General Liability

  • January 09, 2024

    Insurer Owed Defense In Parking Garage Damage Suit

    A second insurer for a concrete subcontractor had a duty to defend the company against accusations it damaged a parking garage, a California federal court held, saying the carrier failed to show that the alleged damage occurred outside the policy period.

  • January 09, 2024

    Insurance Boutique Co-Founder Joins McGuireWoods

    A founding partner of insurance boutique Pasich LLP and former adviser at consultancy AECOM is joining McGuireWoods LLP's national insurance recovery team, the firm said Monday.

  • January 08, 2024

    $5M Settlement For Fatal Bike Accident Covered, Court Told

    A Markel unit must cover a $5 million settlement reached between a policyholder's employee and the estate of a woman fatally struck in a motor vehicle accident, the estate told a Florida federal court, arguing that because the perpetrator's car wasn't owned by the policyholder, an auto exclusion wasn't triggered.

  • January 08, 2024

    Store Says Insurers Owe $2.7M In Jewelry Heist Coverage Row

    A California jewelry store that won a $2.7 million judgment against a security company it accused of negligence after the store was burglarized said the security company's insurers must pay the judgment, arguing the insurers wrongly denied coverage for the security company.

  • January 08, 2024

    Excess Insurer Says Landscaper Payment Row Isn't Covered

    The excess insurer for a general contractor told a Texas federal court that it doesn't owe coverage for a landscaper's suit alleging nonpayment, saying that neither its policies nor an agreement to resolve unrelated cross-claims obligated it to cover the suit.

  • January 08, 2024

    Ruling In Home Defect Coverage Fight Unripe, Judge Says

    A South Carolina federal judge dismissed a suit lodged by a contractor's insurer over coverage for damage supposedly caused by building defects in a man's home, finding the court lacks jurisdiction because no decision on liability has been reached in an underlying state court suit.

  • January 08, 2024

    11th Circ. Revives State Farm Vehicle Valuation Suit

    A State Farm policyholder can continue to litigate his claim that the insurer systematically undervalues totaled vehicles, the Eleventh Circuit ruled, finding that an appraisal dispute process outlined in his policy did not bar him from filing his proposed class action.

  • January 08, 2024

    Travelers Unit Owes $2.5M For Injury Suit, Liberty Mutual Says

    A pair of Liberty Mutual units told a New York federal court Monday that a Travelers insurer owes them more than $2.5 million for the costs of defending and settling claims against a construction company after an employee was injured at a work site.

  • January 08, 2024

    9th Circ. Must Define 'Occurrence' In Opioid Coverage Fight

    The question of what constitutes an occurrence, an accident that triggers an insurer's defense obligations, will take center stage before the Ninth Circuit and legal experts say the panel must clarify whether California law requires units of AIG and Chubb to defend McKesson against government opioid suits.

  • January 08, 2024

    High Court Won't Review Tossing Of UPS' Dispute With Airline

    The U.S. Supreme Court declined on Monday to review a Second Circuit ruling upholding the dismissal, for lack of personal jurisdiction, of UPS' indemnification fight against Taiwanese airline EVA Airways after an AIG unit had sued UPS over damaged vitamin pallets the airline was contracted to transport.

  • January 05, 2024

    Insurance Mogul Fights Bid To Clarify Fraud Case Review

    An embattled insurance mogul has urged the North Carolina Supreme Court to resist a bid by a group of allegedly defrauded insurers to explain the terms of the court's agreement to review a potential $420 million judgment, arguing that it would be an "unprecedented" move.

  • January 05, 2024

    Drunken Driver Says Geico Forced $14M Settlement On Him

    A drunken driver accused of causing two deaths claimed Geico failed to settle a wrongful death claim against him for a reasonable value, forcing him to take a $14 million settlement deal one day before trial, according to a suit removed to Nevada federal court.

  • January 05, 2024

    Sanctioned Co. Can't Get Coverage For Ga. Murder, Court Told

    An insurer tried again in Georgia federal court Friday to escape defending a property management company that was sanctioned for spoiling evidence in underlying litigation accusing it of failing to maintain safety at an apartment complex where a man was shot to death in 2021.

  • January 05, 2024

    Insurer Sued Over $3.5M Colo. Sewer Damage Award

    A Colorado county water authority has accused Gemini Insurance Co. of failing to defend a construction company that was found liable for $3.5 million in damages related to a botched construction project that caused a sewage line failure.

  • January 05, 2024

    Texas Co. Says It's Owed Coverage In Antitrust Class Actions

    Willow Bridge Property Co. is suing its insurers after it was denied coverage in 35 putative class actions alleging that it and others conspired to use RealPage software to inflate apartment lease rates.

  • January 05, 2024

    Property Co. Can't Get Coverage In Equipment Damage Row

    An industrial contractor's insurer has no duty to indemnify a commercial property owner over claims that the contractor caused more than $500,000 in damages for wrongly removing and damaging electrical equipment at a Pennsylvania property, a federal court ruled, finding a policy's faulty workmanship exclusion was applicable.

  • January 05, 2024

    Ky. Court Tosses Insurers' Asbestos Coverage Dispute

    A Kentucky state court tossed a group of insurers' asbestos coverage suit against a defunct machine company, saying the court lacks subject matter jurisdiction since the dissolved and liquidated company no longer has any interest in the insurance policies at issue.

  • January 05, 2024

    Mich. Parents Can Control 'Awkward' Teens' Auto Policies

    A Michigan appellate panel says parents have the authority to make auto insurance policy decisions for their children, rejecting arguments that a 17-year-old's liability limits should be declared invalid because the teen's mother selected his policy without his input.

  • January 04, 2024

    Cleaning Co. Seeks Coverage For Wrongful Termination Suit

    A kitchen exhaust system cleaning company is seeking over $250,000 in damages from two Hartford units and an insurance agency, telling an Ohio federal court that the insurers wrongfully denied coverage for an underlying judgment entered against it in a wrongful termination lawsuit.

  • January 04, 2024

    Fla. Medical Device Maker Sues Insurer Over Equipment Loss

    A medical device manufacturer accused a Munich Re unit of failing to properly cover the "equipment breakdown loss" it said it suffered in February 2022 related to its mills and lathes, according to a suit removed to Florida federal court Wednesday. 

  • January 04, 2024

    PF Chang's COVID Coverage Capped At $1M, Calif. Panel Says

    P.F. Chang's is entitled to only $1 million in coverage for its COVID-19 losses, a California state appeals court ruled, finding its policy's pandemic event endorsement clearly limits coverage for all restaurant locations to a total of $1 million.

  • January 04, 2024

    Power Supply Co. Says Insurers' Fraud Claim Is Duplicative

    An infrastructure technology company urged an Ohio federal court to dismiss a fraud claim brought by two insurers looking to recoup $18.7 million for an explosion at an insured's Alabama manufacturing facility, telling the court the claim is duplicative of the lawsuit's breach of contract claim.

  • January 04, 2024

    Chubb Unit Denied New Trial In $12.4M Crash Coverage Row

    A Chubb unit can't get a new trial in a crash coverage dispute following a jury's nearly $12.5 million verdict in favor of a trucking company, a Missouri federal court ruled, finding that any alleged errors during the trial did not prejudice the parties.

  • January 03, 2024

    Paving Co. Seeks $595K From Gov't Contractor, Liberty Mutual

    A paving company is seeking over $595,000 from an engineering services company and two payment and performance bond providers, telling a North Carolina federal court that the contractor failed to pay the full amount owed for its work on a U.S. Marine Corps air station.

  • January 03, 2024

    Wash. High Court Won't Take Up Gun Group's Insurance Fine

    The Washington State Supreme Court won't consider an appeal from a group that covers legal expenses for members who use weapons in self-defense, leaving in place a $50,000 fine from state regulators who said the organization essentially sold insurance without a license. 

Expert Analysis

  • Regulatory Estoppel Does Not Invalidate The Virus Exclusion

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    Some policyholders seeking coverage for losses stemming from COVID-19 are arguing that virus exclusions are invalid due to regulatory estoppel, but this theory lacks substance and threatens to undermine formal clarifications of insurance policy intent, say Jonathan Schwartz and Colin Willmott at Goldberg Segalla.

  • Leaving The Tort System Behind Via Corporate Risk Transfer

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    With an increasingly litigious tort environment for corporate defendants, companies holding legacy liabilities would do well to investigate a capital markets solution for transferring their risks, say Mark Hemmann at FARA LLC and Peter Kelso at Roux Associates.

  • History Can Inform Pandemic Biz Interruption Insurance Cases

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    Historical catastrophes like the SARS epidemic, the 9/11 terrorist attacks and asbestos exposure provide helpful context for understanding the scale of current insurance litigation stemming from coronavirus-related business interruption, say Anne Gron and Georgi Tsvetkov at AlixPartners.

  • 'Notice Of Circumstances' May Preempt Virus Insurance Denial

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    Insurance policyholders impacted by COVID-19 should consider proactively sending notices of circumstances to their insurers in order to preempt new pandemic policy exclusions, although this tactic carries certain risks as well, say Richard Milone and Jennifer Romeo at Milone Law Firm.

  • How Law Firms Can Maximize COVID-19 Insurance Coverage

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    Law firms struggling due to the pandemic should identify relevant insurance policies and provisions, be mindful of notice requirements that could interfere with coverage, and push back against policy exclusions, say Robin Cohen and James Smith at McKool Smith.

  • Maximize Chances Of Insurance Coverage For COVID-19

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    Policyholders suffering losses related to COVID-19 can take steps right now, such as documenting proof of loss and mitigation efforts, to preserve their chances of recovery under property or business interruption insurance policies, says Creighton Page at Foley Hoag.

  • Does Property Insurance Cover COVID-19 Damage In Texas?

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    Business interruption claims have led the news about COVID-19 insurance disputes, but ahead could be property claims made pursuant to homeowners' policies — another proposition with significant complexity, says Drew Jones at Thompson Coe.

  • Excess Policy Win Gives Calif. Insureds Hope For The Future

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    The California Supreme Court's decision in Montrose v. Los Angeles Superior Court gives insureds facing long-tail liabilities a valuable gift by adopting the theory of vertical exhaustion, but it also explicitly leaves a number of questions to be resolved in future decisions, says Michael Fehner at Irell & Manella.

  • Pa. Ruling Doesn't Support COVID-19 Biz Interruption Claims

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    A recent Law360 guest article argued that the Pennsylvania Supreme Court's decision in Friends of Devito v. Wolf provides a clear advantage to policyholders seeking business interruption coverage for COVID-19 losses, but the case is not even related to property damage, say Anthony Miscioscia and Timothy Carroll at White and Williams.

  • Liability Insurance Outlook For Opioid Public Nuisance Claims

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    As lawsuits against prescription opioid manufacturers are being narrowed to focus on public nuisance claims based on intentional business schemes, pharmaceutical companies may struggle to secure insurance coverage unless they can explain how these claims allege a fortuitous loss, say Patrick Bedell and Allyson Spacht at BatesCarey.

  • Are Litigation Funding Documents Protected From Discovery?

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    With law firms and their clients increasingly interested in exploring litigation funding during the current economic crisis, attorneys must be aware of the trends emerging in courts across the country regarding the discoverability of litigation funding materials, say attorneys at Jenner & Block and Longford Capital.

  • 3 Insurance Principles Behind Calif. Excess Policy Ruling

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    The California Supreme Court's recent decision in Montrose v. Los Angeles Superior Court, streamlining policyholders' ability to collect from multiple policies, is based on three state insurance principles specific to continuous injury, say attorneys at Reed Smith.

  • Virus Coverage Prospects Are Bright For Ind. Policyholders

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    Indiana’s strong history of rigorous protection for insureds and strict scrutiny of contract terms bodes well for policyholders seeking coverage for COVID-19-related losses, so they should not take denials at face value, say attorneys at Plews Shadley.