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Blog

Category: Blog

Winning the Subro Response Game to the tune of $18 Million Dollars!

Win at Subrogation
Posted on July 10, 2025 by Lauren Clark

One of the greatest challenges we had in my old claim’s organization was getting adjusters to respond to inbound subrogation demands and arbs.   As one of the largest insurers in the nation these missed responses resulted in substantial payments that could have been avoided with a more robust subrogation response process in place.

Our situation was not unique but rather one that many insurers, TPA’s and self-insured’s grapple with.   Why does this phenomenon occur?  In our case we built an entire Six Sigma study around missed responses it came down to a very simple and predictable answer.  Adjusters were busy.  With a growing business, staff promotions, attrition, and ever evolving claims assignment models something simply had to give.

For today’s blog I want to share a recent case study from a Top 5 carrier.   They were challenged with a backlog of inbound arbitrations and asked SubroIQ to assist them in addressing this challenge.

This response task involved months of work and thousands of files worth tens of millions of dollars.  At the end of the project the client evaluated their success based upon internal criteria and determined that the SubroIQ response approach resulted in an $18 million dollar savings!

How can a response solution help you?

Everyone is busy.  A subro demand that doesn’t get responded to has a high probability of turning into an arbitration filing that doesn’t get responded to.    This will likely lead to an award for the filing company that will be paid by the company that failed to respond.   This is real money that adds up. Fast!

The SubroIQ response solution was developed specifically to help carriers, TPA’s and self-insureds get out in front of volume challenges.  By leveraging this approach, it creates immediate bandwidth for adjusters and/or subrogation personnel to focus on higher probability, higher value claims to maximize bottom line results.

SubroIQ has positioned itself as a leader in the subrogation space with a customized approach that is configurable to any organization.  Their mission is to fit into the claims ecosystem as a plug and play solution.   Unlike a one size fits all approach, SubroIQ uses over 600 years of claims expertise to identify gaps in the end to end recovery process.    The result has been the recovery of over one billion dollars for clients.

Chris Tidball is an Executive Claims Consultant with SubroIQ, a leading provider of subrogation and claims consulting services.  He spent more than 25 years with multiple leading carriers as an adjuster, manager, and executive.   He is the author of multiple books including Re-Adjusted:  Taking Your Claims Organization From Ordinary to Extraordinary.   He can be reached at christopher.tidball@subroiq.com

Posted in BlogTagged blog, Subrogation

10 Areas To Avoid in A Subrogation Journey

subrogation puzzle
Posted on June 27, 2025 by Lauren Clark

“Show me the money.” – Rod Tidwell in Jerry Maguire

Next year is the 30th anniversary of the 1996 romantic comedy Jerry Maguire. Its director, Cameron Crowe, just published the entire 5,000-word mission statement he wrote for his crisis-hit sports agent played by Tom Cruise. The memo, entitled The Things We Think and Do Not Say laments some of the dysfunctions within the world of sports agents and endeavored to improve the profession. In many ways, this article is also a mission statement revealing critical mistakes we see with some frequency within the industry and providing suggestions as to how to avoid repeating them. Subrogation is the necessary evil of recovering as much of our insureds’ claim dollars as possible in order to help hold down insurance premiums and soften the blow a claim event might otherwise have on them. No industry is perfect, and insurance is no exception. Thirty-three years of subrogation litigation experience has distilled ten of the most common mistakes which we see clients continuing to make when it comes to recognizing and acting on subrogation potential I divulge and discuss them in this article, much like Jerry Maguire did, not as a criticism of the clients to whom we owe the living we make, but as a healthy reminder to those who do not wish to repeat them. The following are the ten most common mistakes we see repeated within our industry in order of the frequency with which we see them made.

(1) DELAY OF GAME PENALTY: Waiting too Long to Involve Subrogation Counsel

The dollars lost because claims with subrogation potential are referred to subrogation counsel mere weeks, days, or even hours before a statute of limitations or other deadline is about to expire, is almost incalculable. I refer not to cases in which subrogation potential is discovered late or notice of a pending third-party action filed by the insured or claimant is received late in the game. Rather, I refer to files in which subrogation potential is obvious, but a conscious decision is made to avoid incurring subrogation attorneys’ fees or costs resulting in the wholesale avoidance of referring the file. Claims deteriorate with age and we see far too many files entrusted to us at the very last moment which contain literally dozens of identical demand letters – with little or no substance or subrogation “proof” to support them – sent to the third-party carrier every six weeks like clockwork for years, each a carbon copy of the one which preceded it. When the file is submitted to subrogation counsel with very little time left on the clock, there is frequently no opportunity to conduct a thorough investigation. Evidence has disappeared or been destroyed. Deadlines have passed. Lawsuits have been settled. Releases have been signed. Witnesses have vanished or been “reached” by the other side. Money has been lost. It is the number one subrogation-killer we have seen over the years, in terms of the volume of dollars lost and the number of claim files.

The most surprising aspect of this particular insurance practice is it appears to transcend file size. It is one thing to sit on a $3,500 med pay claim – quite another on a $350,000 workers’ compensation claim. Trial lawyers have developed a well-known body of law in almost every state which allows them to take tremendous advantage of carriers who protect their interests either passively or not at all. Subrogation is a serious investment that deserves both respect and a dedication of time and resources. A successful subrogation program is never an accident and it cannot be developed as an after-thought or a last resort. It is always the result of a commitment to excellence, informed decision-making and planning, subrogation knowledge, an investment of time and money, and an intensely-focused effort and perseverance.

(2) A HOT CUP OF MCDONALD’S COFFEE: Failure to Recognize Third-Party Liability

The biggest obstacle to larger and quicker subrogation recoveries is us. We are our own worst enemy. Our industry is, by design, steeped in the mind-set of limiting liability. Even the most experienced claims adjusters see the comparative fault of their insured before they see the liability exposure of the tortfeasor. Your defense lawyers see a myriad of ways to defend a claim, but very few ways to aggressively prosecute one. It is what makes them good at what they do. Our industry shares a defense myopia that has served us well in the defense of claims of all types and sizes. Human nature dictates that we sing for life the song we learn in our youth. As stated so poignantly in the Suzzy Kassem anthology, Rise Up and Salute the Sun:

If the Creator stood before a million men with the light of a million lamps, only a few would truly see him because the truth is already alive in their hearts. Truth can only be seen by those with truth in them. He who does not have Truth in his heart, will always be blind to it.

Claims professionals are often blind to liability. Your greatest strength is also your greatest weakness. As subrogation counsel, we are plaintiffs’ trial lawyers for the insured industry; hired guns that push your subrogation claims to the maximum – the only way to achieve maximum recovery in each file. It is what makes us good at what we do. Claims professionals reminisce at the water cooler about the ridiculous verdict in the McDonald’s hot coffee case – a case which has become the poster child for tort reform across America. Yet, the true facts of the case reveal a well-litigated claim, an aggressive trial lawyer and a brash, cavalier defense in which the defense witnesses gave off an air of indifference to the 700 serious burn cases which preceded those of the 79-year-old grandmother named Stella Liebeck, whose full thickness third-degree burns over 6 percent of her body, including her inner thighs, perineum, buttocks and genital and groin areas, put her in the hospital for eight days while she underwent skin grafting and burn debridement treatment. They looked past the fact that Lieback lost 20 pounds (nearly 20 percent of her body weight), reducing her down to 83 pounds. They ignored the fact that her grandson was driving and he had pulled over in a McDonald’s parking spot while attempting to pull the far side of the lid toward her to add sweetener, when the cup exploded in her hands. Two years of medical treatment and extensive medical bills followed. The creativity and aggressive pursuit of that infamous case should be the poster child for aggressive subrogation programs rather than a case to be ridiculed as emblematic of an out-of-control civil justice system.

Subrogation opportunities are most frequently disguised as hard work, so it is no wonder they are often not recognized. Our industry is no stranger to hard work. But, human nature is such that the over-worked claims professional with a full plate simply adjusting claims will rationalize away subrogation opportunities because it means willingly accepting more work and more responsibility. Compound this with the fact that recognizing third-party liability often requires thinking like a plaintiff’s attorney and having a working knowledge of tort law from premises liability to product liability. It requires in-depth knowledge of statute of limitations and repose, and an ability to make quick and accurate decisions regarding engaging experts, putting the right people on notice, and taking steps to preserve rights which could easily be lost. Wearing two hats is never easy, but subrogation requires exactly that. Dedicated subrogation staff makes overcoming the fatal mistake of not recognizing recovery potential from day one. Irony is a word often misused. But, it is truly ironic that the four largest subrogation recoveries our firm has ever made were all made in cases in which the insurer or their designated TPA had indicated in the file that there was no subrogation potential.

The best way to overcome an innate inability to recognize third-party tort liability is training. A claims handler doesn’t have to agree with enforcing third-party product strict liability, but they do have to take every reasonable effort to produce a recovery on behalf of their insured employer. Our firm presents a series of webinars and training programs dedicated to immersing the claims professional in a thorough overview of tort law and tort opportunities. Graduates recognize opportunity and know how and why the fact that simply because your insured does the rear-ending in a rear-end collision doesn’t necessarily foreclose the potential for third-party subrogation. Understanding and being familiar with statutory and case law in all jurisdictions gives them the tools to recognize and take appropriate action on subrogation potential that the average claims professional might otherwise overlook. Hard work doesn’t guarantee success – but, a lack of hard work almost always leaves significant claim dollars unrecovered.

(3) THE PARABLE OF THE PEBBLES: Lack of Timely/Thorough Subrogation Investigation

Whether a claim is large or small – the burden is the same. The subrogated carrier has the burden of proving: (1) that the defendant was negligent (or that a product was defective); (2) that this negligence proximately caused the damages which the carrier paid for; and (3) the amount and nature of those damages. If it fails with regard to any one of these elements, there will be no subrogation recovery. Liability carriers are quick to latch on to weaknesses in subrogation files and often deny claims simply because the demand letter doesn’t address these three elements satisfactorily. Like a chain, a subrogation claim is only as strong as its weakest link and that weakest link is almost always created early in the claim, when memories are fresh and evidence is available. The first few days after a loss are critical – the first and often only chance anyone may have to identify, retain, document, investigate, and record valuable information on which a future subrogation lawsuit will depend. Things which may seem to have little or no meaning or importance may turn out to be the lynchpin of an entire subrogation action. An ancient parable is relevant here and goes something like this:

A group of traveling nomads was preparing to make camp for the evening, when suddenly they were surrounded by a great light. They knew instantly they were in the presence of a celestial being. A loud voice spoke from the heavens, “Gather as many pebbles as you can. Put them in your saddle bags. Travel a day’s journey. Tomorrow night you will be both glad and sad.” Then, as quickly as it had appeared, the voice and the light disappeared. The nomads looked at one another in disbelief. They had expected the revelation of a great universal truth – the key to great wealth or happiness. But instead, they were given a menial task that made no sense. Dejected, each one did pick up a few pebbles and put them in their saddle bags. The following morning they broke camp and traveled a day’s journey. That evening, while making camp once again, they reached into their saddle bags and discovered that the few pebbles they had gathered the night before had turned into beautiful and brilliant diamonds! Indeed, they were both glad and sad, just as the voice had promised. They were glad they now had beautiful and valuable diamonds. But, they were very sad they had not gathered and filled their saddlebags with pebbles when they had the opportunity.

Subrogation investigation is much like the opportunity the nomads had to gather pebbles. You don’t know which pebbles might turn out to be valuable, so you conduct your investigation promptly as though they are all valuable. It is important to lock witnesses into positions and testimony favorable to your subrogation case, before the other side gets a hold of them. It is sometimes urgent and legally necessary to place government entities on notice of your claim. Early and thorough investigation often uncovers additional third parties and sources of recovery, including the occasional existence of other insurance which may be available to contribute to the loss.

Some cases are virtually worthless – even with the best of liability facts – unless some investigation and preservation of evidence is undertaken almost immediately. Premises liability cases involving slip and falls, ice and snow, or dangerous conditions on property require some sort of preservation or recording of the conditions existing at the time of the fall. Such cases depend entirely on whether the condition was “unreasonably dangerous” and “open and obvious.” In most cases, relying on the claimant’s or insured’s memory in order to meet our burden of proof guts such files of virtually all value. Cases involving livestock which escape a fenced-in area and wander onto a busy highway almost always require the subrogated carrier to prove that the livestock owner was negligent. This means proving in court that a broken fence or gate that wasn’t repaired or other negligence on the part of the owner caused the accident. This type of evidence can only be preserved at or near the time of the loss and before repairs or spoliation take place.

If a product is involved in a subrogation claim, it is our burden to prove a defect or that there was negligence by a third party in maintaining the product. We also have to prove that the condition of the product was unchanged at the time of the injury or damage from the date it was manufactured. These are impossible burdens to meet if the product is not preserved and the chain of custody is not carefully documented and protected. When an appliance which causes a fire is still under warranty and the repair technician (often an “authorized service company”) takes the appliance or the faulty part, this evidence is often misplaced in the shuffle. Sometimes we are able to argue spoliation by the manufacturer, but it much easier and cheaper to simply preserve the part.

When the cause of a loss seems apparent, don’t stop with simply securing only the product or evidence bearing most directly on the case. Bear in mind that the targets of your investigation will almost always find alternate causes and persons to blame and will quickly cry spoliation if evidence, which they claim may exonerate them, is gone or damaged. Think like the defendant. Take efforts to disprove and eliminate the alternate theories your subrogation counsel will ultimately face. If the claim is significant, engage subrogation counsel or an investigator to conduct the investigation and take thorough statements of all witnesses and, if called for, timely engage experts who are qualified and experienced. The extra work of properly investigating a claim often deters claims handlers from stuffing their saddlebags full of pebbles, but every case is different, and it is often the pebble you leave behind that turns out to hold the key to a full recovery. The pebbles might not turn into brilliant diamonds as in the parable, but they literally can and often do translate into subrogation dollars realized.

Even in inspecting the loss, the client (and sometimes even the expert) doesn’t keep any of the evidence. This is especially true when insurance clients try to cut corners by not having an expert out to the loss scene, but instead rely on plumbers or technicians to tell them what failed. The plumbers or technicians may uncover what failed, but they are not qualified to testify to that in court. Unless they preserve the product and other possible suspects the defendant is sure to blame the loss on, an expert retained at a later date will not be able to offer an opinion and the case will be rendered worthless.

Spoliation-  the defense that a party to a suit has somehow damaged or lost evidence which is crucial to the defense of a case – is becoming a very popular claim today, even if it doesn’t exist. Creative theories which blame products located across the room from a point of origin are frequently used to create doubt in the mind of jurors – often with great success.

Investigate cases early and thoroughly. Choose the right expert and insist on reports which pinpoint a cause and an origin of a fire or a water loss. Ben Franklin’s aphorism, “An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure” is very accurate when it comes to describing the value of investing early in subrogation potential. Kicking the can down the road frequently leads to significant recovery potential being lost or seriously compromised. As Ayn Rand famously said, “We can ignore reality, but we cannot ignore the consequences of ignoring reality.”

(4) GETTING WHAT YOU PAY FOR: Using Cut-Rate Vendors and Low Bidders is More Expensive

Many corporate decisions made with the best of intentions can be some of the most detrimental to subrogation performance. This is irony at its purest. When making decisions on ways to “save” money when it comes to subrogation, the real, total cost often looks very different. This “mistake” must be assessed when taking into consideration total costs of out-sourcing subrogation. John Glenn was often asked what he was thinking as he was about to be launched into orbit in the nose of a giant rocket. His reply is instructive: “Well, the answer to that one is easy. I felt exactly how you would feel if you were getting ready to launch and knew you were sitting on top of two million parts – all built by the lowest bidder.” The trend today is seemingly to fall victim to slick marketing promotions by third-party adjusting companies and subrogation vendors – often owned by larger law firms with control over the employees.

Litigation is rarely cheap, but it is often necessary. Nowhere is this truer than in the area of insurance subrogation, where those who resist paying subrogation claims assume that insurance companies are loath to pull the trigger and file suit. As a result, liability insurers almost never pay full value on subrogation claims with even the clearest liability facts. For decades, the insurance industry have paid special attention to the attorneys’ fee line item in their claim department budgets and have gone to great lengths to find the perfect balance between keeping litigation fees and costs in check and maintaining high quality representation. Insurers have turned to litigation budgets, in-house counsel, litigation management guidelines, litigation vendor databases, and law firms with lower hourly rates. An entire litigation cost management cottage industry has sprung up and some insurers have even turned over the distasteful task of disallowing certain lawyer time entries and expenses to cost management vendors whose very existence is justified by cutting as much as possible from fee bills.

The problem of runaway fees began and remains primarily within insurance defense litigation, but the mindset of cutting costs has quickly spread to other areas of litigation, including subrogation, where cost-effectiveness is a built-in requirement. It is difficult to assess whether a large hourly attorney’s fee in a defense case resulting in a defense verdict is justified, because it is an open-ended evaluation. Defense lawyers must react to and defend against the case asserted by the plaintiff, whether it has merit or not. A fee of $100,000 which saves $1 million on a defense file is worth it in hindsight. In subrogation cases, however, cost-efficiency must be built into the handling of every file because subrogation is only as successful as it is profitable. If you spend $5,000 to recover a $5,000 subrogation claim, the only winner is your lawyer.

Subrogation files are most frequently handled on a contingency fee basis, which makes the cost containment goal less elusive, but limits the litigation management options available to the insurer. As a result, one illusion which the insurance industry seems to be operating under is the specious notion that lower contingent fee percentages translate into higher net recoveries and, therefore, a more successful subrogation program. If 33 years of subrogation litigation experience has taught us anything, it is the fallacy behind that premise. The only path to true subrogation success is a genuine partnership between an insurer and a law firm it trusts.

A new generation of opportunistic subrogation and claims vendors, often owned by lawyers who have experienced firsthand the cost-conscious insurance industry’s attraction to low rates, have had great success by offering contingent fee rates too good to be true. Idioms which have weathered the test of time usually have a basis in fact and the pejorative phrase “built by the lowest bidder” is no exception. The lowest contingent fees guarantee that many files will be settled for less than their true value and that larger files that should see the inside of a courtroom in order to get top dollar never will. Like insurance catnip, however, the low contingent fees serve up the mirage of fee containment while simultaneously devaluing an entire book of business. The only winner here is the short-lived vendor, who profits by selling short the wheat and leaving the client with the devalued chaff.

The infamous businessman John Ruskin once said, “It’s unwise to pay too much, but its worse to pay too little. When you pay too much, you lose a little money – that’s all. When you pay too little, you sometimes lose everything, because the thing you bought was incapable of doing the thing it was bought to do. The common law of business balance prohibits paying a little and getting a lot – it can’t be done. If you deal with the lowest bidder, it is well to add something for the risk you run, and if you do that you will have enough to pay for something better.”

We know the above to be true because we are approached weekly by vendors desperate to find lawyers capable of accepting the files that won’t settle on an even lower percentage contingency fee basis. We regularly hear from frustrated claims professionals who are being told that files which did not settle quickly and without litigation suddenly have no subrogation potential and should be closed. Decision makers are sold on a PowerPoint presentation and the lure of quick results at bargain basement prices. Without exception, they are later universally disappointed and must scramble to salvage what they can. It is similar to the unfortunate phenomenon of “sign and settle” trial lawyers who advertise using celebrities or sports figures, but try no cases. If a case doesn’t settle, they must try to refer the case out and retain a percentage, all but ensuring the further devaluation of the poor victim’s case.

A $75,000 recovery in a $90,000 subrogation claim litigated on a 1/3 contingency fee is preferable to a $30,000 recovery on a 15 percent contingency fee. The subjective nature of subrogation success allows a good file to be easily misrepresented as a bad file in order to justify a quick settlement. Unfortunately, it is often easier for subrogation claims managers to sell an 18 percent contingent fee than to assess the true recovery potential of a large case which is settling for little or nothing at all. Far too many in our industry go for the quick buck – skimming the cream while leaving behind a treasure trove of subrogation potential to slowly decay until statutes of limitations are mere weeks from running. Taking the road less traveled means that the bulk of files referred by such vendors have less than 30 days left before being time-barred. Lawyers know the number of hours necessary in order to ready a file for trial and, if that number exceeds the potential profitability of success based on a reduced contingency, they won’t stay in business long. The subrogation vendor working on cut-rate contingency fees is faced with that stark truth when they try to assign to counsel the majority of files that do not settle quickly at discounted value. When even lower rate vendors undercut the cut-rate vendors, the result is disaster. For these entrepreneurial opportunists it is not about getting good results across a wide spectrum of files for their client – it’s about making any promise necessary to get the business in the door and milking the files for settlements the client could have achieved with just a phone call. Unlike law firms, subrogation vendors don’t have to follow attorney ethics rules and obligations and owe no fiduciary duty to ensure that the client’s best interests are being served. Time and time again we see independent audits revealing millions of dollars unrecovered and left on the table and, by then, it’s often too late.

The argument against entrusting your subrogation files to a vendor who will only be paid 22 percent as opposed to one-third is counter-intuitive. But, intuitive isn’t always right. For example, if a bat and a ball together cost $1.10, and the bat costs $1.00 more than the ball, how much does the ball cost? Most people’s quick answer – ten cents – like most people’s instinct on the value of sending off your valuable subrogation files to the lowest bidder – is wrong.

Cheaper is rarely better. My favorite ice cream store has a sign: “You can find cheaper ice cream somewhere else; if you want cheap ice cream, go there.” Litigation is not a “commodity”. It is a professional service like brain surgery and engineering. When you need it, you have to get it right. If your adversaries win by paying significantly less than what they owe, the entire industry suffers. You cannot lose when subrogating on a contingency fee, but those who fall for the idea that this isn’t enough, can lose everything to cut-rate percentages. As a law firm, we sell expertise, value, and proven results. The three go hand-in-hand. Clients who think they want cheap rates occasionally go elsewhere, but we inevitably see them back again – wiser and more determined to understand what it means to win. It takes hundreds of hours to properly develop a case for trial and to try it. Law firms know their margins and, try as they might to avoid doing so, the 22% file is rarely worked aggressively enough to give the client a fighting chance at trial. All parties end up relying on reducing a subrogation demand deep enough to resolve a file. In the end, money is lost – not saved.

Successful subrogation requires that the pointy end of the subrogation sword – a genuine threat of litigation – must always be hanging over your adversary’s head. Value, experience, legal knowledge, availability, prompt and thorough reporting, and the willingness to strong-arm top dollar recoveries in every matter entrusted to it are the trademarks of a good litigation law firm and a good subrogation department. Everything else is smoke and mirrors. Successful subrogation requires the best – not the cheapest. Recall the story of the engineering consultant who was called to repair a broken machine that had brought a factory to a stand-still. He tightened a single screw and within about five minutes the whole factory was back on line. When a $1,000 bill was received, the factory owner was outraged, “You spent just five minutes here, tightened one screw, and we received a bill for $1,000!” The consultant smiled, “The tightening of the screw was free. The $1,000 was for knowing which screw to tighten!”

There are no short cuts in life, and that includes subrogation. Fast food is popular because it’s convenient, it’s cheap, and it tastes good. But, the real cost of eating fast food never appears on the menu and is rarely discovered until it is too late.

(5) SLEEPING WITH THE ENEMY: Relying on Plaintiff’s Counsel to Protect You

“From a place you will not see comes a sound you will not hear”, is the famous line dealing with special forces snipers. It describes the inevitable when insurers think they have “teamed up” with plaintiff’s counsel for protection of their lien. The illusion which many insurers operate under is the perceived “savings” which result from not engaging counsel and relying instead on the plaintiff’s or insured’s attorney to protect and safeguard their subrogation interests. Trial lawyers are shrewd and suggest such arrangements because they know their victims. The idea of a plaintiff’s attorney protecting your valuable subrogation interests runs contrary to the ethical duty these lawyers have. They are ethics-bound to zealously and aggressively represent their client’s interests, not yours. Their number one mission is to make sure you take as little of your subrogation interest home with you as possible, and then bill you for the privilege of succeeding. When relying on plaintiff’s counsel for their “take” on litigation, it is almost always dismal, and trial lawyers know that when the hen comes to the fox for advice, the result is never pretty. One of the most common type of file we see is one in which our client thought they had an “understanding” with the plaintiff’s attorney that he or she would protect their interests. Everything goes well right up to the point where it doesn’t. Frequently, motions to eliminate the lien or subrogation interests are filed just a few days before a hearing date. Scrambling to protect interests this late in the game almost always result in lost recoveries.
If your claim is small enough that entrusting plaintiff’s counsel with your interests, despite the above, is still the more cost-effective course of action, make sure that you have, in writing, an agreement which spells out that you are a “client” of the attorney just like the claimant or your insured. This will go a long way toward deterring the attorney from not keeping your best interests protected.

(6) DETECTING AND CURING SUBROGATION CANCER: Failure to Discover Indemnity/Waiver of Subrogation

A frequently-seen obstacle to successful subrogation is the waiver of subrogation. Waivers of Subrogation are a necessary evil of underwriting, but their application and effect on subrogation are rarely understood. One of the ways to avoid subrogation is through the implementation and enforcement of waivers of subrogation. Just as the insurer has a legal right to pursue subrogation, so too does a party to a commercial transaction have a right to structure the transaction so that the party’s legal rights of recovery against another party are abrogated or somewhat limited. Such clauses, known as exculpatory clauses, have as their intent and effect, to limit a party or that party’s insurer from subrogating against another party to a transaction. Obviously, the existence of contractual limitations to subrogation must be discovered during the due diligence investigation of subrogation potential and should be revealed to subrogation counsel as soon as possible. Spending significant time and money on recovering large subrogation dollars only to discover that a waiver of subrogation endorsement to an insurance policy cuts us off at the knees is worse than if subrogation had not been pursued at all.

A “waiver of subrogation” actually involves two separate provisions:
  1. A waiver of subrogation clause contained in the contract between the parties; and
  2. A provision in the insurance policy, or an endorsement to that policy, granting permission to the insured to waive in writing, recovery rights against the others prior to loss.

Waivers can be found in commercial general liability (CGL) policies, commercial auto policies, workers’ compensation policies, and commercial property, builders’ risk, and inland marine policies, to name a few. In the workers’ compensation context, however, even if a waiver of subrogation exists, a sin worse than not discovering the waiver in the first place is giving up on subrogation because of a waiver which technically would not bar you from seeking a subrogation recovery or a future credit. The first mistake might be issuing a waiver of subrogation endorsement without adequate consideration or premiums charged. However, once issued, it is important to understand what a waiver does and doesn’t do. We see far too many companies giving up on subrogation because of a waiver which will not prevent them from subrogating, seeking reimbursement, and/or, at least in the area of workers’ compensation, obtaining a significant future credit.

Typical waiver of subrogation endorsement language reads as follows:

We have the right to recover our payments from anyone liable for an injury covered by this policy. We will not enforce our right against a person or organization named in the Schedule, but this waiver applies only with respect to bodily injury arising out of the operations described in the Schedule where you are required by a written contract to obtain this waiver from us.

As you can see, there are lots of conditions which must be in place for the waiver to be applicable. Even if it is applicable, clients routinely think that their right to reimbursement and their right to a future credit are also waived. This is not always the case, and failure to act on subrogation due to a misunderstanding of when rights are waived and when they aren’t continues to be a problem we see costing the industry a lot of money.

(7) SHARING THE GOOD NEWS: Giving Notice to Carriers, Government Entities and Product Manufacturers

Refraining from doing some of the simplest acts can result in some of the largest subrogation potential being lost. Notice requirements necessary to preserve and protect subrogation claims are very common and vary from state to state. They present a procedural trap and a pitfall for the unwary subrogation claims handler. We frequently see significant claims lost because notice requirements with short fuses receive a back seat to the busy activity of adjusting a new loss – especially early in the claim. Notice is required in many states in as short a time as thirty (30) days. A notice of claim against the city of Austin must be filed within forty-five (45) days or be lost forever. An intervention for workers’ compensation subrogation must be filed within thirty (30) days of the carrier having notice of a third-party complaint being filed, or it can recover nothing. If our insured settles a personal injury claim with a tortfeasor prior to us giving notice of our subrogation interest to the liability carrier, no matter how quickly the settlement occurs, our subrogation rights as against the tortfeasor are lost forever. In almost every state, if the claimant settles a third-party bodily injury action before we have placed the claimant’s attorney on notice, our right of reimbursement may be jeopardized and the ability to pursue the only entity with money left in the bank – the attorney – might be barred.

Notice to governmental entities must strictly conform to statutory guidelines and contain specific items of information in order to be valid. Frequently, we see “form” notice letters being sent to such entities, and only months or years later do we receive the file, and by then it is too late. Notice to a plaintiff’s attorney that we will not need his services and do not want to contribute toward common fund attorneys’ fees is necessary in order to avoid significant portions of our subrogation interest going into the bank account of the insured’s attorney. Yet, we often see notice – or notice in the incorrect form and with insufficient information – not given in a timely manner. These become expensive letters that we didn’t bother to write, and quite often, there is nothing subrogation counsel can do to turn back the hands of time and fix the problem.

In the workers’ compensation arena, notice is frequently required in order for the carrier to file suit, intervene, or settle a subrogation claim. Notice against the federal government must be filed on a government-prescribed form, or, in the alternative, it must contain precisely the same information as requested on the form.

The failure of clients to give adequate notice to the property party in a timely manner remains a common mistake leading to the elimination of subrogation potential across all lines of insurance. Unless our client knows that notice required, how to file it, what must be included, and who to serve it on, the notice is often simply overlooked.

(8) CROSSING STATE LINES FOR MORAL PURPOSES: Multi-Jurisdictional Opportunities and Pitfalls

Under the U.S. Constitution, each state is still considered sovereign, and each state controls the laws within its boundaries. Things get complicated, however, when a vehicle insured and garaged in one state is involved in an accident in another state. The legal issues involving conflicts of law, at least with respect to subrogation rights, concern themselves with one question: “Which state’s subrogation law should be applied to a particular lawsuit?” The actual process by which a court determines which state’s law to apply is sometimes referred to as “characterization” or “classification.” The actual determination of which state’s law is to apply must be made in accordance with the law of the state in which the court is sitting, which is most often the state in which the accident occurred.
Courts have used a variety of approaches to determine which state’s law applies to an auto insurance carrier’s subrogation interest in a lawsuit filed in a state other than the state in which a vehicle is insured and garaged. This area of law is known as Conflict of Laws. The three main approaches used to determine which state’s law applies in situations such as these are the following:

(1) Lex loci delecti – applying the law of the forum state in which the tort or accident occurs.
(2) Larson Rule – (workers’ compensation) applying the law of the state where the benefits are paid (enabling state) to a recovery made in a different state in which the third-party action was filed (forum state). This is the same as the Restatement (Second) of Conflicts of Law § 185; and
(3) Most significant contacts – applying the law of the state with the most significant contacts to the incident.

Some states have not declared what their rule is and handle extra-territorial situations on a case-by-case basis. In fact, some states which apply rule number (3) above must look at the facts and circumstances of each case to determine which law applies.

Opportunities to game the subrogation system frequently present themselves in the area of workers’ compensation insurance. In today’s national and global economy, employees are routinely traveling in the course and scope of their employment throughout the country and are getting injured in states other than the state where the employer is based. Employers with multi-state operations are regularly encountering workers who are being injured and claiming benefits in states other than the state where their home office is located. When attempting to subrogate for workers’ compensation benefits, this can lead to a wide array of confusing results. Most state workers’ compensation laws are extra-territorial. This means that an employee in the enabling state (the state in which he was hired and under whose laws he recovers benefits) who suffers an occupational injury or disease while outside of its boundaries in a forum state (the state in which the worker is injured and files a third-party action), is still eligible for workers’ compensation benefits under the laws of the enabling state. In some circumstances, the employee who is injured in another state may choose to collect benefits either in the enabling state or in the forum state.

We frequently see clients who have the ability to select the payment of benefits under one jurisdiction picking a different jurisdiction even though the selection forecloses any possibility of future subrogation. For example, one state may give an employer and its workers’ compensation carrier first money rights of recovery (such as Texas) while another state may disallow your subrogation interest unless and until the worker is “made whole” (such as Georgia). Knowing which state’s subrogation law to apply is critical in evaluating your subrogation potential and recovering your subrogation interest. If Texas benefits are selected relative to a Georgia accident and a Georgia third-party lawsuit, however, subrogation is destroyed because Georgia only allows subrogation when benefits are paid under Georgia law. Therefore, the littlest decision – often the very first decision made – can have devastating consequences and cost literally millions of dollars in subrogation dollars, all because the necessary homework with an eye toward subrogating was not performed ahead of time.

(9) STEPPING OVER DOLLARS TO PICK UP DIMES: Waiver of Lien to Settle Comp Claims or EL Claims

Whether it’s a case of the tail wagging the dog or the simple fact that insurance companies see their primary responsibility as that of adjusting and concluding “claims”, we all too often see a client with significant subrogation potential waive a $500,000 workers’ compensation lien in order to take down $75,000 in reserves on a pending claim. It is simple and quick, and because they do not yet have the $500,000 in hand, it becomes Monopoly money. The importance placed on closing a file often clouds the more economically sensible decision to wait until the subrogation claim settles and take a large future credit which will have the effect of closing the workers’ compensation claim without having to waive half a million dollars in potential recovery.

Sadly, decisions such as these are often made at levels far above those of the front-line subrogation professional, who learns after-the-fact, that despite significant efforts spent to affect a large recovery, the lien is waived, and subrogation is gutted. Left holding the bag, of course, is the employer, who has a vested interest in seeing a large subrogation recovery and a reserve takedown, so that its risk modifier is favorably affected, and future workers’ compensation premiums do not go through the roof.

States which allow employer liability (EL) claims, including contribution claims (e.g., Illinois and Minnesota), also present “opportunities” for a carrier to waive a significant lien in order to settle an EL claim worth considerably less. While there are other considerations at play, such as attorneys’ fees for the defense of the EL claim, large liens are often abandoned for the settlement of much smaller contribution claims without much financial analysis. Defense counsel’s job is to resolve the EL claim or the compensation claim, so their recommendation to the client usually consists of waiving subrogation – without regard to the net effective gain or loss.

(10) SUBROGATION AND THE FLAT EARTH SOCIETY: Hiring the Right Expert

In modern litigation – especially subrogation litigation involving defective products, premises liability, negligent maintenance, or medical negligence – expert testimony may be necessary to prevail. The first rule of subrogation is “Do no harm.” This rule is violated when experts who are not qualified to support a subrogation claim area are engaged. Experts represent an expense of litigation – a necessary evil for subrogating carriers. However, in an effort to minimize costs, many carriers rush into broad agreements with “expert” vendors who offer “cut-rate” fees and a sliding menu of services. All too often, we see “expert” reports authored by investigators and technicians who are not qualified to offer testimony in court. It is human nature to tend toward the path of least resistance, and engaging the same company over and over, regardless of their areas of expertise and credential, to author a report which does nothing more than state “the fire started somewhere under the hood”, has become quite common. Unfortunately, the failure to hire the right expert is often worse than hiring no expert at all. At the same time, subrogation professionals cannot afford to hire the best available expert in smaller cases. Compromises must be made. All too often we see our clients settling for experts who are not experts and who author reports which say little or nothing at all. Such an effort is a complete waste of time and money. More importantly, it damages recovery potential.

Manufacturers of defective products know their products much better than you do, and they have a routine of responding to a defective product allegation down to an art. They are familiar with their electrical schematics and engineering diagrams, while our expert may have to learn from scratch. It is said that an expert is one who knows more and more about less and less. Every state has specific requirements about what is necessary in order to allow an expert to testify.

Subrogation counsel should be prepared to provide you with a number of potential experts immediately after a loss occurs. They should be able to walk you through the process of setting up an inspection and destructive testing of a potentially-defective product. In the right case, choosing the best available expert means the difference between a large recovery and no recovery at all.

HONORABLE MENTIONS
  • Signing Releases With Indemnity
  • Ignoring the Subrogation Duty we Owe to Our Insured
  • Ignoring the Small Files
  • Giving Up too Early Once Indemnity or Waiver Agreement Discovered
  • Get Appraisal in Residential/Dwelling/Building Total Losses
  • Grading on a Curve: Giving Yourself an “A” for “D” Work

The above ten areas are areas in which we most commonly see costly mistakes being made. Over the years, we have learned that good decisions come from experience, and experience comes from bad decisions. That may sound like making bad decisions is a good thing, which isn’t true. However, bad decisions permeate every industry and every profession. Making the most of those bad decisions – learning from them and taking steps to avoid remaking them – is the hallmark of a progressive company. They can be expensive lessons to learn. “Experience is simply the name we give our mistakes,” Oscar Wilde famously said. Quite frequently, the subrogation mistakes we see from even the most experienced claims professionals are actually disguised as corporate efforts to save money, streamline, or consolidate. We understand that they are not made in a vacuum and they often begin with the best of intentions. The mistakes we see repeated are sometimes benign. Quite often, however, they turn into very expensive lessons. Whether we learn from these lessons is the true test of both our desire to optimize the recoveries we make and the lengths we will go to in order to fulfill the service – and in some states the “duty” – we owe to our insureds and our clients, for it is often our insured which pays the price for missed subrogation opportunities. As the industry becomes wiser to the significant savings, aggressive, cost-effective subrogation can provide, we can no longer ignore the best subrogation practices and techniques available to us. We can only take advantage of our mistakes if we recognize them and strive to avoid repeating them.

About the original writer of this article: Gary Wickert
Gary Wickert is an insurance trial lawyer and a partner with Matthiesen, Wickert & Lehrer, S.C., and is regarded as one of the world’s leading experts on insurance subrogation. He is the author of several subrogation books and legal treatises and is a national and international speaker and lecturer on subrogation and motivational topics.

Posted in Blog

He Said, She Said – A back to basics approach to comparative negligence

car accident
Posted on May 12, 2025 by Lauren Clark

My son recently graduated from college and began his career as an auto liability adjuster.   It has been a lot of fun watching him grow into the role and taking his calls with questions, most frequently about liability.   Having been in the business for over thirty years, I probably take liability knowledge for granted.

The reality is that it can be very challenging to properly assess fault.   Even simple situations sometimes require a lot of investigation and critical thinking.

Consider the typical rear-end accident and the presumption that the person in the rear is always at fault. However, what if the person who got hit from behind had intentionally slammed on their brakes, had a defective brake lamp or was in the process of backing up? Compounding matters, consider claims scenarios involving intersections, parking lots, slip and falls, or liquor liability.  If you really want to talk complex situations, let’s examine mass torts, cargo, supply chains and faulty products from abroad.

The origins of comparative negligence date back to 1809 and a decision from the King’s Bench in the case of Butterfield v. Forrester.   Forrester had left a pole jutting out into the road.   Butterfield struck the pole, was injured and sued.   The King’s Bench instructed jurors that if the plaintiff contributed to his injuries in any way, he would be barred from recovery.   Welcome to the advent of Contributory Negligence.

Over the ensuing years contributory negligence was found to be potentially harsh and caselaw eventually gave way to a more comparative approach to assessing liability.   In 1842, Davis v. Mann, established the last clear chance doctrine.   In 1915, British Electric Railway v. Loach established proximate cause.

Perhaps the most famous case is Palsgraff v. Long Island Railroad from 1928.   A man was boarding a rail car with the assistance of an LIRR employee who accidentally dropped a package containing fireworks which exploded.   Palsgraff, who was at the other end of the rail car, was injured and filed suit against the LIRR.   The trial and appellate courts sided with the plaintiff, but the Supreme Court reversed.   The key holdings were that a duty owed must be determined from the risk that can reasonably be foreseen under the circumstances (how duty is determined).  A defendant owes a duty of care to those who are in the reasonably foreseeable zone of danger.

As caselaw continued to evolve, so too, did state legislatures with Wisconsin being the first implement a comparative negligence law in 1931.   Today, we have a hodgepodge of contributory, modified and pure comparative states.

But liability still remains a challenging issue, as it is often not black and white.

Adjusters are tasked with making liability decisions, yet their results often fall far below juries, who apportion liability in a majority of cases nationwide.   In closed file audits, conducted free of charge, by SubroIQ, a leader in subrogation and claims consulting, an estimated 3-5% of files were closed with a comparative decision.   In fact, errant liability decisions are the single leading cause of missed subrogation.

So, what can carriers do to drive these results?

There are plenty of software-based solutions that will provide assistance to the extent that they are effectively executed by the adjusting corporations. There is also the approach of going back to the basics and instilling in the organization the most fundamental concepts of duties owed and duties breached. This should be spelled out by adjusters as part of their liability assessment that should occur in each and every file they handle.

It is often said that the devil is in the details, and in many cases far too many details get overlooked, for reasons ranging from staffing shortages to inadequate training or management/mentoring oversight. By providing adjusters with the necessary tools to understand liability and the time to obtain the facts, inspect the damages, preserve property, and utilize experts, carriers can leverage an accurate outcome that properly identifies and assigns fault.

To optimize claims performance, carriers need to instill an ethic of “investigate, evaluate, and negotiate.” These form the foundation for quality claim files containing accurate settlements yet are increasingly overlooked in a never ending quest to chase other metrics of dubious distinction.

Investigate…Evaluate…Negotiate

Investigate, investigate, investigate!  This can’t be said enough. Are statements taken from all parties? Has all damaged property been inspected, photographed and preserved? Was there a scene investigation? Were primary and secondary liability factors or mitigators considered? Which duties were owed; which ones were breached? By taking the steps to complete a thorough investigation, not only will quality improve but so will results.

Evaluations are the critical byproduct of a thorough investigation. If the latter is incomplete, then how can the former be conducted at the level expected of a fiduciary? From the time the claim is reported, it is incumbent upon all involved to secure the necessary documentation to enable a fair and accurate assessment of coverage, liability and damages which are all of equal importance.

There is no question that evaluations take time; a necessity if one is to achieve accuracy. A detailed evaluation necessitates not only looking at all of the facts presented to date but thinking outside the box.  Often times scenarios that present themselves initially are far more complex as details emerge.

One aspect of the claims process that many adjusters struggle with is negotiation. There is no question that this can be a contentious and adversarial part of the process. Complicating matters is a struggling economy that has resulted in an uptick of insurance opportunism. Whether a claim is legitimate, inflated, or an outright fraud, it seems that everyone is trying to haggle for as much as they possibly can.

This makes the job even more challenging, as carriers must take steps to ensure that they have not only the best and brightest in their ranks but provide them with the negotiation tools and strategies that have been proven to work. Far too often people will take the path of least resistance, failing to negotiate the shared liability or pre-existing conditions. This not only costs the carrier, but alas violates the fiduciary duties between the insurer and the insured.

Calibrating Your Organization

During my tenure as quality assurance director for a large multi-national carrier, our team was tasked with providing the necessary feedback to enable the organization to improve the entire claims process. From loss intake and investigation to evaluation, settlement, and recoveries, a myriad of opportunities existed.

Perhaps one of the greatest challenged faced across the insurance industry is consistency, such as liability assessment. While consistency in any process is a challenge, it becomes even more so when there is an element of subjectivity. After all, who’s to say if the accident was 50/50 or 60/40?

Herein lies the challenge, as a 10 percent differential in liability assessments is not necessarily the concern, but having clear comparative losses settled as absolute is. When reviewing internal data, it is critical to not only identify the frequency by which comparative is assessed, but to conduct calibration exercises to ensure that staff understands and uniformly applies the proper application of jurisdictional laws and general duties owed.

Calibration, defined as a set of gradations to show positions or values, brings into alignment what previously was out of sync. In the world of insurance claims, it accomplishes the ever elusive goal of organizational consistency. Once this has been established, internal processes can be designed so as to achieve a variety of metrics to gauge results.

This process can be used to benchmark both current results and internal knowledge.

While many aspects of the claims process should be calibrated, liability is often a key issue that can serve as a foundation for organizational improvement can be based. Proper liability assessment will ultimately lead to improved negotiations, more accurate settlements, better recovery identification and ultimately an improved bottom line.

In the end, it isn’t the bells and whistles that will improve results, but rather a keen focus on blocking and tackling the very basic elements of insurance claims. While there are certainly claims in which one person bears sole responsibility, they do not comprise the majority.

To the contrary, there are many more opportunities where shared liability exists. From product defects and dram shop claims to homeowner’s, commercial, and auto insurance, there are often multiple parties that share culpability. From points of impact to statement inconsistencies, it is incumbent upon the investigating claims team to identify those opportunities. But beyond the identification comes the effective negotiation. It is one thing to determine shared fault, but another to effectively educate a person as to why they bear some of the responsibility.

To take advantage of the opportunities that exist, it is critical to evaluate current results, both internally and against the industry. But even then, if 15 percent of all claims across the industry are closed with a missed subrogation opportunity, is that benchmarking enough?

A good solution is a three-pronged program that begins with the recognition that opportunities exist, and certainly can serve as a foundation from which to gain a competitive edge. By recognizing that money is being left on the table, there should be a tremendous cross-functional incentive to collaborate on effective solutions that have been proven to work.

Next, identifying an organization’s gaps can serve as an invaluable exercise to identify glaring openings like a football coach reviewing game day films. Simply asking process related questions isn’t enough. Sit down and plot out every single action taken from the inception of a claim through its final disposition. For carriers with multiple physical locations, or even multiple teams, this can prove to be an eye opening experience.

Lastly, calibrating the audience to ensure consistency of purpose is the only way to create an exceptional organization. As Vince Lombardi once said, “perfection isn’t attainable, but if we chase perfection we can catch excellence,” which should be everyone’s ultimate goal.

Christopher Tidball is an Executive Claims Consultant with SubroIQ.  He has spent more than 30 years in the claims industry, including roles as adjuster, manager and executive for multiple Top 10 P&C carriers.   He is the author of Re-Adjusted: 20 Essential Rules To Take Your Claims Organization From Ordinary to Extraordinary! He can be reached at christopher.tidball@subroiq.com.

Posted in BlogTagged blog, Subrogation

Missed Subrogation by the Numbers

subrogation money
Posted on April 25, 2025 by Lauren Clark

Every year, insurers leave millions of dollars on the table due to missed subrogation opportunities. In fact, studies estimate that up to 15% of claims are closed without identifying valid recovery potential, with certain lines like workers’ compensation reaching as high as 30%. In this blog, we break down the data behind missed subrogation, highlight the hidden costs of claims leakage, and explore how leveraging technology and expert reviews can significantly improve recovery outcomes. At SubroIQ, we combine analytics with over 600 years of adjusting expertise to turn these missed opportunities into measurable results.

  • Fire loss: $1,326,534
  • Water loss: $2,127,236
  • Risk Transfer: $48,237
  • Cargo: $759,342
  • Business Interruption: $1,653,556
  • Uncashed Check in File: $16,250

These are just a handful of examples of potentially missed subrogation from closed claim audits. Six files with over $6 million dollars in missed subrogation.  It is estimated that 15% of all files are closed with a missed subrogation opportunity at a cost to the industry of over $15 billion dollars per year. My guess is that figure is substantially higher. During a recent conversation, a leading subrogation attorney shared that four of his 5 largest recoveries (all over $10 million dollars) had been closed by the adjuster as having no subrogation potential.

Missed subrogation is a very real problem costing carriers, TPA’s and self-insured’s sizeable amounts of money.

In addition, there are many policyholders out deductibles because this subrogation was not pursued. This could be a cause for concern if a creative trial lawyer explored breaches of recovery fiduciary duties as a new cottage industry.

Having handled claims for a number of years I will be the first to say that getting outstanding and accurate results takes time and effort.   In an environment of doing more with less adjusters are often burdened with large caseloads. In a quest to maximize profit and efficiencies claims organizations are pushing for file closures as a critical metric. As the adage goes, a closed file is a good file. True to a point, but not when money is being left on the table.

So how is subrogation being missed?

First and foremost is a lack of comparative negligence identification and assessment.   It is estimated that juries assess shared liability more than 50% of the time. Yet when we review claim files it is rare to see claims that are other than 0% or 100% with an occasional 50/50 sprinkled in for good measure. How is it that jurors, who are not trained claims experts, are getting it right when trained experts are missing it so often?

Accurately assessing liability is fundamental to claims.  It is something that should be reviewed in every single claim no matter how apparent one’s negligence appears to be. The liability writeup should focus on duties owed and duties breached by all parties to the claim.

Beyond comparative negligence there are a myriad of opportunities missed because evidence is missing. While claims organizations do a decent job of working with their insured’s to promptly resolve property claims evidence is often left behind.   If recovery potential is identified later in the claim cycle it is often too late as the evidence has been discarded. Herein lies the reason that SubroIQ created their Property Recovery Partnership process, working with client’s beginning at FNOL, to identify and score recovery potential and working hand in hand with experts to obtain and preserve critical evidence.

Sometimes recovery just is not obvious to the adjuster. 

We often see this in no-fault states that have specific definitions where subrogation may or may not apply. Additionally, we see this in jurisdictions with conflicting caselaw that can impact chain of custody in the supply lines. This has become such a problem that the SubroIQ team is patenting ReverseSubrogation™, a transformational process that will redefine recoveries for years to come.

Subrogation is not rocket science, unless it involves a Royal Caribbean cruise liner straying into a no-go zone off the coast of Cape Canaveral causing a SpaceX launch to be scrubbed at a cost of $1.6 million dollars in fuel and labor.

Rather, subrogation generally involves basic blocking and tackling. Evaluating every claim for recovery potential is a critical part of the end-to-end claim cycle. It is paramount to getting the most accurate claim results possible. Yet we continue to find a significant percentage of files that have been closed with missed recovery potential, a large portion of which is recoverable.

A recent audit of 100,000 New York PIP files SubroIQ recovered over $2 million dollars that both the adjuster and the subrogation vendor missed. In another audit of an outside subrogation vendor SubroIQ recovered an amount missed in excess of 10% of the dollars referred.    In an audit of a global insurer, looking at just one jurisdiction, over $5 million dollars was recovered.

This is real money that can have a profound impact on the bottom line of carriers, TPA’s and self-insureds.

SubroIQ provides closed file audits at no charge and has recovered over $1 billion dollars for clients.

Chris Tidball is an Executive Claims Consultant at SubroIQ, a leading provider of audit, consulting, and subrogation services. He spent more than 25 years as an adjuster, manager, and executive with multiple Top 10 insurers. Chris is the author of Re-Adjusted: Taking Your Claims Organization From Ordinary to Extraordinary and is the creator of The Adjuster television series based on his fictional thriller Deep State.  He can be reached at christopher.tidball@subroiq.com.

Posted in BlogTagged Subrogation

After the Storm: Effectively Subrogating Mother Nature

Damage from a storm
Posted on April 4, 2025 by Lauren Clark

The picture you are seeing is my dock, torn from its pilings after Hurricane Ian.   Was it the result of massive waves battering it for 48 hours straight or was it the result of poor design and craftsmanship.  In today’s blog we are going to take a closer look at the various aspects of subrogating Mother Nature, including a great case study.

Hurricane Ian was one for the ages. I have probably been through thirty named storms over the years and this one was a once in a lifetime experience, and I wasn’t even close to where it made landfall.   Ian hit with 153 mph sustained winds, 2 mph shy of a CAT 5, causing extensive devastation across the Florida peninsula.    In my location on the east coast of the state, but in the path of the eyewall, the outer bands began arriving midafternoon on September 28th.   The eye went over us for six hours the following day, followed by the trailing bands that wound down on September 30th.

To put the size in perspective, the storm caused damage from Marco Island to well north of Tampa on the west coast, and from Fort Pierce to Flagler Beach on the east coast, both four-hour drives.   Most hurricanes that have hit Florida would have fit in the eye of Ian.

Hurricane Ian

It was a jaw dropping size and in addition to winds Ian dropped record amounts of rain in Central Florida before exiting the east coast over Volusia and Brevard County as a CAT 2 storm.   Of course, storm season didn’t end with Ian as we got hit by a less severe Nicole six weeks later.  But with the ground already saturated and structures already weakened from Ian, more damage was just par for the course.

Here is where we begin the investigation into potential subrogation after storms, be they hurricanes, tornadoes, nor’easters or some other weather related phenomenon.

While damage is often due to wind and rain, the reality is that there is a lot of shoddy construction.   In the most basic example, you have the aforementioned dock.   While the driving waves did separate the dock from the pilings, construction experts have said that the stringers were attached on the wrong side of the pilings.  Had they been east of the pilings the driving waves would have pushed them, versus pulling, and not been able to loosen the lags.   In addition, the hurricane clips used to attach the deck to the pilings were insufficient and had lags been properly installed through the hangars to the pilings the deck likely would have not come loose.    This is just one simple example of how poor construction can result in potential subrogation.

Unfortunately for those with decks, docks and seawalls over the water, this is all excluded by policy.  The result is that the affected homeowners will have to pursue contractors directly.   But in many instances, there may be coverage.   Improperly installed roofs, windows and doors could have failed.    As adjusters continue their investigations there will likely be covered losses making it extremely important to dig into all facets of construction.

In some instances, it is even possible that property owners and/or contractors were aware of certain conditions from prior acts of God that previously resulted in catastrophic damage.  This is why it takes a lot of digging to determine what is and is not recoverable.

Let’s take a look at a case study from an audit conducted by SubroIQ, a leader in subrogation investigation and services.

This particular case involved a commuter parking lot that was flooded during a storm.   A significant number of cars were damaged.   This would appear to be an act of God, right?

This is why digging deeper results in finding money that is often left on the table.   In this case, the parking lot was adjacent to a large river.   During the investigation it was determined that the parking lot had flooded on multiple prior occasions, all during a full moon at high tide.   The owners were aware of this, and warnings should have been posted or the parking lot closed during such events.

But it doesn’t stop there.  As the adjuster dug deeper it turns out that aerial imagery showed that the parking lot had grown year over year as owners brought in fill, encroaching on the river.   Yet no permits were ever found, indicating that the parking lot expansion was occurring without oversight from local, state or federal officials.

In this particular case the SubroIQ adjuster was able to present evidence to the carrier for the parking lot resulting in an amicable settlement.    The subrogation money was collected for the SubroIQ client and deductibles were returned to many very happy customers.

There is a reason that 15% of all claims are closed with a missed subrogation opportunity.

Basic investigations, algorithms, AI and ML can all do a decent job on subrogation ID for less complex recovery opportunities.   But as cases get more complex, it requires a lot of digging, knowledge and intuition to get to the right outcome. SubroIQ’s SubroIQ Technology takes things a step further by modeling over 600 years of collective claims experience to ID what others miss.  To date, the company has recovered over a billion dollars for clients.

Before closing out and writing off those storm related claims, consider taking a SubroIQ, utilizing a NO COST closed file audit.   You never know what you will find in those claims.

Chris Tidball is an Executive Claims Consultant with SubroIQ, a leading provider of subrogation services.   His career has spanned more than thirty years, working in adjusting, leadership and consulting roles for multiple to insurers.   He is the author of Re-Adjusted:  Taking Your Claims Organization From Ordinary to Extraordinary, fictional thrillers Swoop & Squat and Deep State, and is the creator of the TV series The Adjuster.   To learn more about how SubroIQ can deliver missed revenue to you please contact christopher.tidball@subroiq.com

Posted in BlogTagged blog, deductible, Subrogation

March Madness and Subrogation: Avoiding Costly Turnovers in Claims Recovery

march madness blog
Posted on March 26, 2025 by Lauren Clark

As March Madness takes over the sports world, it’s a great time to draw some parallels between winning strategies on the court and successful subrogation recovery. Just like in basketball, where every possession matters, in claims subrogation, every missed opportunity can cost insurers millions in lost recoveries. At SubroIQ, we specialize in helping carriers, TPAs, and self-insured organizations maximize recoveries by eliminating subrogation turnovers.

The Full-Court Press: Identifying Missed Subrogation Opportunities

In basketball, a full-court press is used to apply relentless pressure, forcing turnovers and creating scoring opportunities. In insurance subrogation, a similar aggressive approach is needed to identify and recover missed subrogation opportunities before they slip through the cracks. Studies show that up to 15% of all claims are closed with missed subrogation potential, and in some lines like workers’ compensation, that number climbs to nearly 30%.

To win the subrogation game, insurers must implement advanced analytics, closed file audits, and expert claims handling to ensure that no recovery is left on the bench.

Avoiding Fouls: Common Mistakes That Lead to Claims Leakage

In basketball, careless fouls can change the outcome of the game. In claims subrogation, common mistakes lead to significant claims leakage, resulting in millions of dollars in lost revenue. Some of the most frequent subrogation errors include:

  • Failure to assess comparative negligence – Too often, adjusters overlook shared liability scenarios where recovery is possible.
  • Overlooking evidence – Missing police reports, witness statements, or critical documentation can weaken a case.
  • Premature file closures – Pushing files to closure without a thorough subrogation review can leave substantial recoveries on the table.
  • Relying solely on AI and automation – While technology is crucial, it can only take insurers 80% of the way. Complex liability scenarios still require human expertise.

Winning the Championship: The SubroIQ Playbook for Maximizing Recoveries

At SubroIQ, we deploy a championship-level strategy to ensure subrogation success. Our proven SubroIQ Technology blends AI-driven analytics with over 600 years of combined subrogation expertise, identifying missed opportunities that traditional models overlook. Through patent-pending solutions like ReverseSubrogation™, we have helped insurers recover millions in previously lost claims.

Take Your Subrogation Game to the Next Level

March Madness is all about momentum, strategy, and execution—the same principles that drive successful claims subrogation. Don’t let missed recoveries and claims leakage put your organization on the losing end of the scoreboard. Partner with SubroIQ to implement proven strategies that maximize recoveries and keep your financials in championship form.

Are you ready to eliminate costly turnovers and boost your subrogation success? Contact SubroIQ today for a FREE closed file audit and start winning more recoveries!

Posted in BlogTagged blog, business, Subrogation

ReverseSubrogation™ can be easy to miss

Reverse subrogation
Posted on March 21, 2025 by Lauren Clark

With a new year upon is, there has never been a better time to implement processes to find more money.   Adjusters are busier than ever, more and more subrogation opportunities are getting overlooked.

While some carriers, TPA’s and self-insured’s have gotten better at subrogation identification, there is still a gaping hole to fill.

It is estimated that 15% of all claims are closed with a missed subrogation opportunity. 

In some lines, such as workers’ compensation, that figure approaches 30% and that doesn’t even include the credits that are lost in an effort to push files to a premature closure. The reason for some improvements, in some lines, is that many carriers and vendors, including SubroIQ, have developed advanced analytics and algorithms to ID subrogation.  In many cases, that is all that is needed, in particular on less complex claims.  But analytics will only get you so far, as demonstrated in the following chart, which is what led us to the creation of SubroIQ Technology where we stepped beyond a tech only application and modeled over 600 years of claims expertise to provide a cutting-edge solution.

In two recent closed file audits for large insurers SubroIQ Technology found millions of dollars missed by front line adjusters and vendors.  We reviewed over 100,000 claims closed with no recovery.   In 404 of them SubroIQ recovered what others missed for a net back to the carrier of $2 million dollars.  The majority of those recoveries were the result of our patent pending ReverseSubrogation™ process.

Reverse subrogation can come into play in a variety of situations, in particular on auto no-fault, cargo and construction claims.

To solve for these very difficult scenarios, SubroIQ designed a unique to industry solution to identify what is virtually impossible to model.  Building this level of sophistication into a subrogation process is ever evolving and one where utilizing SubroIQ’s FREE closed file audit could yield substantial missed subrogation opportunities.

Subrogation remains one of the few areas in the claims process where money can be brought back into the organization.  Focusing on new and innovative technology has proven to be helpful but can only get organizations part of the way there.  Laying in SubroIQ’s unique solution, currently used by dozens of insurers, TPA’s and self-insureds has resulted in clients gaining a significant competitive advantage in the marketplace.

Chris Tidball is an Executive Claims Consultant with SubroIQ, a leading provider of subrogation services.   He has spent more than 30 years in adjusting, management and leadership positions with multiple Top 10 carriers’ insurance related enterprises. and has authored multiple books, including Re-Adjusted: Taking Your Claims Organization From Ordinary To Extraordinary!  and is the host of the Insurance Claims Innovation podcast.   He can be reached at christopher.tidball@subroiq.com

Posted in Blog

The Subrogation Cash Cow (the saga continues)

Posted on March 12, 2025 by Lauren Clark

My first “Subrogation Cash Cow” article was published back in 2010, followed by a series of educational training modules over the next few years.   But as we evaluate the state of subrogation practices today, it seems that for as much as the world has changed in the past thirteen years, many subrogation practices remain the same.

Back in 2010, carriers faced some big challenges largely driven by the crash of the housing market and the great recession.   Today, the challenges faced are related to the lingering effects of the pandemic such as inflation, the slowing economy and the “great resignation”. Claim volumes have fluctuated up and down.  There seems to be less predictability in an already unpredictable world.   Exacerbating these challenges are ongoing mergers, acquisitions, downsizing and much consolidation within our industry.

So how does this impact claims, in particular subrogation?

Increased productivity demands, fewer resources, and ever changing technology all play a role in the quality of claims investigations and outcomes.  Arguably one of the biggest opportunities in the world of claims is subrogation, as an estimated 15% of claims closed are closed with missed subrogation opportunities!

In a conversation with a longtime colleague, we discussed how it was “back in the day”.   Claims were handled with a generalist approach requiring adjusters to have their eye on the ball at all times.  Subrogation was just part of what we did and failing to pursue it often resulted in negative audit and leakage reviews.   In today’s more specialized world there are arguably more opportunities for defects in the claims handling process.   While there may be economies of scale and productivity gains, there is also a greater risk of leakage, which can offset many of the other gains.

In two recent file audits, more than ten million dollars of missed subrogation was identified.   Many of the claims were very basic auto, property and work comp scenarios.   How does this happen?  Adjusters are extremely busy, often tasked to do more with less while chasing metrics, such as disposition, that put subrogation at a greater risk of being missed.   In the world of work comp we often find scenarios where adjusters did a great job on the compensability front, but completely missed the liability situation.   Missing evidence continues to hamstring property recoveries.   Adjusters not assessing comparative negligence when it is event certainly remains a significant issue.

So how do you come out on top?

When it comes to subrogation, the key to winning the game is ID.   If you don’t ID the subrogation you are going to miss the recovery.  Vince Lombardi once said, “If winning isn’t everything, why do they keep score?”   It is a pretty simple formula.   Despite this, many opportunities do get missed as our industry leading subrogation experts often see in routine closed file audits.

In this day and age of advanced algorithms, AI and machine learning this just shouldn’t be the case.   The reality is that all of the aforementioned are good, and vitally important.   But they only get you 80% of the way there.   Certainly, technology can do a good job on the majority of claims, but when you have complex recovery scenarios, PIP nuances, convoluted workers’ compensation laws and ever-changing case law, technology simply can’t adapt fast enough.  This is why SubroIQ has deployed SubroIQ Technology, which has been shown to outperform AI due to it incorporating human adjusting behaviors in the process.

Today, we are going to focus on two key strategies to drive subrogation outcomes.   Comparative Negligence and Complex Liability Scenarios.    When looking at recoveries on collision claims, there is a wide variance, but generally it falls to a range of about 22-28%.    When evaluating Six Sigma studies of quality reviews for a variety of carriers the statistically valid samplings find a recovery range that are much higher.  The recovery gap is the variant opportunity for improvement that carriers can expect when staff fully understand and effectively apply the concepts associated with comparative negligence.

Comparative Negligence and Complex Liability Scenarios

Aside from straightforward situations such as intersection, lane change or parking lot accidents, there are a myriad of opportunities where comparative fault would apply in virtually any coverage line.   Concepts such as assumption of risk, laden versus unladen vehicle weight, bailment and last clear chance, phrases not heard since our adjuster boot camps, need to once again become part of the daily claim vernacular.

In simplest terms front line adjusters often miss comparative negligence assessments.   Audits that I have been involved with routinely show that a mere 3-5% of auto collision claims have a shared liability assessment.    This is a much different outcome than we see with juries where it is estimated that more than 50% of cases adjudicated have liability apportioned between the parties.  Other lines aren’t much better with contributing factors to the loss often being overlooked.

As the adjusting population ages and retires, there is going to become an even bigger void in experience that will likely result in even more missed subrogation.   This is further exacerbated by the outsourcing of First Notice of Loss, often overseas.   While FNOL can serve as a valuable training experience for future adjusters, the costs savings of outsourcing is what some carriers are more focused on.    When accuracy of information and data collection become problematic, it has a direct and quantifiable impact on a carrier’s bottom line.   When relying on subrogation models, the output is only as good as the data being collected.

Beyond FNOL, adjusters are often measured in terms of production versus the quality of their work, which results in critical items slipping through the cracks.   A missed witness statement here, a overlooked piece of evidence there, missing police reports, witness statements, etc., can all add up to billions of dollars in leakage across the industry.   Carriers that see the highest subrogation success rates are those that are consistently utilizing impartial auditors for closed file reviews, as well as enhancing processes to leverage business partners to augment staff and provide valuable services such as applicant and response arbitrations.

By focusing on two areas- maximizing recoveries on tough collections and developing an acute understanding of comparative negligence- carriers can battle their way out of the red ink.   These opportunities abound in our industry, and carriers, TPA’s and self-insureds that leverage expertise in these areas will have an immediate competitive advantage.    While millions of dollars may not seem like much to billion dollar companies, the reality is that ever little bit helps.   What can an extra million buy?  More adjusters?  Better programs? Newer fleets? More technology?

To wrap it all up…

In my own case, I utilized Second Look while overseeing subrogation at a multi-billion dollar company.   They recovered over $5 million dollars.   While not a lot in the grand scheme of a global enterprise, it allowed us to purchase some critical technology that improved claims results across the organization to a benefit that was at least tenfold of what was recovered.   As the old adage goes, it takes money to make money so why leave anything on the table?

A renewed focus on execution associated with effective and accurate investigations and outcomes will drive overall subrogation recognition, a key component to improving profitability.   Recognizing subrogation as an area of opportunity and focusing on continuous process improvement by leveraging expertise in the industry is what we will define the most successful carriers and companies in coming years.

 

Chris Tidball is an Executive Claims Consultant with SubroIQ, an industry leading subrogation firm with over 600 years of collective experience that has recovered over $1 billion dollars for clients. His career spans over 30 years, including adjusting, management and executive roles with multiple To 10 P&C carriers.  He is a frequent industry speaker and the author of multiple books including Re-Adjusted: Taking Your Claims Organization From Ordinary to Extraordinary!  To learn more about no cost closed file reviews to ID missed subrogation please contact christopher.tidball@subroiq.com

Posted in BlogTagged blog, newsletter, Subrogation

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