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Fault: The Final Frontier
Once you know how insurance companies use the damages formula to start negotiating, you are close to figuring out the total value of your claim.
The other elements used to decide what your claim is worth boil down to how the insurance company thinks a jury would decide your claim if it wound up in court.

In measuring its chances in court, the insurance company has to figure in the cost of putting up a legal fight, on top of what a jury might award you, compared with the amount for which your claim could be settled without going to court.

The extent each person is at fault is the most important factor affecting how much the insurance company is likely to pay.

The damages formula gives you a range of how much your injuries might be worth, but only after you figure in the question of fault do you know the actual compensation value of your claim -- that is, how much an insurance company will pay you.
 
Demystifying the Damages Formula
When determining compensation, it is usually simple to add up the money spent and money lost, but there is no precise way to put a dollar figure on pain and suffering or on missed experiences and lost opportunities. That's where an insurance company's damages formula comes in.

At the beginning of claim negotiations, an insurance adjuster adds up the total medical expenses related to the injury. These expenses are referred to as "medical special damages" or simply "specials." That's the base figure the adjuster uses to figure out how much to pay the injured person for pain, suffering and other non-monetary losses, which are called "general" damages.

The adjuster multiplies the amount of special damages by 1.5 or 2 when the injuries are relatively minor, or up to 5 when the injuries are particularly painful, serious or long-lasting. (The multiplier may be as great as 10 in extreme cases.) The adjuster then adds on any income lost as a result of the injuries.

That's all there is to the formula. However, this figure -- medical specials multiplied by a number between 1.5 and 5, then added to lost income -- is not a final compensation amount buy only the number from which negotiations begin.

Small Claims Court
Small claims court judges resolve disputes involving relatively modest amounts of money. The people or businesses involved normally present their cases to a judge or court commissioner under rules that encourage a minimum of legal and procedural formality.

The judge then makes a decision (a judgment) reasonably promptly. Although procedural rules dealing with when and where to file and serve papers are established by each state's laws and differ in detail, the basic approach to properly preparing and presenting a small claims case is remarkably similar throughout the United States.
In a handful of states, including California, Nebraska and Michigan, you must appear in small claims court on your own. In most states, however, you can be represented by a lawyer if you like. But even where it's allowed, hiring a lawyer is rarely cost-efficient. Most lawyers charge too much given the relatively small amounts of money involved in small claims disputes. Happily, several studies show that people who represent themselves in small claims cases usually do just as well as those who have a lawyer.
 
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