- If you are injured in an accident, PIP will cover all medical costs. If you injured and cannot work or are killed PIP will cover up to 85% of the income that you would have earned for up to three years. The phrase "up to 85%" is capped at a fixed amount, which changes every year. Effective 10/1/13, the maximum was set at $5,282 a month. There is also a $20 allowance to pay for household services that you can no longer perform because of the accident.
- No-fault is required to provide up to $1 million for any damage that the owner's car does to another person's property, such as houses, trailers, buildings and fences. It will also pay for damage that your car does to another person’s properly parked vehicle, but it will not pay for any damage to cars in a moving accident or for an improperly parked car.
- The Residential Liability Insurance protects the driver from being sued in the event of an auto accident, except in many special circumstances that will vary from No-Fault state to No-Fault state. In Michigan, the exceptions include when someone is killed, seriously injured, or permanently disfigured; if you are in an accident with a non-resident who is an occupant in a vehicle not registered in Michigan; you are in an accident in another state; if you are more than 50% at fault in an accident with an uninsured vehicle up to $1,000.
- Now the question became what could be done about the deductible on my claim? Because we were friends a check passed hands covering my cost, end of story, but what if you are not so lucky?
- If you can get the insurance company information from the "at-fault" driver who struck your parked car, you can get their insurance company to pay for the repairs and no deductibles would be involved. Your car would be fixed with nothing out of pocket for you.
- If you have "Standard or Broad Collision" you can have your insurance company pay for the damages, less your deductible.
- Have the person who hit your car pay to have it repaired.
If you can prove that someone stuck your properly parked car, that someone is liable for the full amount of the damages to your car even in a no-fault state. If the other driver doesn't have insurance or lacks the appropriate coverage, you can sue them for damages. If you have collision coverage you may want to leave it up to your insurance company to pursue them for damages as you can go after your deductible in small claims court if it is $1,000 or less. The sad news is that in small claims court, even if you get a judgment in your favor it does not necessarily mean that you will collect and there is a lack of recourse in the U.S. that you can pursue without great expense.
In a moving accident, if the other driver has no-fault insurance and is proven to be over 50% at fault, you are very limited in what you can get back in court. In most no-fault states, if all you have is a deductible to cover, you can certainly sue to have them cover up to $1,000 in most no-fault states. Michigan law has a "mini-tort" provision in their no-fault law that allows the victim to collect up to $1,000 in damages from the "at fault" driver. (See: http://www.michigan.gov/documents/cis_ofis_ip202_25083_7.pdf)