurance companies
in aggregate.
INLAND MARINE INSURANCE – A
branch of the insurance business which developed from
the insuring of shipments which did not involve ocean
voyages. Exposures eligible for this form of protection
are described in the nation-wide definition of Marine
Insurance. Such diverse properties as bridges tunnels,
jewellery and furs can now be written under Inland Marine
forms.
INSPECTION – Independent
checking on facts about an applicant or claimant, usually
by a commercial inspection agency.
INSURABILITY – Acceptability
of an applicant for insurance to the insurance company.
INSURANCE – A formal
social device for reducing risk by transferring the risks
of several individual entities to an insurer. The insurer
agrees, for a consideration, to assume, to a specified
extent, the losses suffered by the insured.
INSURANCE POLICY – Legal
document issued to the insured setting out the terms
of the contract of insurance.
INSURANCE TO VALUE – Insurance
written in an amount approximating the value of the property
insured.
INSURED – The person
(or persons) whose risk of financial loss from an insured
peril is protected by the policy. Sometimes call the "policyholder".
INSURER – The Insurance
Company.
J
JOINT TENANCY – Ownership
of property shared equally by two or more parties under
which the survivor assumes complete ownership. This is
different from a tenancy in common where the heirs of
a deceased party to the tenancy inherit his or her share.
K
L
LAPSE – Termination
of a policy because of failure to pay the premium.
LESSEE – The person,
to whom a lease is granted, commonly called the tenant.
LESSOR – The person
granting a lease, also known as the landlord.
LIABILITY INSURANCE – In
an accident where you are charged with injuring another
person or damaging his or her property, liability insurance
pays the cost of your legal defense, as well as the cost
of any damages for which you are found legally responsible.
Liability, Collision and Comprehensive
These are the three main types of coverage available
in an auto insurance policy. Liability pays
other people if you've injured them or damaged their
property. Collision pays to
repair damage to your car caused by (what else?) collisions. Comprehensive pays
you for your losses due to theft and other calamities
that are unrelated to collisions – like damage from hail,
fire, vandalism, floods, etc.
LIABILITY LIMITS – The
sum or sums beyond which a liability insurance company
does not protect the insured on a particular policy.
LIBEL – A written
statement about someone, which is personally injurious
to that individual.
LIMIT OF LIABILITY – The
maximum amount, which an insurance company agrees to
pay in case of loss.
LIMITS – Maximum amount
a policy will pay either overall or under a particular
coverage.
LOSS – Generally refers
to:
- the amount of reduction in the value of an
insured's property caused by an insured peril,
- the amount sought through an insured's claim,
or
- the amount paid on behalf of an insured under
an insurance contract.
LOSS OF USE INSURANCE – Coverage
to compensate an insured for the loss of use of property
if it cannot be used because of a peril covered by the
policy.
M
MARKET VALUE – The
price for which something would sell, especially the
value of certain types of assets, such as stocks and
bonds. It is based on what they would sell for under
current market conditions. For example, common stock
market value would be the price of the stock as of a
specified date.
MATERIAL MISREPRESENTATION – The
policyholder / applicant makes a false statement of any
material (important) fact on his/her application. For
instance, the policyholder provides false information
regarding the location where the vehicle is garaged.
MORAL HAZARD – A condition
of morals or habits that increase the probability of
a loss from a peril.
MORALE HAZARD – An
attitude that increases the probability of loss from
a peril. The attitude of, "It's insured; so why worry?" is
an example of a morale hazard.
MORTGAGE INSURANCE POLICY – In
life and health insurance, a policy the benefits from
which are intended to pay off the balance due on a mortgage
or meet the payments on a mortgage as they fall due upon
or after the death or disability of the insured.
MORTGAGEE – The creditor
to whom a mortgage is given and who lends money on the
security of the value of the property mortgaged. MORTGAGOR – The
debtor who receives money and in turn grants a mortgage
on his property as security for a loan.
N
NAMED INSURED – The
first person in whose name the insurance policy is issued.
NAMED PERILS – Named
perils are the specific dangers a policy insures you
against – such as fire, windstorm, and hail in a homeowner's
policy, for example. These perils are "named" or listed
in the policy.
NEGLIGENCE – Failure
to use that degree of care, which an ordinary person
of reasonable prudence would use under the given circumstances.
Negligence may be constituted by acts of either omission
or commission or both.
NO-FAULT INSURANCE – No-fault
insurance is designed to speed up claims payments to
accident victims and to lower the cost of auto insurance
by reducing the number of lawsuits for minor claims.
Under no-fault insurance, a person's own insurance company
pays for financial losses like medical expenses and lost
wages due to an accident, regardless of who caused it.
(In a fault system, your expenses won't be paid by the
other party's insurance company until he or she has been
proved negligent.) In exchange, the right to sue may
be restricted in some cases.
O
OCCASIONAL DRIVER – The
person who is not the primary or principal driver of
the vehicle.
OCCUPANCY – In insurance,
this term refers to the type and character of the use
of property in question.
OCCURRENCE – An event
that results in an insured loss. In some lines of insurance,
such as Liability, it is distinguished from accident
in that the loss does not have to be sudden and fortuitous
and can result from continuous or repeated exposure,
which results in bodily injury or property damage neither
expected
nor intended by the insured.
P
PARTIAL LOSS – A
loss under an insurance policy which does not either
(1) completely destroy or render worthless the insured
property, or (2) exhaust the insurance applying thereto.
PERIL – Cause of a
possible loss. For example, fire, theft, or hail.
PERSONAL ARTICLES FLOATER – Provides
all risk coverage, subject to reasonable exclusions for
valuable items such as furs, jewellery, cameras, silverware,
etc. formerly insured under separate contracts. The items
are generally listed by description and value. This can
be contrasted to the personal effects floater.
PERSONAL EFFECTS FLOATER – An
inland Marine policy covering world-wide except in the
insured's domicile, personal effects usually carried
by a tourist. In two forms, "All Risk" or Broad Form
and "Specified Perils" form.
PERSONAL INJURY – Injury
other than bodily injury arising out of false arrest
or detention, malicious prosecution, wrongful entry or
eviction, libel or slander, or violation of a person's
right to privacy committed other than in the course of
advertising, publishing, broadcasting or telecasting.
Contrast with Advertising Injury.
PERSONAL PROPERTY – Any
property of an insured other than real property. Homeowner
policies protect the personal property of family members,
and commercial forms are used to protect many types of
business personal property of an insured.
PERSONAL PROPERTY FLOATER – A
broad policy covering all personal property world-wide,
including insured's domicile.
PERSONAL PROPERTY LIMITATIONS – Don't
assume everything you own is adequately insured by a
standard homeowner's policy. The typical homeowner's
policy provides only limited coverage for many expensive
items. Extra coverage can be purchased separately.
PHYSICAL DAMAGE – A
generic term indicating actual damage to property.
PHYSICAL DAMAGE COVERAGE – Physical
damage coverage insures you against damage to your car.
The physical damage section of an automobile policy can
include both comprehensive coverage – which
protects you against theft and vandalism, among other
things – and collision coverage.
PHYSICAL HAZARD – The
material, structural, or operational features of the
risk itself, apart from the morale or moral hazards of
the persons owning or managing it.
PILFERAGE – Petty
theft, especially theft of articles in less than package
lots.
POLICY – Legal document
issued to the insured setting out the terms of the contract
of insurance.
POLICY EXPIRATION DATE – The
date when your current insurance policy expires. This
date can be found on your current Declaration (or "DEC")
page, insurance identification card, or recent cancellation
notice. This date is not to be confused with the date
of your next payment or the date when your renewal payment
is due.
POLICY LIMIT – The
maximum amount a policy will pay, either overall or under
a particular coverage.
POLICY PERIOD (OR TERM) – The
period during which the policy contract provides protection,
e.g., six months or one or three years.
POLICYHOLDER – The
person (or persons) whose risk of financial loss from
an insured peril is protected by the policy.
PREFERRED RISK – An
insurance classification indicating a risk that is superior
to the average risk on which the rate has been calculated
and thus eligible for a reduced rate.
PREMISES – The particular
location of property or a portion thereof as designated
in a policy.
PREMIUM – The amount
of money an insurance company charges for insurance coverage.
PRIMARY RESIDENCE – The
place where you will reside for the majority of your
policy term.
PRINCIPLE DRIVER – The
person who drives the car most often.
PROFESSIONAL LIABILITY INSURANCE – Liability
insurance to indemnify professionals, doctors, lawyers,
architects, etc. for loss or expense resulting from claim
on account of bodily injuries because of any malpractice,
error, or mistake committed or alleged to have been committed
by the insured in his profession.
PROHIBITED RISK – Any
class of business, which an insurance company will not
insure under any condition.
PROOF OF LOSS – A
formal statement made by the insured to the insurance
company regarding a loss. The purpose of the proof of
loss is to place before the company sufficient information
concerning the loss to enable it to determine its liability
under the policy.
PROPERTY DAMAGE LIABILITY – Pays
when an insured person is legally liable for damage to
the property of others caused by your vehicle or your
operation of most non-owned vehicles. This coverage also
pays for your legal defense costs if you are sued.
PROPERTY DAMAGE UNINSURED
MOTORIST – Property damage uninsured or underinsured
coverage protects you in situations where your vehicle
has been wrecked by another driver who doesn't have
adequate coverage or no insurance at all, and can't
pay for your losses. With this coverage, your own insurance
company would pay up to the limit of your policy, to
have your car fixed or replaced.
PROPERTY INSURANCE – Property
Insurance indemnifies an insured whose property is stolen,
damaged, or destroyed by a covered peril. The term property
insurance includes direct or indirect property losses
covered in several lines of insurance.
PROTECTION –
- Term used interchangeably with the word "coverage" to
denote the insurance provided under the terms of
a policy.
- Term used to indicate the existence of fire-fighting
facilities in an area known as a "protected" area.
Q
QUOTE – An estimate
of the cost of insurance, based on information supplied
to the insurance company by the applicant.
R
RATE – The per unit
cost of insurance. (See also Premium).
RATED – Usually used
in combination, rated-up or rated policy. A policy issued
with an extra premium charge
REIMBURSEMENT – Payment
of an amount of money related to the amount of the loss
to or on behalf of the insured upon the occurrence of
a defined loss.
REINSTATEMENT – Restoring
a lapsed policy back in force. The reinstatement may
be effective after the cancellation date, creating a
lapse of coverage. Some companies require evidence of
insurability and payment of past due premiums plus interest.
REINSURANCE –
- A contract of indemnity against liability by
which the insurance company procures another insurance
to insure it against loss or liability by reason
of the original insurance.
- Insurance by one insurance company of all or
part of a risk accepted by it with another insurance
company which agrees to reimburse the insurance company
for the portion of the claim reinsured. The insurance
company obtaining the reinsurance is called the "ceding
insurance company;" the insurance company issuing
the reinsurance is called the "reinsurer." A reinsurer
may, in turn, seek reinsurance on some portion of
the risk it has reinsured, a process known as "retrocession."
RENEWAL – The continuation
in full force and effect of something that is about to
expire. With an insurance policy it is made either by
the issuance of a new policy or renewal receipt or certificate,
to take effect upon the expiration of the old policy.
REPLACEMENT COST – The
cost of replacing property without deduction for depreciation.
RIDER – Usually known
as an endorsement, a rider is an amendment to the policy
used to add or delete coverage.
RISK –
- A chance of loss.
- A person or thing insured. (Impaired or substandard
risk: An applicant whose physical condition or moral
habits do not meet the standard on which the rate
is based).
RISK MANAGEMENT – Management
of the pure risks to which a company might be subject.
It involves analyzing all exposures to the possibility
of loss and determining how to handle these exposures
through such practices as avoiding the risk, retaining
the risk, reducing the risk, or transferring the risk,
usually by insurance.
ROBBERY – The felonious
taking, either by force or by fear of force, of the personal
property of another, commonly known as "hold-up."
S
SETTLEMENT – Usually,
a policy benefit or claim payment. It connotes an agreement
between both parties to the policy contract as to the
amount and method of payment.
SPECIFIED PERILS – An
optional coverage designed to provide basic protection
for your vehicle for loss or damage resulting from incidents
specifically stated in your policy. A few examples of
the types of losses insured under named perils coverage
include fire, lightning, theft, explosion, earthquake,
windstorm and hail. This coverage is optional and may
be purchased in addition to the mandatory coverages required
by law, and it is subject to a deductible.
SUBROGATION – The
right of an insurance company to step into the shoes
of the party whom they compensate and sue any party whom
the compensated party could have sued.
T
TENANTS POLICY – A
Homeowners form, which is specifically designed for people
who rent.
THEFT – Any act of
stealing. Theft includes larceny, burglary and robbery.
THIRD PARTY INSURANCE – Protection
of the insured against liability for damage to or destruction
of the bodies or property of others.
TOTAL LOSS – A loss
of sufficient size so that it can be said there is nothing
left of value. The complete destruction of the property.
The term is also used to mean a loss requiring the maximum
amount a policy will pay.
TRANSFER OF RISK – Shifting
all or part of a risk to another party. Insurance is
the most common method of risk transfer, but other devices,
such as hold harmless agreements, also transfer risk.
One of the four major risk management techniques. See
Risk Management.
U
UMBRELLA LIABILITY POLICY – a
policy that pays for liability losses in excess of those
covered in homeowners and auto insurance.
UNDERWRITER –
- A person trained in evaluating risks and determining
the rates and coverages that will be used for them.
- An agent, especially a life insurance agent,
who might qualify as a "field underwriter." In theory,
the agent is supposed to do some underwriting before
submitting the case to the home office underwriter;
i.e., to make a decision on the basis of facts known
to him on whether or not the risk is sound and to
report all facts known to him that might affect the
risk.
UNDERWRITING – The
process of evaluating a risk for the purpose of issuing
insurance coverage on it.
V
VANDALISM – Used synonymously
with malicious mischief; willful physical damage to property.
VANDALISM AND MALICIOUS MISCHIEF
(V&MM) – Damage or destruction to property,
which is willful. This coverage can be purchased under
many Property forms and is automatically covered under
most Homeowners policies.
VALUATION – Estimation
of the value of an item, usually by appraisal.
VIN – The vehicle
identification number (VIN) on your vehicle. This number
is usually found on the dashboard of your vehicle on
the driver's side, and is usually listed on the vehicle
registration and title. The VIN is a combination of letters
and numbers 17 characters in length that can be used
to identify the make, model, and year of your car.
W
WAIVER –
- A rider waiving (excluding) liability for a
stated cause of accident or (especially) sickness.
- A provision or rider agreeing to waive (forego)
premium payment during a period of disability.
- The giving up or surrender of a right or privilege
that is known to exist. It may be effected by the
agent, adjuster, or insurance company employee or
official orally or in writing.
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