Why Trust This Analysis
This article is part of our ongoing policy exhaustion coverage, with 13 published articles analyzing policy exhaustion issues across New York State. Attorney Jason Tenenbaum brings 24+ years of hands-on experience to this analysis, drawing from his work on more than 1,000 appeals, over 100,000 no-fault cases, and recovery of over $100 million for clients throughout Nassau County, Suffolk County, Queens, Brooklyn, Manhattan, and the Bronx. For personalized legal advice about how these principles apply to your specific situation, contact our Long Island office at (516) 750-0595 for a free consultation.
Key Takeaways
- An arbitration award directing payment beyond the monetary limit of a no-fault policy exceeds the arbitrator’s power and is grounds for vacatur.
- In Allstate v Northeast Anesthesia, an attorney’s affirmation, the declaration page showing the $50,000 limit, and a chronological payment ledger raised triable issues on exhaustion.
- The court held the carrier was not precluded by 11 NYCRR 65-3.15 from paying other legitimate claims after denying the respondent’s claims — the Harmonic Physical Therapy exception.
- Courts review these exhaustion and priority-of-payment disputes de novo on a petition to vacate.
Allstate Prop. & Cas. Ins. Co. v Northeast Anesthesia & Pain Mgt., 2016 NY Slip Op 50828(U)(App. Term 1st Dept. 2016)
The Decision
(1) “An arbitrator’s award directing payment in excess of the monetary limit of a no-fault insurance policy exceeds the arbitrator’s power and constitutes grounds for vacatur of the award”
(2) “Petitioner’s submissions in support of its petition to vacate the award and in opposition to the cross motion to confirm – including an attorney’s affirmation, the policy declaration page showing the $50,000 policy limit, and a payment ledger listing in chronological order the dates the claims by various providers were received and paid – raised triable issues as to whether the $50,000 policy limit had been exhausted by payments of no-fault benefits to respondent and other health care providers before petitioner was obligated to pay the claims at issue here”
(insurer relied upon “affirmation of its attorney with attachments of alleged payout sheets, bills submitted by providers, and other documents” to show policy limits exhausted)
(3) “We note that, contrary to respondent’s contention, defendant was not precluded by 11 NYCRR 65-3.15 from paying other legitimate claims subsequent to the denial of respondent’s claims”
This is interesting from the standpoint that the court will adjudge priority of payment disputes under a de novo level of review. Again, the Harmonic Physical Therapy exception to priority of payment rules applies to these disputes.
The Legal Framework
The standard New York auto policy carries $50,000 in basic no-fault (PIP) benefits per eligible injured person. That pot pays medical bills, lost earnings, and other necessary expenses on a rolling basis as claims come in. When the pot runs dry, the carrier’s contractual obligation ends — which is why exhaustion is one of the few defenses that can defeat even an otherwise payable claim.
Two bodies of law collide here:
Arbitration finality. No-fault arbitration awards get narrow judicial review under CPLR Article 75. But an arbitrator has no power to direct payment beyond the policy’s monetary limit — an award doing so “exceeds the arbitrator’s power” and may be vacated. Exhaustion thus operates as a structural check that survives the usual deference to arbitrators, and courts decide the question fresh.
Priority of payment. 11 NYCRR 65-3.15 directs carriers to pay claims “in the order in which each service was rendered or each expense was incurred.” Providers argue from this that a carrier cannot leapfrog: if it denies a claim and the provider contests the denial, the carrier should not be allowed to exhaust the policy by paying later-submitted claims and then plead exhaustion against the contested one. The Harmonic Physical Therapy exception — drawn from the First Department’s Harmonic Physical Therapy v Praetorian line — rejects that reading: a carrier is not precluded from paying other legitimate claims subsequent to its denial of the disputed claim. Point (3) of this decision applies that rule squarely.
The proof question in point (2) is its own lesson. Allstate’s package — attorney’s affirmation, the declaration page showing the $50,000 limit, and a chronological payment ledger of when each provider’s claims were received and paid — raised triable issues on exhaustion.
Why This Matters for Carriers and Providers
For carriers, the decision is doubly useful. Substantively, it confirms that denying a claim does not freeze the policy: the carrier may keep paying other providers’ legitimate claims while the denied claim is litigated, and if the limits run out before the disputed claim is reduced to an obligation to pay, exhaustion is a live defense — even against an arbitration award. Procedurally, it shows the evidentiary floor: keep a clean, chronological payment ledger and produce the declaration page, and a vacatur petition has traction.
For medical providers, the Harmonic exception is a hard rule to litigate around. A provider whose claim is denied and who spends years in arbitration may emerge with an award against an empty policy. The practical responses are speed — contest denials promptly, because the policy is depleting in the meantime — and scrutiny of the carrier’s exhaustion proof. A ledger with gaps, or payments made after the carrier was already obligated to pay the disputed claim, can defeat the defense.
Anesthesia and surgical providers feel this most acutely: their bills are large, often arrive after months of physical therapy and diagnostic billing, and are the likeliest to hit a depleted policy. Where the injuries are serious, the real recovery may lie outside no-fault entirely — in the bodily injury action arising from the accident.
Practice Pointers
- Carriers: maintain a chronological payment ledger from day one — dates received, dates paid, payee, and running balance — and pair it with the declaration page in any exhaustion submission.
- Carriers: raise exhaustion at every stage, including by petition to vacate; the courts treat the policy limit as a boundary on the arbitrator’s power.
- Providers: demand the ledger and audit it. Exhaustion is the carrier’s burden, and the ledger either proves the math or it does not.
- Providers: move contested denials quickly; the Harmonic exception means the clock on the policy keeps running while you arbitrate.
Frequently Asked Questions
What happens when a no-fault policy is exhausted in New York?
Once the policy’s monetary limit — typically $50,000 in basic PIP benefits — has been paid out in no-fault benefits, the carrier’s obligation ends. An arbitration award directing payment beyond that limit exceeds the arbitrator’s power and can be vacated by the courts.
Can an insurer pay other providers after denying my no-fault claim?
Yes. Under the Harmonic Physical Therapy exception applied in Allstate v Northeast Anesthesia, 11 NYCRR 65-3.15 does not preclude a carrier from paying other legitimate claims after it denies a disputed claim — even if those payments ultimately exhaust the policy.
How does an insurer prove policy exhaustion?
With the policy declaration page showing the limit and a payment ledger listing, in chronological order, when each provider’s claims were received and paid. In this case that package — submitted with an attorney’s affirmation — raised triable issues sufficient to support vacatur proceedings.
Related Resources
- Understanding priority of payment in no-fault insurance claims
- How policy exhaustion must align with priority of payment requirements
- Policy exhaustion and priority of payment fundamentals
- Preserving policy limit defenses when compelled payments may exceed limits
- Priority of payment regulation and forced arbitration (2024–2025) — the firm’s priority-of-payment cluster hub
- Successful collateral attack on arbitration award for policy limit issues
- Browse the firm’s Legal Encyclopedia for more no-fault doctrine
- No-fault defense practice page
Legal Context
Why This Matters for Your Case
New York law is among the most complex and nuanced in the country, with distinct procedural rules, substantive doctrines, and court systems that differ significantly from other jurisdictions. The Civil Practice Law and Rules (CPLR) governs every stage of civil litigation, from service of process through trial and appeal. The Appellate Division, Appellate Term, and Court of Appeals create a rich and ever-evolving body of case law that practitioners must follow.
Attorney Jason Tenenbaum has practiced across these areas for over 24 years, writing more than 1,000 appellate briefs and publishing over 2,353 legal articles that attorneys and clients rely on for guidance. The analysis in this article reflects real courtroom experience — from motion practice in Civil Court and Supreme Court to oral arguments before the Appellate Division — and a deep understanding of how New York courts actually apply the law in practice.
Keep Reading
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Mar 21, 2013Frequently Asked Questions
Common Questions About This Topic
3 answers from the firm's New York personal-injury and employment-law practice. Click any question to expand.
What happens when a no-fault policy is exhausted in New York?
Once the policy's monetary limit — typically $50,000 in basic PIP benefits — has been paid out in no-fault benefits, the carrier's obligation ends. An arbitration award directing payment beyond that limit exceeds the arbitrator's power and can be vacated by the courts.
Can an insurer pay other providers after denying my no-fault claim?
Yes. Under the Harmonic Physical Therapy exception applied in *Allstate v Northeast Anesthesia*, 11 NYCRR 65-3.15 does not preclude a carrier from paying other legitimate claims after it denies a disputed claim — even if those payments ultimately exhaust the policy.
How does an insurer prove policy exhaustion?
With the policy declaration page showing the limit and a payment ledger listing, in chronological order, when each provider's claims were received and paid. In this case that package — submitted with an attorney's affirmation — raised triable issues sufficient to support vacatur proceedings.
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About the Author
Jason Tenenbaum, Esq.
Jason Tenenbaum is the founding attorney of the Law Office of Jason Tenenbaum, P.C., headquartered at 326 Walt Whitman Road, Suite C, Huntington Station, New York 11746. With over 24 years of experience since founding the firm in 2002, Jason has written more than 1,000 appeals, handled over 100,000 no-fault insurance cases, and recovered over $100 million for clients across Long Island, Nassau County, Suffolk County, Queens, Brooklyn, Manhattan, the Bronx, and Staten Island. He is one of the few attorneys in the state who both writes his own appellate briefs and tries his own cases.
Jason is admitted to practice in New York, New Jersey, Florida, Texas, Georgia, and Michigan state courts, as well as multiple federal courts. His 2,353+ published legal articles analyzing New York case law, procedural developments, and litigation strategy make him one of the most prolific legal commentators in the state. He earned his Juris Doctor from Syracuse University College of Law.
Disclaimer: This article is published by the Law Office of Jason Tenenbaum, P.C. for informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice, and no attorney-client relationship is formed by reading this content. The legal principles discussed may not apply to your specific situation, and the law may have changed since this article was last updated.
New York law varies by jurisdiction — court decisions in one Appellate Division department may not be followed in another, and local court rules in Nassau County Supreme Court differ from those in Suffolk County Supreme Court, Kings County Civil Court, or Queens County Supreme Court. The Appellate Division, Second Department (which covers Long Island, Brooklyn, Queens, and Staten Island) and the Appellate Term (which hears appeals from lower courts) each have distinct procedural requirements and precedents that affect litigation strategy.
If you need legal help with a policy exhaustion matter, contact our office at (516) 750-0595 for a free consultation. We serve clients throughout Long Island (Huntington, Babylon, Islip, Brookhaven, Smithtown, Riverhead, Southampton, East Hampton), Nassau County (Hempstead, Garden City, Mineola, Great Neck, Manhasset, Freeport, Long Beach, Rockville Centre, Valley Stream, Westbury, Hicksville, Massapequa), Suffolk County (Hauppauge, Deer Park, Bay Shore, Central Islip, Patchogue, Brentwood), Queens, Brooklyn, Manhattan, the Bronx, Staten Island, and Westchester County. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome.