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Oddly enough most TP insurers will expect someone who is insured comprehensively to go the route of claiming for repairs from their own insurers, paying the excess (an uninsured loss) and then the injured parties insurer claims their repair costs back and the innocent party claims the excess back from the TP along with any other uninsured losses such as injury, car hire cost and of course the excess.
In my personal experience, by passing claiming from your own company inevitably leads to complications, although it is normally done with the utmost best intention of saving you own insurer money. In practice it never seems to work as it should or is intended.
If you pay repair costs yourself, and by pass your own insurer, it in a sense becomes an uninsured loss. However, if you say to your insurer "recover my repair costs from the TP and pay me back when the TP coughs up" they will probably say no cos that's not really how the system works odd as it might seem. To do that you would need a "Legal Expenses" insurer to do that for you.
In real terms if you pay for repairs yourself and you have comp cover, when you send the recipt to your own co, they will normally just reimburse you having deducted the excess and will then recover their costs leaving you to get your excess back as described above.
If the accident was clearly the TP fault, best just follow the procedure suggested by your own insurer. It will save grief normally.
Daft eh? I hope I understood your question correctly, if not holler.
_________________ Nobody told me to use my initiative. To err is human to arr is pirate.
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