Would it be fair, then for me to conclude if it had been, say the City of San Francisco, you would not have posted this.
No, I think I would have posted it anyway. The real question is would CNN have run the story?
What is immoral is double-dipping, being paid twice for the same claim. How someone can claim otherwise is beyond me.
Clearly no one, except you, thinks of this as double-dipping. It is, in fact, not.
It is not double-dipping. The couple made the investment and ultimately spent more than $500,000 in legal fees to get their settlement. That it was paid out of the settlement is irrelevant. The insurance company did not spend that money. They could have, but decided to let this couple spend their money instead. So morally, the insurance company, if they want to subrogate the claim, should compensate the couple for the legal expenses they incurred essentially on behalf of the insurance company.
I believe this woman, who clearly cannot help herself, has been taken to the cleaners, primarily by her attorneys who appear to be both greedy and incompetent. I think she may even have a case of legal malpractice against her attorneys for not addressing this foreseeable consequence of the award.
The insurance carrier (not Wal-Mart actually) has the final say. They can
choose whether, and to what extent, to subrogate the claim. I doubt that Wal-Mart has any real (read: legal) say in how the insurance company pursues such matters.
That the insurance company is legally entitled to renumeration is not something I dispute. My problem with it is that they
chose to claim all the assets this woman got from the lawsuit leaving her destitute and disabled.
As has been pointed out repeatedly on this and other threads, legal does not equal moral.
Vern, I do not understand your moral position on this and would like to hear you defend it. Please explain how it is just for a wealthy insurance company to make disabled individual destitute? Keep in mind that the couple paid all the costs to get the money from the offending party to begin with, not the insurance company. Citations from the Catechism in support of your position would be helpful. This is not intended to be a rhetorical question. Also, do not respond with a question; I am looking for a real answer, not an exchange of barbs, like the post I quoted.