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Josh, not really playing the blame game here, But I would have appreciated the insurance company putting me on notice...at least I would have known that the car was being taken. As I stated earlier, I realize that I can find out where the car is, but the supervisor was planning to conduct his evaluation on Tuesday and agreed to call when enroute so we could meet him there, but he never contacted us. I then called the towing company to see if he had stopped by and it was then that I learned that the car was gone...and had been gone for several days.
To some degree that is on them. Ignoring the settlement number for a moment, you have no obligation to agree to their settlement offer. If they took the car away from you then you may have the right to have them return it. They may be on the hook for expenses to get the vehicle back to you, but it sounds like the best move is to haggle a little higher on the price and call it a day. Again, cars can be deeply personal and what a car is worth and what an owner thinks it's worth are usually two different numbers. You seem like a reasonable enough person and maybe after spending the night sleeping on it the offer might seem a little more fair. 244k miles? Hondas are amazing, you can tell when you look at used ones how long they last because they have so many miles on them, but the tranny and engine could have just as easily failed you on that in the next mile. Even for a honda, quarter of a million miles is a lot. It's hard for an adjuster to ignore that kind of mileage. You might be able to get the stereo out of it too.