I don't know all of the deal with the recoverable.
If she does the job for less (and does it all, paint included with another outfit) will she get some or all of that recovered back to HER? Everything I've read so far says that money belongs to the homeowner, not some roofing outfit that's trying to run a shell game on somebody.
I felt like he was trying to hustle her for the extra $2000.
Modified:
Here's how I think it works. The insurance company estimated $11,500. They sent her a check for $3750. She's responsible for her deductible -- $5900. But that's only $9650. There's still an approximately $2000 gap in there, which is recoverable AFTER the repairs are done. So she spends her $5900 and their $3750. And the gets the painting done for $400. She can claim that $400 against the $2000. Basically anything she spends above the deductible (and their first check) she can claim and be reimbursed. But she CAN'T request the whole amount back or it's insurance fraud, right? If that's the case, she's just keeping this roofing guy from screwing the insurance company over for the $2000.
I also went back and re-read your entire post again, because I glossed over the part of the recoverable. I also thought you got a quote of 11,500 not the adjuster. So the Adjuster said Actual Cash Value was 11,500, but they only gave her 3,750 and she has a deductible of 5,900 means that they depreciated the roof by the sum of 1,850.
My understanding is if she has a recoverable depreciation clause in her contract in order to get that 1,850 she would have to have the roof fixed at the adjusters amount or over. So he was trying to scam her big time.
Here is an example:
A home is insured for $100,000 and has completely damaged its roof due to a tornado. The cost to replace the roof (Replacement Cost Value) is $10,000. Let’s say the roof is 20 years old and the policy owner’s deductible is $1,000.
The insurance adjuster is going to depreciate the roof based on age, so let’s say 20%, making the Actual Cash Value of the roof $10,000 – $2,000 depreciation = $8,000
The recoverable depreciation would be the Replacement Cost Value – Actual Cash Value = $7,000 after the deductible is applied.
The insurance company will make a payment to the policy owner for $7,000 actual cash value towards replacing the roof.
After the roof has been replaced for the full Replacement Cost Value of $10,000 and the insurance company receives the invoice, they will release the recoverable depreciation of $2,000 to be reimbursed to you.