0 the ability that an insurance company has to get the money it has paid to a customer back from the person who caused the accident, damage, etc.
1 the right of an insurance company to get back the money that it pays to someone with an insurance contract from the person who has caused the loss, injury, or damage:
The understanding of the other did not mean in any case the subrogation of the disciplinary expertise.
So already we have the principle of subrogation, and if there are formidable objections to it one wonders how it got on the statute book.
If they think that to adopt the subrogation system would cut down the cost of administration or the work for lawyers, they are sadly misguided.
It is inevitable in the subrogation system that there should remain an element of fault.
In certain cases it will give rise to subrogation to the insurance company, but all that works out naturally.
The object of the exercise is to enable the relevant body to claw back its expenses from the tortfeasor probably by means of subrogation.
The letter then deals with the doctrine of subrogation.
The rights of subrogation would be involved in such a case.