Specialty Lines

  • April 26, 2023

    Scholastic Says Travelers Must Cover $13M Settlement

    A Travelers unit has wrongfully refused to provide Scholastic Inc. coverage for more than $13 million remaining in a settlement with Vanderbilt University after the college sued the book publisher and distributor over trademark and copyright infringement, Scholastic told a New York federal court Wednesday.

  • April 26, 2023

    Wire Co. Seeks Defense For Podcast's False Advertising Suit

    A wire and cable manufacturer told a Texas federal court that its insurer should have defended it in an underlying false advertising lawsuit, saying the personal and advertising injury claim it filed fits squarely within its commercial general liability policy.

  • April 26, 2023

    Accounting Co. Gets Case Stay In Fraud Coverage Spat

    A coverage fight brought by an accounting group's insurer will be placed on hold pending underlying state court proceedings in litigation alleging that a former officer made unauthorized credit card charges, a California federal court ruled Tuesday.

  • April 26, 2023

    Insurance Attorney Named New Head Of Covington's SF Office

    A seasoned insurance attorney has been named the new managing partner of Covington & Burling LLP's growing San Francisco office, where the firm has been operating since 1999.

  • April 26, 2023

    Marketing Co. Wants Out Of La. Hurricane Solicitation Suit

    A legal marketing company accused of deceptively soliciting Louisiana hurricane victims as clients for a controversial law firm has asked to be dropped from a putative class action, telling a Texas federal judge Tuesday that the suit fails to establish that its work on behalf of McClenny Moseley & Associates caused any real harm.

  • April 26, 2023

    Co. Settles With 2 Insurers In EEOC Suit Coverage Spat

    A senior care facility has settled its claims against two of four defendants in a coverage fight over a U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission lawsuit alleging that the facility allowed employees to be harassed, the facility told a Colorado federal court.

  • April 25, 2023

    Clover Health To Pay $22M In Investor Suit Over DOJ Probe

    Medicare Advantage insurance provider Clover Health Investments Corp. has agreed to a $22 million settlement deal that resolves claims it covered up a U.S. Department of Justice probe as it prepared to go public via a merger with a special-purpose acquisition company.

  • April 25, 2023

    Insurance Broker Wants Out Of Mushroom Shipping Suit

    An insurance broker said it should be dismissed from a mushroom company's Texas federal suit over a weeklong revocation of authorization to operate its shipping truck fleet, allegedly caused by a failure to notify the Department of Transportation of new insurance coverage.

  • April 25, 2023

    Underwriter Says Lloyd's Must Help In Settlement Payments

    Lloyd's of London must contribute to a settlement that an underwriter and an adjuster agreed to pay after the duo was accused of mishandling claims related to a fatal vehicle crash, the pair told a California federal court, saying the payment is a covered loss under its policy.

  • April 25, 2023

    IRS Seeks To Force Sex Toy Co. To Hand Over Insurance Docs

    A sex toy company should be forced to comply with an IRS summons seeking accounting documents, financial statements and other records in the agency's investigation of what it alleges was a captive insurance scheme, the U.S. government told a California federal court.

  • April 25, 2023

    BCBS Unit Owes Out-Of-Network Payments, Practice Says

    A Blue Cross Blue Shield unit owes a surgery practice "hundreds of thousands of dollars" in out-of-network payment awards issued to the practice under the No Surprises Act, the surgery practice told a New York federal court.

  • April 24, 2023

    Solar Panel Co. Rips Insurer's 'Onerous' Terms As Trial Opens

    Canadian Solar Inc.'s counsel told a California federal judge during bench trial opening arguments on Monday that Sussex Insurance and its predecessor imposed "onerous" provisions and wrongfully denied $45 million in solar panel warranty claims while the insurer's counsel said the policies never specifically covered the types of claims at issue.

  • April 24, 2023

    Minn. Panel Reverses Insurer's Coverage Escape In Injury Suit

    A Minnesota appeals court panel overturned on Monday an insurer's win in its dispute over the duty to defend a woman sued by a police officer over injuries he suffered when she dragged him from her car, finding a dispute exists over whether she acted intentionally.

  • April 24, 2023

    Insurer Tips Cash Value Scale Against Insureds, Court Told

    A group of policyholders launched a proposed class action against American Family Mutual Insurance Co., alleging that the insurer "thumbs the scale against its insured" in Illinois and Ohio by using an adjustment when determining the actual cash value of their total-loss vehicles.

  • April 24, 2023

    9th Circ. Declines Redo On Malicious Prosecution Coverage

    The Ninth Circuit declined Monday to rehear its decision last month against a Los Angeles law firm that an insurance company should be reimbursed for its contributions to a malicious prosecution settlement.

  • April 24, 2023

    Staffing Agency's Clients Not Covered, Insurer Says

    A cannabis staffing agency's insurance policy doesn't cover its client's employees, the insurer told a California federal judge in its bid for a pretrial win in its suit seeking to avoid coverage of a wrongful termination suit.

  • April 24, 2023

    Allstate Tells 4th Circ. To Uphold Win In UIM Coverage Spat

    Allstate asked the Fourth Circuit to affirm its win in a suit brought by a South Carolina woman injured in a car accident, arguing state law doesn't support the partial policy ratification under which the woman said she should be able to add $100,000 in underinsured motorist coverage.

  • April 24, 2023

    Fishing Co., Shipbuilder Win $23M In Policy Blank-Space Fight

    Various insurers led by Norwegian Hull Club must pay a fishing company and shipbuilder more than $23 million in additional coverage and prejudgment interest over a vessel severely damaged by Hurricane Michael, a Florida federal judge ruled, finding that their $77 million policy escalated coverage up to 25%.

  • April 24, 2023

    Exclusion Bars Subpoena Expenses Coverage, Judge Says

    A drug development company born out of a merger does not have coverage for expenses it advanced to two of its former officers in connection with U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission subpoenas, a California federal court ruled, saying the company hasn't shown that a change-in-control exclusion is inapplicable.

  • April 21, 2023

    Law360 Reveals Titans Of The Plaintiffs Bar

    In the past year, companies like Juul, Capital One and Southern California Edison have settled for millions if not billions of dollars in litigation that was high-profile and often groundbreaking in its impact on the law itself. Such cases and many others — which involved opioids, sexual harassment, kickbacks and data breaches — were led by attorneys whose accomplishments helped them earn recognition as Law360's Titans of the Plaintiffs Bar for 2023.

  • April 21, 2023

    Excess Insurer Ducks Defense Costs For Ex-Medical Director

    A New York federal judge rejected a former medical center director's bid to force an excess insurer to fund defense costs in adversarial bankruptcy proceedings, finding the policyholder was unable to show that a bankruptcy/insolvency exclusion is inapplicable or unlawful.

  • April 21, 2023

    Oil Trader Sues Liberty Mutual For Contamination Damage

    Houston-based oil and gas trader Grey Rock Gathering and Marketing LLC hit Liberty Mutual Insurance Co. with a breach of contract suit on Friday for failing to cover damage related to a contaminated oil shipment.

  • April 21, 2023

    6th Circ. Reverses Health Care Co.'s Retaliation Coverage Win

    The Sixth Circuit on Friday reversed a health care holding company's win in a dispute over coverage for a settlement of several employees' retaliation claims brought under the False Claims Act, saying a Fairfax Financial insurance unit's policy excluded coverage of the claims.

  • April 21, 2023

    Ozy CEO Can Get Advanced Defense Costs, Court Says

    Ozy Media's insurer must advance defense costs to Ozy's CEO but not the media company itself, a California federal court said Thursday, saying there is little evidence supporting rescission of the policy concerning the CEO at this point in litigation.

  • April 21, 2023

    Firm Says Travelers Owes $1M For Gymnastics Fund Hack

    Travelers should have to pay its $1 million policy limit to a law firm claiming it lost $1.6 million when its USA Gymnastics sex abuse settlement fund was hacked, the firm said, telling a Michigan federal court that its policy specifically provides coverage for losses resulting from fraudulent wire transfers.

Expert Analysis

  • Insurance Commissioner's Agenda: NY On Industry Diversity

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    My Chi To, executive deputy superintendent of the New York State Department of Financial Services Insurance Division, discusses steps her agency is taking to promote diversity, equity and inclusion within the insurance industry and suggests practices for companies to consider adopting.

  • FCA Ruling Guides Insureds On Classifying Restitution Costs

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    In Astellas v. Starr Indemnity, an Illinois federal court recently held that a False Claims Act settlement qualified as insurable compensatory damages, not uninsurable disgorgement, providing an important guide to policyholders navigating the tax code's deductibility requirements and insurance policy exclusions, say attorneys at Reed Smith.

  • Subpoena Defense Cost Ruling Gets Insurance Law Wrong

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    A Connecticut federal court's recent decision that National Union Fire Insurance Co. of Pittsburgh didn't need to cover defense costs for a power utility's response to a grand jury subpoena included two crucial mistakes that contravene long-standing insurance law principles, say attorneys at Hunton.

  • 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.

  • 5 Buyers' Counsel Tips For R&W Insurance Underwriting Calls

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    With representations and warranties insurance becoming more popular than ever, buyers' counsel participating in underwriting calls for such insurance should follow certain best practices to secure contracts with minimal exclusions, say Bryan O'Keefe and Gena Usenheimer at Seyfarth.

  • When A Denial Of Recovery-Based Insurance Claim Is Invalid

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    Two recent court decisions show that policyholders should not accept denials of coverage based on the uninsurability of restitution or disgorgement-based losses without a detailed, two-part analysis of the specific state's law and the particular facts of the loss, say Stephen Raptis and Emily Buchanan at Haynes and Boone.

  • Insurance Commissioner's Agenda: Del. Tackles Mental Health

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    Delaware Insurance Commissioner Trinidad Navarro highlights the state's efforts to achieve insurance coverage parity for mental health care by confronting systemic stigma and penalizing disparate and restrictive insurance determinations.

  • Key Takeaways From The NAIC Summer National Meeting

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    Stephanie Duchene and Kara Baysinger at Willkie highlight what insurance practitioners should know about top industry priorities from the National Association of Insurance Commissioners’ recent national meeting, including climate-related risk, diversity and inclusion, and technological innovation.

  • Considerations In Structuring Private Equity D&O Coverage

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    With the surge in investment activity driven by the ongoing pandemic recovery, private equity firms should carefully consider the scope of protection afforded by their directors and officers and general partnership liability programs, and how that coverage fits into their overall risk mitigation strategy, say Geoffrey Fehling and Syed Ahmad at Hunton and Rachel Beck at CAC Specialty.

  • The Complex State Of Insurance In The Cannabis Business

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    Jan Larson and Philip Sailer at Jenner & Block outline the complex cannabis regulatory schemes perplexing courts faced with insurance coverage cases and discuss legislative solutions that could at least begin to reduce the challenges for both policyholders and insurers.

  • D&O Coverage Considerations Amid Increasing SEC Scrutiny

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    With all signs pointing to heightened U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission oversight and enforcement, policyholders should be asking four questions to ensure their directors and officers insurance provides the protection they expect and to avoid coverage disputes, say Robin Cohen and Orrie Levy at Cohen Ziffer.

  • Policyholder Best Practices As Cyberattacks Escalate

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    As ransomware attacks increasingly target corporate victims, policyholders should enhance cybersecurity and privacy efforts to avoid regulatory hot water and mitigate the effects of rising insurance premiums and coverage restrictions, say Lee Epstein and Krishna Jani at Flaster Greenberg.

  • Embracing ESG: AIG Counsel Talks SEC Risk Alert

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    As the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission responds to the changing landscape on environmental, social and corporate governance investing, including with its recent risk alert, it is imperative that the regulator take a measured approach, says Kate Fuentes at AIG.