road runner
Well-known member
Did you consider having the insurance company totaling it, then buying it back from them and then fixing it? It would have a salvage title, but you could make some money on the deal. Especially if you do most/all the work yourself.The bike is a 950sm not a 990. Yes it had full coverage. But as I stated, some repair shortcuts have to be made to keep the company from totaling it. Just made the 1st payment the other day...only 47 to go and she's all mine! :^)If Jeff is making payments on the KTM 990 SM -- he has collision coverage...right?
Re the deductible: I was involved in an intersection altercation a long time ago (non-m/c) and the other guy was pretty shady about Ins., etc.
Long story short: I got nowhere and, eventually, my Ins. paid all but the deductible. They said I'd get that, too, when they recovered it. Time passed and I didn't -- a letter from an attorney was all it took to get the money.
Good luck.
Was it a new bike ?Secondly, I change my vote; The appropriate moral thing to do is for him to pay your deductible. Since you elected to settle for a partial repair, anything more required was your decision and not his responsibility. The financial compesation is never more than the price paid for the machine . . so if the insurance would have totalled ther machine and returned what you paid for it (less the deductible) then that is the limit of their liability. One might also be able to arue that he owes nothing, since the amount of the deductible was your decision and you did not verify that he would be willing to pay or was covered for same before you allowed him to climb on board your machine, turn the ignition on and ride awa with it. in other words, you accepted the responsability based on the possibility that this might happen by not coming to an agreement before he rode off.
So from my perspective, his moral obligation would be to pay a reasonable deductible (if you had a $5K deductibe, for example I'd tell you to piss off had I been in that situation). And, you might NOT prevail in small claims court since HIS expectation was that you had sufficient insurance coverage and never discussed the possible consequences beforehand as to what might transpire in the eventuality of a crash.
Third; You are in Cali? Be VERY happy that HE isn't suing YOU for lending him the bike in the first place - this could have cost you hundreds of thousands of dollars.
If yes, why not total it, add the amount needed to replace it, and get a brand new never been wrecked bike ?
Then go after the guy at fault for your out of pocket money. If he doesn't pay you, then take him to court.