WYOMING ADJUSTERS
LICENSE TEST BANK
PART 0: THE (Table of Contents)
Section Cognitive Tier Focus Area Question Range
PART I The Preview Critical Axioms & N/A
Foundations
PART II Tier 1 Foundational Syntax & Q1 – Q15
Application
PART II Tier 2 Complex Application & Q16 – Q35
Simulation
PART II Tier 3 Grandmaster Synthesis Q36 – Q60
PART I: THE Preview
Mastering this Elite Test Bank guarantees a flawless transition from theoretical study to
authoritative, real-world claims adjudication. By internalizing these specific Wyoming statutory
metrics and regulatory frameworks, you will operate as a top-tier fiduciary capable of navigating
the industry's most complex liability structures.
● The "Critical Axioms" Cheat Sheet:
○ Auto Liability Baselines: Wyoming mandates a minimum financial responsibility of
25/50/20 ($25,000 bodily injury per person, $50,000 per accident, $20,000 property
damage per accident).
○ The 45-Day Prompt Payment Clock: Under W.S. 26-15-124, property and
casualty claims must be accepted or rejected and paid within exactly 45 days of
receiving the claim and supporting bills. Failure triggers a 10% per annum interest
penalty and attorney fees.
○ Labor Depreciation Prohibition: Per Wyoming Department of Insurance bulletins,
labor costs MUST NOT be depreciated when calculating Actual Cash Value (ACV)
for property claims.
○ Monopolistic Workers' Compensation: Wyoming is a monopolistic state;
extra-hazardous industries must buy coverage through the state fund. Adjusters
handling private commercial claims must verify the existence of Stop Gap
(Employers Liability) Endorsements to cover employee lawsuits.
○ Valued Policy & Excess Premium (W.S. 26-23-101): If property is totally
destroyed and the ACV is less than the policy limit, the insurer must refund the
premium paid for the excess coverage. This does NOT apply to Replacement Cost
policies.
,PART II: THE ELITE TEST BANK
Tier 1: Foundational Syntax & Application
Q1: A driver in Cheyenne causes an accident resulting in $30,000 of medical bills for a single
injured pedestrian. The driver carries only the state minimum liability limits. Based on the
principles of Wyoming Auto Insurance Requirements, which payout is the MOST ACCURATE?
A) The insurer pays $30,000 because the per-accident limit is $50,000. B) The insurer pays
$20,000 under the bodily injury provision. C) The insurer pays $25,000, and the insured is
personally liable for the remaining $5,000. D) The insurer splits the $30,000 equally with the
pedestrian's health insurance.
● The Answer: C (The insurer pays $25,000, and the insured is personally liable for the
remaining $5,000.)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: The per-person limit is strictly capped at $25,000 regardless of the
$50,000 aggregate per-accident limit.
○ B is incorrect: $20,000 represents the state minimum for property damage, not
bodily injury.
○ D is incorrect: Auto liability acts as the primary indemnity layer; it does not arbitrarily
pro-rata with health insurance for third-party liability.
The Mentor's Analysis: Wyoming minimums operate on a strict 25/50/20 framework. When
facing third-party bodily injury claims, the immediate priority is isolating the per-person cap
before analyzing the aggregate loss. By utilizing Per-Person Liability Limits, you bypass the
common trap of misapplying the gross accident limit. Professional/Academic Intuition: The
25/50/20 framework is an absolute ceiling for minimum policy defense; the insurer's duty
to indemnify ends the exact moment the $25,000 per-person limit is exhausted.
Q2: A resident adjuster receives a comprehensive proof of loss and all supporting medical bills
for a slip-and-fall claim on September 1. Based on the principles of the Wyoming Prompt
Payment Statute (W.S. 26-15-124), by what exact deadline MUST the insurer accept or reject
and pay the claim? A) September 15 (15 calendar days). B) September 30 (30 calendar days).
C) October 16 (45 calendar days). D) November 1 (60 calendar days).
● The Answer: C (October 16 (45 calendar days).)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: 15 days is an acknowledgment standard in other jurisdictions, not
Wyoming's payment standard.
○ B is incorrect: 30 days is a common timeline for clean healthcare claims, not
general P&C claims.
○ D is incorrect: 60 days exceeds the statutory limit, exposing the insurer to bad faith
penalties.
The Mentor's Analysis: Property and Casualty claim timelines are rigidly codified. When facing
a completed proof of loss, the immediate priority is starting the statutory clock. By utilizing the
45-Day Statutory Deadline , you bypass the common trap of applying generalized industry
timelines that lead to 10% penalty interest. Professional/Academic Intuition: In Wyoming
P&C claims, receipt of the final supporting bill immediately triggers a non-negotiable
45-day countdown to payment or formal rejection.
Q3: An adjuster is calculating the Actual Cash Value (ACV) of a wind-damaged roof in Casper.
, The estimate includes $5,000 for materials and $4,000 for labor. Based on the principles of the
Wyoming Department of Insurance Labor Depreciation Bulletins, which calculation is the MOST
ACCURATE? A) Both materials and labor are depreciated based on the roof's age. B) Only the
materials can be depreciated; the labor must be paid at full value. C) Only the labor can be
depreciated; the materials must be paid at full value. D) Neither labor nor materials can be
depreciated under a standard ACV policy.
● The Answer: B (Only the materials can be depreciated; the labor must be paid at full
value.)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: Depreciating labor is explicitly prohibited by the Wyoming DOI.
○ C is incorrect: Materials represent physical assets that lose value, making them
eligible for standard depreciation.
○ D is incorrect: This describes a Replacement Cost Value (RCV) policy, not an ACV
policy.
The Mentor's Analysis: Labor represents a fixed market service, not a tangible asset subject to
physical wear and tear. When facing an ACV roof settlement, the immediate priority is
separating material costs from labor costs. By utilizing the Labor Depreciation Prohibition , you
bypass the common trap of underpaying the claimant and inviting regulatory sanctions.
Professional/Academic Intuition: Never apply a depreciation schedule to human labor;
only physical building materials lose value over time.
Q4: A Wyoming commercial framing contractor operates in an "extra-hazardous" industry.
Based on the principles of Wyoming Workers' Compensation Law, which action is REQUIRED
for this employer to legally operate? A) The employer must purchase workers' compensation
insurance on the private open market. B) The employer must purchase workers' compensation
insurance directly through the state-run monopolistic fund. C) The employer may elect to
self-insure provided they post a $100,000 surety bond. D) The employer is exempt from
workers' compensation if they have fewer than 5 employees.
● The Answer: B (The employer must purchase workers' compensation insurance directly
through the state-run monopolistic fund.)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: Private insurers are barred from underwriting primary workers'
compensation for extra-hazardous industries in Wyoming.
○ C is incorrect: Wyoming does not permit employers to self-insure by posting a bond.
○ D is incorrect: Wyoming requires coverage if there is even one employee in a
mandated sector.
The Mentor's Analysis: Wyoming operates a closed ecosystem for primary occupational risk.
When facing a commercial liability profile, the immediate priority is verifying state-fund
compliance. By utilizing the Monopolistic State Fund Mandate , you bypass the common trap of
assuming a private CGL policy includes primary employee injury coverage.
Professional/Academic Intuition: Private insurers cannot underwrite primary workers'
compensation in Wyoming; extra-hazardous coverage lives exclusively within the state
fund.
Q5: An adjuster insured a Wyoming residential property for $200,000 under a standard ACV
policy. A fire causes a total loss. The adjuster determines the fair value of the property was
actually only $150,000. Based on the principles of the Wyoming Valued Policy Law (W.S.
26-23-101), what is the MOST ACCURATE required action? A) Pay $200,000 because the
policy limit acts as a liquidated demand. B) Pay $150,000 and return the premium paid for the
excess $50,000 of coverage. C) Deny the claim for material misrepresentation of property value.