In North Carolina, if the assigned claims representative is out of the office and no one responds to your counteroffer, your counteroffer usually just sits open until it is accepted, rejected, or withdrawn. Silence is not the same as acceptance, and you generally do not have an enforceable settlement unless both sides clearly agree to the same terms. The most important practical risk is timing: ongoing negotiations typically do not stop the statute of limitations from running, so you may need to file suit to protect the claim if a deadline is approaching.
In North Carolina personal injury claims, people often ask: “If we made a counteroffer, can we force a response when the insurance claims representative is out of the office?” This question matters because settlement talks can feel like they are “almost done,” but the claim can still stall if the adjuster is unavailable. Here, one key fact is that your office is following up on prior counteroffers while trying to reach the assigned claims representative who is currently out of the office.
Under North Carolina law, a settlement is a contract. That means you generally need a clear offer and a clear acceptance of the same material terms (for example, who is being released, what claims are being released, and the amount and timing of payment). If the insurer does not respond, there is typically no acceptance and no binding settlement yet.
Separately, North Carolina has a process that can be used in some situations to push an insurance claim toward resolution: prelitigation mediation of certain insurance claims. When it applies and is properly initiated, it can temporarily toll (pause) certain time periods, including statutes of limitations, from the time the request is filed until 30 days after mediation concludes. This is a tool to discuss with counsel when negotiations stall and a deadline is getting close.
Apply the Rule to the Facts: You have made counteroffers and are trying to reach the assigned claims representative, but the representative is out of the office. Under basic settlement contract principles, the lack of a response generally means there is no acceptance yet, so there is no final settlement to “enforce.” Practically, that means your counteroffer remains unresolved unless you set a deadline and withdraw it, the insurer accepts it, or the insurer responds with a different offer.
If the claims representative is out of the office and no one responds to your counteroffer, the usual result in North Carolina is simple: there is no settlement yet because silence is not acceptance. Your counteroffer remains pending unless it is accepted, rejected, or withdrawn, and you still must protect the claim’s filing deadline while negotiations are stalled. The most important next step is to calendar the statute of limitations and file a lawsuit before it expires if you cannot get a timely response.
If you’re dealing with stalled settlement negotiations because the insurance adjuster is out of the office, an attorney can help you document your position, push the claim forward through the right channels, and protect critical deadlines. Reach out today.
Disclaimer: This article provides general information about North Carolina law based on the single question stated above. It is not legal advice for your specific situation and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Laws, procedures, and local practice can change and may vary by county. If you have a deadline, act promptly and speak with a licensed North Carolina attorney.