Why Trust This Analysis
This article is part of our ongoing euo issues coverage, with 197 published articles analyzing euo issues 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
- The Appellate Term, Second Department held there is no distinction between a carrier’s contractual remedies for an EUO no-show occurring before versus after submission of the claim form.
- The timing argument was an attempt to carve a loophole out of the EUO appearance requirement; it failed.
- The court’s reasoning draws force from the First Department’s Manoo line addressing pre-claim-form examinations.
- Providers cannot defeat an EUO no-show defense by pointing to when in the claims cycle the demand issued.
Understanding EUO No-Show Consequences: When Timing Doesn’t Matter
Examinations Under Oath (EUOs) represent a critical component of New York no-fault insurance law, allowing insurance carriers to investigate claims through sworn testimony. When claimants fail to appear for these examinations, insurers typically invoke contractual remedies to deny coverage. A recurring question in no-fault litigation has been whether the timing of a no-show—before or after claim form submission—should affect the available remedies.
Recent appellate decisions have addressed this timing distinction, with courts examining whether insurers should have different contractual options based on when the EUO failure occurs in the claims process. This issue has particular significance for medical providers and other no-fault claimants who face EUO obligations as part of routine claims investigations.
The resolution of timing-based distinctions has implications for how courts interpret insurance policy language and the uniformity of contractual enforcement in no-fault cases. Understanding these judicial interpretations helps practitioners navigate EUO-related disputes more effectively.
The Decision
Jason Tenenbaum’s Analysis:
National Med. & Surgical Supply, Inc. v ELRAC, Inc., 2017 NY Slip Op 50028(U) (App. Term 2d Dept. 2017)
“Contrary to plaintiff’s assertion, there is no basis for a distinction between defendant’s contractual remedies when “the failure to appear for occurs before the submission of the claim form or after its submission” (id. at 722).”
This line of reasoning has its force from the Manoo debacle at the First Department.
The Legal Framework: The EUO as a Condition of Coverage
The mandatory personal injury protection endorsement prescribed by the no-fault regulation (11 NYCRR 65) requires an eligible injured person — and, by assignment, the medical provider standing in that person’s shoes — to submit to examinations under oath “as may reasonably be required.” New York courts treat appearance at a properly demanded EUO as a condition of coverage: a claimant who fails to appear at two duly scheduled examinations breaches the policy, and the carrier may deny the claims.
The provider’s argument in ELRAC tried to slice that rule by chronology. The verification machinery of 11 NYCRR 65-3.5 is keyed to receipt of a claim form — verification requests follow the NF-3 — so, the argument ran, an EUO demanded before a given claim form is submitted should sit outside the verification framework and carry different (lesser) consequences than a post-claim verification EUO.
The Appellate Term rejected the dichotomy. The EUO obligation is rooted in the policy endorsement itself, not merely in the claim-specific verification timetable. Whether the demanded examination precedes or follows the paper claim, the contractual remedy for non-appearance is the same. As noted above, the conclusion draws force from the First Department’s Manoo decision addressing examinations demanded before claim forms arrive — a holding this author has filed under debacle, but which is now firmly embedded in the case law of both departments.
Why This Matters for Carriers and Providers
For carriers, ELRAC preserves the ability to demand EUOs early — often the point in a suspicious claim when sworn testimony is most useful, before months of bills accumulate. A carrier investigating a questionable treatment pattern or eligibility issue need not wait for each NF-3 to trickle in before locking in the appearance obligation.
For medical providers, the decision closes what looked like a promising technical defense. Timing alone will not invalidate an EUO demand. The productive battlegrounds remain elsewhere: whether the scheduling letters were timely and properly mailed, whether the carrier can prove non-appearance at both examinations, and whether the denial issued timely. Providers who simply skip EUOs on a timing theory do so at the cost of the entire claim.
The uniformity principle also matters for arbitration strategy. Because the appearance obligation is contractual and timing-neutral, the same no-show proof package controls in court and before AAA arbitrators alike.
Practice Pointers
- Providers: do not build a case strategy on when the EUO demand issued relative to the claim form — ELRAC forecloses it in the Second Department’s Appellate Term, and Manoo reasoning covers the First.
- Providers: attack the proof chain instead — mailing, timeliness of the scheduling letters, proof of non-appearance, and the timeliness of the denial.
- Carriers: even with timing flexibility, paper every EUO demand as if it were verification: prompt scheduling, proper follow-up after a first no-show, and affidavits of mailing from witnesses with personal knowledge.
- Carriers: keep the EUO demand “reasonably required” — breadth and burden objections survive ELRAC even though timing objections do not.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can a no-fault insurer demand an EUO before the claim form is submitted?
Yes. The EUO obligation arises from the mandatory policy endorsement, and under National Med. & Surgical Supply v ELRAC the carrier’s contractual remedies for a no-show are the same whether the failure to appear occurs before or after submission of the claim form.
What happens if a medical provider skips an EUO in New York?
Failure to appear at two duly scheduled examinations under oath breaches a condition of coverage, permitting the carrier to deny the claims — provided the carrier can prove timely, properly mailed scheduling letters and the non-appearances themselves.
Are there still defenses to an EUO no-show denial after ELRAC?
Yes. Providers can challenge the carrier’s proof of mailing, the timeliness of the scheduling letters and the denial, the reasonableness of the EUO demand, and the sufficiency of the non-appearance proof. Only the before/after-claim-form timing argument is off the table.
Related Resources
- EUO requirements in New York no-fault insurance cases — cluster hub
- Allstate EUO no-show cases
- EUO obligations in routine claims investigations
- No-fault insurance enforcement — Alrof, citing again
- New York No-Fault Insurance Law
- Browse the firm’s Legal Encyclopedia for foundational no-fault doctrine
- No-Fault Defense
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.
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Jan 6, 2014Frequently 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.
Can a no-fault insurer demand an EUO before the claim form is submitted?
Yes. The EUO obligation arises from the mandatory policy endorsement, and under *National Med. & Surgical Supply v ELRAC* the carrier's contractual remedies for a no-show are the same whether the failure to appear occurs before or after submission of the claim form.
What happens if a medical provider skips an EUO in New York?
Failure to appear at two duly scheduled examinations under oath breaches a condition of coverage, permitting the carrier to deny the claims — provided the carrier can prove timely, properly mailed scheduling letters and the non-appearances themselves.
Are there still defenses to an EUO no-show denial after ELRAC?
Yes. Providers can challenge the carrier's proof of mailing, the timeliness of the scheduling letters and the denial, the reasonableness of the EUO demand, and the sufficiency of the non-appearance proof. Only the before/after-claim-form timing argument is off the table.
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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.
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