Contributed by: filbert Tuesday, April 22 2008 @ 04:28 PM CST
. . . "When an umpire bets on the outcome of a game he is refereeing, he has a conflict of interest," writes (one of the lawyers), in his brief.The reality of the business of insurance, in my opinion, is that it's legalized gambling. And the house (i.e. the insurance company) makes the rules and decides who can and can not play.
"MetLife is equally conflicted when it decides whether a beneficiary is entitled to benefits. If MetLife answers 'yes,' then it is the one who has to pay; the beneficiary's gain is MetLife's loss," (the lawyer) writes.
. . .
In a friend-of-the-court brief, the American Council of Life Insurers says appeals courts finding a conflict of interest have embraced "an overly simplistic view of the economic realities of the business of insurance."
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