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Subrogation time limits aren't any different than the time limit for the claim being subrogated. For property damage, that's three years. For personal injury, two years.
Subrogation time limits aren't any different than the time limit for the claim being subrogated. For property damage, that's three years. For personal injury, two years.
I know what you are saying, but to be 100% accurate, there is no time-limit for subrogation. Subrogation is simply negotiations between two parties...those negotiations have no time-bar to them. It's only when it gets to court that a statute of limitations come in to play. If both parties are willing to negotiate 20 years after the fact (an extreme example), then they can have at it.
Subrogation time limits aren't any different than the time limit for the claim being subrogated. For property damage, that's three years. For personal injury, two years.
Subrogation time limits aren't any different than the time limit for the claim being subrogated. For property damage, that's three years. For personal injury, two years.
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