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51 Ins. Counsel J. 75 (1984)
No-Fault Automobile Insurance: A Success or Failure after Eleven Years

handle is hein.journals/defcon51 and id is 77 raw text is: No-Fault Automobile Insurance

NO-FAULT AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE:
A SUCCESS OR FAILURE AFTER
ELEVEN YEARS?
PATRICK F. MARONEY
Tallahassee, Florida

INTRODUCTION
Professors    Keeton     and    O'Connell
ushered in the no-fault era with the publi-
cation of Basic Protection for the Traffic
Victim,' in which they expressed their
opinion that the traditional tort system of
compensating victims of automobile acci-
dents was needlessly expensive, inequit-
able, and inefficient.2 Responding to such
criticism, Massachusetts enacted the first
state no-fault law, effective. January 1,
1971.3 Florida4 and Delaware5 followed
with no-fault laws, effective January 1,
1972. Currently, twenty-three states have
some form of no-fault legislation.6
One court has enumerated the goals and
legislative objectives involved in no-fault
to include a lessening of court congestion
and a reduction in concomitant court
2R. KEETON & J. O'CONNELL, BASIC PROTEcnON
FOR THE TRAFFIC Vicrns (1965).
21d. at 11-75.
aMAss. GEN4. LAW. ANN. ch. 90 § 34m; ch. 175,
§ 113B; ch. 231 § 6d (1975).
4FLA. STAT. §§ 627.730-.7405 (1982 Supp).
5DEL. CODE tit. 21, § 2118 (1974 & Supp 1980).
GSee ARK. STAT. ANN. §§ 66-4014 to 66-4021 (1980
& Supp 1981); CoLO. REV. STAT. §§ 10-4-701 to 10-
4-723 (1973 & Supp 1982): CONN. GEN. STAT. ANN.
§§ 38-319 to 38-351a (West Supp 1982); DEL. CODE
tit. 21, § 2118 (1974 & Supp 1980); FLA. STAT. §§
627.730-.7405 (1982 Supp); GA. CODE ANN. §§ 56-
3401b to 56-3413b (1977); HAW. REV. STAT. §§ 294-1
to 294-41 (1976 & Supp 1981); KAN. STAT. ANN. §§
40-3101 to 40-2121 (1981); Ky. REv. STAT. §§ 304.39-
010 to 304.39-340, 304.99-050 (1981 & Supp 1982);
MD. ANN. CODE art. 48A §§ 538-546 (1979 & Supp
1982); MASS. GEN. LAws ANN. ch. 90 § 34m; ch.
175; § 113B; ch. 231 § 6d (1975 & Supp 1982-83);
MICH. COMp. LAwS ANN. §§ 500.3101-3179 (West
Supp 1982-83); MINN. STAT. ANN. §§ 65B.41-.71
(Vest Supp 1982); N.J. STAT. ANN. §§ 39:6A-1 to
39:6A-20 (1973 & Supp 1982-83); N.Y. INs. LAW §§
600 et seq. (1966 & Supp 1982-83); N.D. CENT. CODE
§§ 2641-1 to 26-42-18 (1978 & Supp 1981); OR.
REV. STAT. § 748.800-.835 (1981); PA. STAT. ANN.
tit. 40, §§ 1009.101-.701 (1971); S.C. CODE §§ 56-11-
10 to 56-11-800 (1976 & Supp 1981); S.D. CODIFIED
LAWS §§ 58-23-6 to 58-23-8 (1978) ; TEX. INS. CODE
ANN. art. 5.06-3 (1981); UTAH CODE ANN. §§ 31-41-1
to 31-41-14 (1974 & Supp 1981); VA. CODE §§ 38.1-
380.1 to 38.1-380.2 (1981 & Supp 1982).

PATRICK F. MARONEY re-
ceived  his BS. degree
from the Florida State
University and his J.D.
degree from the Univer-
sity of Florida College of
Law. He is an assistant
professor at Florida State
University and Co-chair.
person of the Florida Bar
Committee on Insurance.

calendar delays. Other anticipated results
were reduced automobile insurance pre-
miums and an assurance that acci ent
victims would receive funds for medical ex-
penses and lost wages, thus avoiding dire
financial circumstances and the possible
result of increased public relief rolls. Ad-
ditionally, no-fault was expected to pre-
vent the overpayment of major claims and
to replace a system that was slow.7
No-fault insurance laws have been ex-
amined in light of their actual results and
have been subjected to criticism as failing
to meet the goals described above. One
commentator described a no-fault act as an
experiment in social legislation that has
failed.8 Nevada repealed its no-fault legis-
lation, effective January 1, 1980, after less
than six years of operation. The law was
described as providing a vehicle to finance
lawsuitsY Such a result is contrary tcd the
no-fault goal of reducing litigation.
Despite such criticisms, the no-fault con-
cept remains valid. The problems ei-
countered with no-fault automobile insur-
ance laws are the result of deficiencies in
the laws enacted in the various jurisdic-
MLasky v. State Farm Insurance Co., 296 So2d 9
(Fla 1974).
8L. C. Folzon, Michigan No-Fault: The Rise and
Fall of Socialized Negligence, 56 U. DEr. J. UtB. L.
99 (1979).
9The National Underwriter, June 1, 1979, at 4,
col. 3.

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