Property

  • 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

    $5M Hurricane Damage Claim Must Be Arbitrated, Court Told

    A collection of New Orleans-area property owners must arbitrate their more than $5.1 million Hurricane Ida damage dispute, a group of insurers and underwriters told a Louisiana federal court.

  • January 05, 2024

    Insurer Can't Avoid U. Of Washington COVID Coverage Suit

    The University of Washington has made a plausible claim for coverage against the loss of functionality in a lawsuit seeking coverage from a Liberty Mutual insurer for hundreds of millions of dollars in pandemic-related losses and expenses, a state court judge said in denying the insurer's bid to have the case tossed.

  • January 05, 2024

    Industry Org. Backs Lloyd's, Other Insurers In Arbitration Row

    The Wholesale and Specialty Insurance Association has asked the Second Circuit to let it support a group of surplus lines insurers who claim a New York federal judge erred by not compelling into arbitration a Louisiana property owner who sued the insurers over unpaid claims stemming from Hurricane Ida.

  • January 05, 2024

    No Coverage For BlackRock In La. Hurricane Damage Row

    An insurer doesn't have to pay homeowner BlackRock International for over $200,000 in damage from 2020 Hurricanes Laura and Delta, a Louisiana federal judge ruled, finding that the amount of losses wasn't enough to trigger a third-party payment to the investment company under a lender's policy.

  • January 05, 2024

    NJ Panel Backs Insurers' Win In Wawa COVID Coverage Suit

    A New Jersey state appellate court rejected convenience store chain Wawa Inc.'s bid to revive its COVID-19 business interruption lawsuit, finding Friday that its all-risk policies do not cover its pandemic-related losses.

  • January 04, 2024

    11th Circ. Again Refuses Empire's Bid To Undo Fla. Appraisal

    For the third time, an Eleventh Circuit appeals panel told Empire Indemnity Insurance Co. that the court lacked jurisdiction to overturn an order compelling appraisal in a dispute over 2017 Hurricane Irma damage to Florida condos.

  • January 04, 2024

    Hanover Partially Settles Ga. Shooting Death Coverage Row

    The Hanover Insurance Co. settled its dispute with a trio of real estate companies over a shooting death at an apartment complex they manage in Georgia federal court Thursday, but maintained its ongoing dispute with the victim's estate.

  • 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

    Fla. Homeowner Sues NFIP Insurer For Ian Coverage

    A Florida property owner sued an American Family Insurance unit Thursday for more than $83,000 in National Flood Insurance Program coverage for damage caused by Hurricane Ian, arguing that the insurer underpaid its claim.

  • 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

    Textile Co. Says No Redo For Insurer In Hail Damage Suit

    A textile company asked a Texas federal court to again deny an insurer's bid for an early win in a hail damage coverage dispute, claiming the insurer's motions for reconsideration were based on arguments the court already rejected.

  • 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 03, 2024

    Clothing Co. Asks NC Justices To Revive Virus Coverage Row

    A North Carolina clothing company has asked the state's top court to take up its appeal seeking insurance coverage for COVID-19 losses, arguing both the trial court and the court of appeals erred by ruling that the virus could not have caused qualifying physical damage to the property.

  • January 03, 2024

    Fla. Panel Splits With Sister Court Over Reopened Irma Claims

    A Florida appellate panel ruled Wednesday that a condominium association provided sufficient notice to its insurer that it intended to add to or reopen its Hurricane Irma damage claim, rejecting a requirement established in a previous ruling by a different state appeals court.

  • January 03, 2024

    New NY Law Requires Auto Insurers To Verify Driving History

    A newly passed New York law will require auto insurers to check an applicant's driving history through a third-party database before using that information to issue or accept premiums for a private passenger policy.

  • January 03, 2024

    Property Insurer To Offer Replacement Coverage In Florida

    Property insurance company Loggerhead Insurance negotiated with Progressive Home to provide replacement coverage for 115,000 policies held by Florida homeowners, according to a Wednesday announcement.

  • January 03, 2024

    Insurer Must Face Bad Faith Claim Despite Erroneous Payout

    A Florida appeals panel unanimously overturned a lower court ruling Wednesday, finding that a property owner could proceed with her bad faith claim against an insurer who erroneously paid over $59,000 for her property damage, though it wasn't covered by the policy.

  • January 03, 2024

    Agents' Miscommunication Led To $1M Claim Denial, Co. Says

    Insurance agents for a Texas-based textile restoration company caused it to lose coverage for $1 million in vandalism damage by providing its insurer with inaccurate information about the property's occupancy, the company told a Texas federal court.

  • January 03, 2024

    Insurer Settles With Some Defendants In Virus Delay Cost Suit

    Four individual defendants settled with an insurer in its Florida federal court dispute against a construction company over claims on surety bonds during the COVID-19 pandemic, leaving the construction company as the sole active defendant in the case.

  • January 03, 2024

    Detroit Condo Insurer Escapes Covering Underlying Clashes

    An insurer doesn't have to cover a Detroit condo facing suits over damaged fences, defamation and legal fees, a Michigan federal judge ruled, finding exclusions in the directors and officers policy doomed the claims.

  • January 03, 2024

    Eatery Says Insurer On Hook For Seawall Collapse

    Insurer AmGuard has offered a series of shifting reasons to deny coverage for damage claims by the owners of a landmark Massachusetts restaurant built atop a seawall that partially collapsed last May, a lawsuit alleges.

  • January 03, 2024

    Travelers Must Face Suit Over Ill. Condo Storm Damage

    An Illinois federal magistrate judge refused to trim a bad faith claim from a condominium association's more than $280,000 storm damage suit against Travelers Casualty Insurance Co. of America, finding that the count was adequately pled with specific allegations.

  • January 02, 2024

    Bias Invalidates Bombing Coverage Award, Property Co. Says

    A Nashville, Tennessee, property owner urged a federal court to set aside an appraisal award in a coverage dispute over damage caused by a Christmas Day bombing in 2020, saying a Zurich unit's appraiser created bias and partiality in the umpire in favor of the insurer.

  • January 02, 2024

    $1M Alcohol Spill Damage Not Covered, Insurer Says

    An insurer told a Tennessee federal court that it should not have to cover an underlying lawsuit claiming more than $1 million in damage to a warehouse after expired alcoholic beverages seeped into the floor, because the facility wasn't an insured property.

Expert Analysis

  • 5th Circ. Ruling Aids Policyholder Deductible Calculations

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    In its recent McDonnel Group v. Starr Surplus Lines Insurance decision, the Fifth Circuit held that the policy's flood deductible language was ambiguous, providing a win for policyholders and a helpful mathematical interpretation for insureds with similar deductible language in their property insurance policies, says Tae Andrews at Miller Friel.

  • COVID-19 Offers Cautionary Tales On Hospitality Contracts

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    Hotel owners should look closely at the agreements that govern hotel investment and operation to learn lessons from the pandemic and to protect against such vulnerability in the future with force majeure clauses and other provisions, say Anthony Cavanaugh and Jiah Park at Miles & Stockbridge.

  • What Mainstreaming Of Litigation Finance Means For Industry

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    The rush of new capital and investors into the litigation funding space is expected to bring heightened competition on price and other key deal terms, but litigants will need to be more in tune with individual financiers' proclivities, says William Weisman at Therium Capital Management.

  • After Ida, A Look At Sandy's Flood Insurance Lessons

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    The flood insurance experience gained in connection with Superstorm Sandy can offer valuable lessons to those that have suffered a flood loss from the recent Hurricane Ida, and can guide others before and after the next storm, say Lee Epstein and Matthew Goldstein at Flaster Greenberg.

  • Federal Courts Make 2 Basic Errors In Virus Coverage Rulings

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    Many federal courts deciding dispositive motions in COVID-19 business interruption coverage cases are neglecting fundamental precepts of civil procedure by acting as fact-finders or failing to defer to forum state decisions, say attorneys at Hunton.

  • Lifting The Veil On The Supreme Court's Shadow Docket

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    Following headline-making U.S. Supreme Court emergency orders on Texas’ new abortion law, COVID-19 restrictions and more, Vetan Kapoor, counsel to Senate Judiciary Committee ranking member Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, examines the court's so-called shadow docket and its decision-making procedures, including questions around transparency, timing and precedential effect.

  • Insurance Commissioner's Agenda: DC On Long-Term Care

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    Washington, D.C., Insurance Commissioner Karima Woods outlines the development of insurance coverage for older adults' long-term care benefits and how regulators and the industry are attempting to resolve issues with the popular product.

  • Embracing ESG: United Natural Foods GC Talks Bottom Line

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    In prioritizing environmental, social and governance initiatives as strategic value drivers, corporate general counsel can leverage meaningful ESG progress to benefit both the business's bottom line and the wider world, says Jill Sutton at United Natural Foods.

  • Ruling Rightly Sends COVID Biz Interruption Question To Jury

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    After a string of insurer coronavirus coverage wins on dispositive motions, a Missouri federal court's ruling this week in favor of the policyholder in K.C. Hopps v. Cincinnati Insurance places the decision-making responsibility about the facts and science in COVID-19 business interruption cases back where it belongs — with a jury, say attorneys at Pillsbury.

  • Policyholder Outlook Following UK Biz Interruption Test Case

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    In the nine months since the U.K. Supreme Court ruled in favor of policyholders in the Financial Conduct Authority’s test case on insurance coverage for COVID-19 businesses interruption claims, similar lawsuits filed against insurers show that a positive outcome for insureds is not guaranteed, say Peter Sharp and Paul Mesquitta at Morgan Lewis.

  • Justice Gap Demands Look At New Legal Service Models

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    Current restrictions on how lawyers structure their businesses stand in the way of meaningful access to justice for many Americans, so states should follow the lead of Utah and Florida and test out innovative law firm business models through regulatory sandboxes, says Zachariah DeMeola at the Institute for the Advancement of the American Legal System.

  • Lessons From 3rd Circ. COVID Biz Interruption Ruling

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    The Third Circuit's recent DiAnoia's v. Motorists Mutual Insurance decision, directing district courts to reevaluate their remand of three pandemic-related business interruption cases to state courts, holds a lesson that determining Declaratory Judgment Act jurisdiction requires a rigorous analysis of all factors, says Regen O'Malley at Gordon Rees.

  • What 5th Circ. Ruling Means For Insurers' Post-Award Liability

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    The Fifth Circuit's recent decision in Randel v. Travelers, holding that an insurer's timely preappraisal payment did not extinguish its liability to its insured, highlights the importance of thoroughness and accuracy in initial loss inspections, says ​​​​​​​Karl Schulz at Cozen O'Connor.

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