|
|

You must understand
the intricacies of your disability income policy
to know if you are totally or residually disabled
in your occupation. Do not allow yourself to be confused.
Many policies provide for both total and residual
(partial) disability benefits. In such policies total
disability is usually defined as the inability to
perform the substantial and material duties of your
occupation, or some variation thereof. Residual disability
is often defined as the inability to perform one
or more duties of your regular occupation, or the
inability to perform these duties for as much time
as before, and you have suffered a loss of at least
20% of your pre-disability income.
These provisions seem strikingly similar, but they
are not. Often, a claimant may fit both the total
and residual disability definitions. In such situations,
an insurance carrier often approves residual disability
benefits quite quickly. Many claimants automatically
assume that if they are working at all they are not
totally disabled, but they must be partially or residually
disabled. However, this is often not the case and
not the protection that they have been paying premium
dollars for. Many insurance carriers utilize such
ambiguous language in writing disability income policies
because claimants, unfamiliar with contract interpretation,
will often rely on the carrier’s reading of
the policy. However, it is important to note that
in most states, ambiguous contract language is decided
in favor of the insured. Many individuals are not
aware of this fact and thus, look to the writer of
the contract for clarification, their insurance carrier.
The reason insurance carriers would rather pay residual
disability benefits rather than total disability
benefits is simple. Most disability policies provide
that an individual with a partial disability will
only be paid through the age of 65, while an individual
on total disability benefits may be paid for the
duration of the individual’s life. Moreover,
partial disability benefits are based on the percentage
of earned income lost. Thus, an individual receiving
residual, rather than total disability benefits may
receive a reduced benefit or no benefit at all if
his monthly income exceeds a certain percentage of
pre-disability earnings. Finally, in the event of
a buyout of the contract, an individual would be
more apt to surrender his or her contract for a smaller
settlement, if the individual’s disability
were deemed partial rather than total. This practice
saves insurance carriers hundreds of millions of
dollars each year.
We have uploaded
for your review a summary of a disability case we
recently handled that dealt with the issue of Total
v. Residual disability benefits. The name of he doctor
has been changed for confidentiality reasons. 
|