Complete question:
Why does the insured get the benefit of the doubt if an insurance policy contains any
ambiguities or uncertainties?
A)because insurance contracts are aleatory
B)because insurance contracts are unilateral
C)because insurance contracts are conditional
D)because insurance contracts are contracts of adhesion
Answer: because insurance contracts are contracts of adhesion (Option D)
Explanation:
The insured gets a benefit of doubt if an insurance policy contains any ambiguities or uncertainties because it is included in the policy document been given to a policyholder at the inception of the insurance policy, which is stated in the arbitration clause of the policy document.
Apart from the Article II: B, C, and D are not duties of the president.
B: no, this would be a waste of time, and anyway, this is the role of the parliament, i.e. the legislative Branch, and the president is the executive branch
C: no, this belongs to the judicial branch of the government
d: this depends on what the interpretation is for, but it's not a role of the president anyway.
The correct answer is A: the president is the head of the executive Branch of the Government, which carries the laws th were passed.
Now, I am not too sure which part of the Article II is relevant, but the beginning is probably already relevant for A: "The executive power shall be vested in a President of the United States of America."
Military draft and vote. Controversial as women still left out
1. The ratio of workingage adults to adults aged 65 and older in a population is called the
elderly support ratio