- as a
policyholder,
while a
person or
entity covered under the
policy is
called an insured. The
insurance transaction involves the
policyholder ****uming...
-
brought by or
against the
policyholder.
Depending on the
national rules,
legal protection insurers can also
represent the
policyholder out-of-court or even...
- as
terminal illness or
critical illness can also
trigger payment. The
policyholder typically pays a premium,
either regularly or as one lump sum. The benefits...
-
insurer is
contracted to
typically make a lump sum cash
payment if the
policyholder is
diagnosed with one of the
specific illnesses on a
predetermined list...
-
mutual insurance company is an
insurance company owned entirely by its
policyholders. It is a form of consumers' co-operative. Any
profits earned by a mutual...
- overdue. The insurer's
letter to the
policyholder warning him of this fact was
never received by the
policyholder, who died
shortly after the
policy consequently...
- ****urance Co., Inc. In
structure it is a
mutual company. It
first paid
policyholder dividends in 1898.
Nippon Life
employs 70,519
employees and has 70,608...
- of
permanent life
insurance policies and is a
living benefit that the
policyholder can use
during his or her lifetime. Cash
values are
usually ****ociated...
- in
January 2020. At its peak in the 1990s,
Equitable had 1.5
million policyholders with
funds worth £26
billion under management, but it had
allowed large...
- (1958–2013) was an
American businesswoman and
activist for
insurance policyholders. In 1999, she sued her
insurer over mold
damage in her 22-room family...