Specialty Lines

  • December 19, 2023

    Krispy Kreme Gets No Defense For BIPA Suit, Insurer Says

    Krispy Kreme is not owed a defense in a proposed class action accusing it of violating the Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act, its insurer told a North Carolina federal court, saying several policy exclusions bar coverage.

  • December 19, 2023

    Insurer Can't Pass Settlement To Other Carrier, 5th Circ. Rules

    An Argo Group unit cannot shift some of an undisclosed settlement to the other participating insurer, a unanimous Fifth Circuit panel said, finding the latter is responsible only for the damage that occurred during its policy after a faulty roof replacement done by a mutual insured.

  • December 18, 2023

    Restoration Co. Not Covered For Homeowner's Lost Property

    An insurer doesn't owe coverage to a restoration company for a $428,000 judgment reached over a woman's lost and damaged property, a Virginia federal court ruled Monday, finding that the company failed to notify its insurer of the initial loss and subsequent lawsuit.

  • December 18, 2023

    Insurer Wants Out Of Covering Defense In BIPA Class Action

    A Pennsylvania insurer filed a declaratory judgment action against an Illinois supply chain management firm in Illinois state court, asking the court to determine that it owes no duty to defend or indemnify the firm in an underlying putative class action regarding an alleged biometric privacy violation.

  • December 18, 2023

    3rd Circ. Tosses Insurer Win In Nursing Home Coverage Row

    A Third Circuit panel vacated an insurer's quick win against a nursing home company facing claims from long-term care residents who contracted COVID-19, saying the coverage fight wasn't yet ripe for the district court because the company hadn't met its policy's $3 million self-insured retention threshold.

  • December 18, 2023

    $8B Counterclaims In Chinese Insurer's Hotel Theft Suit Fail

    A California federal judge tossed $8 billion in counterclaims made by a law firm and an investor accused by a Chinese insurer of playing a role in a billion-dollar title theft scheme involving American luxury hotels in New York and California.

  • December 18, 2023

    Insurer Scores $1.4M In Atty Fees For Co.'s Ex-Exec Suit

    An insurance company can recoup more than $1.4 million for attorney and expert fees in a suit brought by the company's former president who, according to a Pennsylvania federal judge, stole millions from the company and manipulated financial records to cover up his actions.

  • December 15, 2023

    Ky. Hospital Didn't Do Enough To Stop Data Breach, Suit Says

    A Kentucky-based healthcare system that suffered a ransomware attack in May was hit with a proposed class action alleging it irresponsibly left about 2.5 million people vulnerable to identity theft, credit card fraud and other crimes.

  • December 15, 2023

    Insurer Failed To Prove Prejudice By Late Notice, Judge Says

    A Washington federal judge took a contractor's side Friday in its dispute with an insurer regarding $355,000 in redress expenses, finding the insurer must prove that a late notice of the expenses caused it actual and substantial prejudice in order to justly deny coverage.

  • December 15, 2023

    State Farm Didn't Owe Liability Coverage Choice, Panel Says

    A State Farm agent had no duty to recommend errors and omissions coverage to a medical billing company seeking comprehensive business liability insurance, a California appeals court found, affirming a trial court's decision that the insurer was not negligent in its actions.

  • December 15, 2023

    Pot Co., Insurer Settle Coverage Dispute Over Deal Fallout

    Hallmark Speciality Insurance Co. has settled its February lawsuit against cannabis company Cura Partners Inc. that asserted to an Oregon federal court that Hallmark shouldn't have to cover an underlying suit related to the sale of one of Cura Partners' subsidiaries to Curaleaf Holdings Inc.

  • December 15, 2023

    Insurer Says Policy Bars Coverage For Subway Slaying Case

    An insurer told a Texas federal court that "anti-concurrent causation" language in a policy held by a Subway franchisee excludes coverage for a $3 million award granted to the family of a murdered employee, even if a covered event contributed to the worker's death.

  • December 15, 2023

    5th Circ. Backs Insurer's Defeat Of 401(k) Exit Fee Suit

    The Fifth Circuit refused to reinstate a dental office's proposed class action alleging an insurer unlawfully charged fees to 401(k) plans that left its platform, saying the insurer had no duty under federal benefits law to waive the charges.

  • December 14, 2023

    Ex-Bankers Org Accountant Gets 2 Years For Embezzlement

    A former accountant for the Georgia Bankers Association has been sentenced to two years in prison and one year of supervised release after pleading guilty to embezzling $700,000 from his onetime employer's trust for its insurance plans.

  • December 14, 2023

    Fidelity Must Pay $185K Over Failed Property Sale, Jury Says

    A Virginia federal jury on Tuesday awarded a property owner $185,000 from its title insurer over a failed $1.6 million sale, two months after the case judge found that the insurer introduced doubts over the property's title that led the prospective buyer to scuttle the sale.

  • December 14, 2023

    Contractor Gets Order Tweaked In Quantico Construction Suit

    A Virginia federal judge granted a contractor’s request to modify an insurer’s proposed order for default judgment against a third-party construction company in a dispute over defective work at a U.S. Navy school, adding language to the order to prevent it from affecting the contractor’s other ongoing suits.

  • December 14, 2023

    Geico To Settle $5.5M Complaint Against Florida Podiatrist

    Geico reached a settlement with a Florida podiatrist it accused of engaging in a patient brokering and kickback scheme with other physicians to channel business through his surgery center and will soon dismiss the case, the insurer has told a Florida federal court.

  • December 14, 2023

    Judge Halves $3M Punitive Damages To Defamed Tax Atty

    A Florida judge on Thursday halved a $3 million punitive damages award for the former law partner of a deceased Miami tax attorney whose widow publicly accused the ex-partner of scheming to keep the proceeds of a $2 million life insurance policy.

  • December 14, 2023

    Appeals Court Seeks ​​​​​​​Fla. Justices' Input In Hate Mail Dispute

    A Florida appeals court reversed a lower court's decision to allow former Marvel Entertainment chair Ike Perlmutter to request punitive damages in a case against his neighbor, but also certified a question to the state's Supreme Court because the decision contradicted several other appeals courts' rulings.

  • December 14, 2023

    Home Depot Brings $50M Data Breach Loss To 6th Circ.

    Home Depot urged the Sixth Circuit to reverse a lower court's ruling that its insurers don't owe over $50 million in coverage for defense and settlement costs for a 2014 data breach, maintaining that the court incorrectly applied the policies' electronic data exclusion to bar coverage.

  • December 14, 2023

    Fla. Panel Upholds Marine Insurance Forum Selection Clause

    A boat owner is not allowed to bring a marine insurance coverage action concerning a partially sunken vessel in state court, a Florida state appeals court affirmed, saying its policy's forum clause restricting suits to federal court was enforceable.

  • December 13, 2023

    Insurer Warns Of 2024 Geopolitical Challenges For Companies

    Company bosses face the threat of legal action next year over failures on geopolitical factors, artificial intelligence and concerns about the environment, an insurer warned Wednesday.

  • December 13, 2023

    Lessor Denies Delaying $97M Payout Over Lost Plane

    An aircraft lessor told a London court that it has already paid out an indemnity following the destruction of its leased plane in Sudan and that therefore a claim by a Saudi airline for $97 million in insurance proceeds should fall away.

  • December 13, 2023

    Prudential Hit With Genetic Privacy Suit After Coverage Denial

    Prudential is the latest insurer to be accused of violating Illinois' genetic information privacy law by asking life insurance applicants for their family medical histories, facing a putative class action lodged by an Illinois woman who was denied coverage.

  • December 13, 2023

    UK Motor Insurers Face 'Worst Losses In Decade' In 2023

    Motor insurance companies in the U.K. are likely to face punishing losses this year, Ernst & Young said Wednesday, as the firm warned that hikes in premiums have failed to keep pace with the spiraling cost of claims.

Expert Analysis

  • Questions Following 2 Recent Cyber Insurance Developments

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    A Minnesota federal court's recent decision in Target v. ACE and guidance from the New York State Department of Financial Services have furthered confusion surrounding how insurance policy language should be applied to the unique circumstances of cyber incidents, say Huiyi Chen and David Kroeger at Jenner & Block.

  • When Mergers Create D&O Insurance Complications

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    A Delaware state court's recent decision in Northrop Grumman v. Zurich illustrates some of the pitfalls and disputes that commonly arise when companies with competing directors and officers insurance policies merge, says Sam Ballingrud at Sherman & Howard.

  • How Biden's Administration Will Affect The Insurance Industry

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    President Joe Biden's administration has signaled interest in a range of key issues — consumer protections, regulation of the cannabis industry and health care reform — that will have outsize influence on the private insurance market, say Adrian Azer and Wes Dutton at Haynes and Boone.

  • An OFAC Compliance Checklist For Ransomware Payments

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    As the U.S. government heightens its scrutiny of ransomware payments, victims that pay extortion demands can follow 12 steps to help establish the requisite mitigation and due diligence to avoid penalties from the U.S. Department of the Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control, says cybersecurity consultant John Reed Stark.

  • Cybersecurity Event-Driven Securities Litigation Has Arrived

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    A recent shareholder lawsuit against First American Title Insurance Co. highlights that securities litigation prompted by regulatory actions may become increasingly prevalent in the cybersecurity context, say attorneys at Pasich.

  • Limiting The Severity Of Deficient Securities Fraud Claims

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    The U.S. Supreme Court's evidentiary requirements of price impact at the class certification stage — established in its Halliburton II decision in 2014 — provide an effective solution to disqualify securities fraud claims with price impact deficiencies, say Nessim Mezrahi and Stephen Sigrist at SAR.

  • The Most-Read Securities Law360 Guests Of 2020

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    The most-read securities articles written by Law360 guest experts in 2020 centered around market volatility triggered by COVID-19; remote testimony considerations as courtroom proceedings moved online; and risk and compliance issues related to the Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act.

  • A Look At Contrasting Rules For Excess Insurance Policies

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    Though the Delaware Superior Court held in Pfizer v. U.S. Specialty Insurance that claims settlements exceeding primary policy limits trigger excess insurance, policyholders should continue to pay close attention to exhaustion clause language due to competing court rules nationwide, say Brian Scarbrough and Deepthika Appuhamy at Jenner & Block.

  • Del. Solera D&O Decision May Have Limited Impact

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    While the Delaware Supreme Court's recent decision in Solera is a blow for companies in the state seeking protection for certain key appraisal proceedings, the ruling hinges on the insurers' narrow definition of a violation that will trigger directors and officers coverage for securities-related claims, making it unlikely that other jurisdictions will follow suit, say attorneys at Hunton.

  • Treasury Stance On Ransomware Payment Could Hurt Targets

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    Recent statements from two U.S. Department of the Treasury offices indicate that paying off ransomware with cryptocurrency may trigger certain registration requirements and U.S. sanctions scrutiny, placing a significant regulatory burden on cybervictims and their incident response consultants, say attorneys at McDermott.

  • OFAC Cyber Ransom Guidance Has Insurance Implications

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    A new advisory from the U.S. Department of the Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control will likely cause delay in insurance coverage determinations for ransom payments, but there are steps policyholders can take to secure coverage for restoration costs when a ransom is not paid, say attorneys at Hunton.

  • How To Navigate A Hardening D&O Insurance Market

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    The directors and officers liability insurance market's shift toward favoring sellers, coupled with the potential surge of lawsuits against companies as a result of COVID-19's economic impact, increases the importance of mitigating risks by reexamining existing D&O coverage, say attorneys at Jenner & Block.

  • When Do Insureds' Legal Fees Constitute Defense Expenses?

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    An Oklahoma federal court's surprising decision in Turner v. XL Specialty Insurance — now on appeal before the Tenth Circuit — found that a named defendant's legal costs did not qualify as defense expenses, highlighting ambiguities in how "defense" is defined for insurance purposes, say David Kroeger and Catherine Doyle at Jenner & Block.