L
Le_Chiot_Noir
Guest
Last year, my brother and I were in a car accident. It wasn’t bad, our car was just rear-ended, but the other guy’s car was pretty badly banged up. A few minutes after the first accident, another accident happened, and this poor fellow’s car was totalled. No one was hurt, thank God-- I still think it was a miracle, considering the extent of the damage.
The other guy had no insurance, so I ended up paying for our car’s repairs out of my own pocket. Our insurance company kept telling us about trying to get our $500 deductible back from the ‘other party’, but I didn’t really want it, the guy had been through enough already, I felt.
Well, I kept putting off telling the insurance guys to lay off him (at one point, they called to inform me that they tried to get his credit company to pay up, and they reported to me that he had ‘no assets’, which made me feel even worse), until after all this forgetting and procrastination (I hate dealing with insurance people), I got a check in the mail from the insurance for $500.
I made a face when I read it was “Payment of $500 is being made for the return of your deductible out of monies collected from another party or parties responsible for your loss.” (emphasis mine)
So my question is: considering that my intent was to forgive the debt, but my inaction made it so that it was carved off of the other guy anyway, is it my moral responsibility to seek out the other party and reimburse him the money I never wanted?
I will admit that, at this point in my life, $500 would be a great help to my finances, but I can’t even begin to imagine what it must be like for the other guy by now. But I feel terrible about keeping it.
I know it’s still ethical to keep the money; it’s mine. But is it moral?
The other guy had no insurance, so I ended up paying for our car’s repairs out of my own pocket. Our insurance company kept telling us about trying to get our $500 deductible back from the ‘other party’, but I didn’t really want it, the guy had been through enough already, I felt.
Well, I kept putting off telling the insurance guys to lay off him (at one point, they called to inform me that they tried to get his credit company to pay up, and they reported to me that he had ‘no assets’, which made me feel even worse), until after all this forgetting and procrastination (I hate dealing with insurance people), I got a check in the mail from the insurance for $500.
I made a face when I read it was “Payment of $500 is being made for the return of your deductible out of monies collected from another party or parties responsible for your loss.” (emphasis mine)
So my question is: considering that my intent was to forgive the debt, but my inaction made it so that it was carved off of the other guy anyway, is it my moral responsibility to seek out the other party and reimburse him the money I never wanted?
I will admit that, at this point in my life, $500 would be a great help to my finances, but I can’t even begin to imagine what it must be like for the other guy by now. But I feel terrible about keeping it.
I know it’s still ethical to keep the money; it’s mine. But is it moral?