Specialty Lines

  • January 19, 2024

    Insurer Resolves Damaged Goods Coverage Row Out Of Court

    An insurer abandoned its request in New York federal court for a second shot at freeing itself from defending a warehouse over a stored merchandise dispute, instead resolving the issue outside of court and stipulating the case's dismissal after months of delays.

  • January 19, 2024

    Progressive Hit With $5M Data Breach Class Action

    Progressive Casualty Insurance Co. was hit with a data breach class action in South Carolina federal court accusing the insurer of leaving customers' personal information vulnerable to hackers and risking them more than $5 million in damages.

  • January 18, 2024

    Title Co. Says It's Owed Defense In $700K Wire Mishap Suit

    A title company told a Florida federal court that Nationwide unit Scottsdale Indemnity Co. wrongfully refused to cover its defense in a suit over nearly $700,000 in property sale proceeds the company is accused of wiring to a third party instead of the seller.

  • January 18, 2024

    Yacht Owner Demands Insurer Cover $240K Engine Rebuild

    The owner of a $3.5 million yacht told a Florida federal court Thursday that its insurer breached its contract by failing to pay for more than $240,000 in water damage to its engine.

  • January 18, 2024

    Contempt Looms For Husband In IP Fight Over Insurance Co.

    The North Carolina Business Court has demanded that the husband of an insurance agency owner return her business assets as required by a previous order or face civil contempt proceedings as part of an intellectual property lawsuit embroiling the couple.

  • January 18, 2024

    Realty Co. Seeks $8.2M For Failed Merger Defense Costs

    A Hartford unit owes over $8.2 million in damages stemming from a merger gone awry between its insured and real estate giant Simon Property Group, the insured said in a complaint removed Thursday to a Delaware federal court, maintaining that it properly exhausted all other limits of coverage.

  • January 18, 2024

    Insurers, Flooring Co. Notch Partial Win Over Gym Fire Suit

    A high school that accused a flooring company of causing a gym fire cannot seek damages related to gym improvements, higher insurance costs and mental anguish, a Louisiana federal court ruled, stopping short of deciding whether the school retains standing to sue the company or the company's insurers to begin with.

  • January 18, 2024

    Burger King Franchisee Says It's Owed Defense For BIPA Suit

    A Burger King franchisee said its umbrella insurance carrier owes coverage for a class action accusing the franchisee of violating Illinois' Biometric Information Privacy Act, telling a federal court that the insurer has ignored it since receiving notice of the underlying action.

  • January 17, 2024

    Wash. Law Firm Says Travelers Must Cover Employee Theft

    Seattle law firm Karr Tuttle Campbell has sued Travelers Indemnity Company of Connecticut in Washington federal court, accusing the insurer of violating the state's consumer protection law by denying coverage after a former firm employee allegedly made $136,000 in unauthorized charges on a credit card.

  • January 17, 2024

    Insurer Owes $900K In Coverage For Mold Cleanup, Court Told

    A contractor told a North Carolina federal court that its insurer wrongly denied coverage for nearly $900,000 in mold remediation expenses it incurred on a building project, asserting that the insurer conflated its standalone environmental legal liability policy with a different policy.

  • January 17, 2024

    1.3M Loan Holders Hit By Cyberattack, Revised Action Says

    A data breach class action claim against Fidelity National Financial and LoanCare LLC was revised on Wednesday after a Florida federal judge found that the original seven-count complaint, filed in late December, constituted an impermissible “shotgun pleading."

  • January 17, 2024

    Feds Ask Justices For Narrow Ruling In NRA Case

    The federal government filed an amicus brief in a First Amendment dispute between the National Rifle Association and a former New York state official, urging Supreme Court justices to reject some of the gun rights group's broader arguments because they raise "harder questions."

  • January 17, 2024

    No Coverage For HOA In Trade Secret Theft Suit, Court Told

    An Illinois homeowners association and its property managers are not entitled to coverage for an underlying action brought by the development's golf course operator accusing the association of downloading proprietary information, an insurer told a federal court, saying the incident doesn't meet the policy's definition of an occurrence.

  • January 17, 2024

    No Coverage For New York Ghost Gun Suits, AIG Unit Says

    An AIG unit told a New York federal court it should have no duty to cover a firearm retailer in three lawsuits by the state attorney general and municipalities alleging that the retailer knowingly sold unfinished components that would be assembled into so-called ghost guns.

  • January 16, 2024

    5th Circ. Revives Southwest Airlines' Cyber Coverage Suit

    The Fifth Circuit on Tuesday revived Southwest Airlines' coverage fight against Liberty Insurance over costs stemming from a 2016 computer network failure, saying the district court was wrong in finding that the costs fall outside the coverage range of an excess cyber risk insurance policy.

  • January 16, 2024

    Sports Co. Wants Coverage Apart From CEO Accused Of Rape

    A sports equipment company asked a Washington federal judge Tuesday not to conflate it with its CEO when determining whether to allow an insurer to escape defending the leader and his company against underlying sexual assault allegations.

  • January 16, 2024

    Insurance Adjuster Says Ex-Employees Stole Clients, Intel

    An insurance adjuster accused five ex-employees of colluding with a competitor to steal the company's clients, telling a Mississippi federal court that the employees breached their agreements with the company — including noncompetes — to benefit the competitor.

  • January 16, 2024

    Cement Co. Rips Insurer Bid To Slip Demurrage Fee Coverage

    A Houston-based cement supply company challenged Liberty Mutual's attempt to avoid paying coverage for more than $780,000 in demurrage charges incurred during cleanup of a shipping mishap, telling a Louisiana federal court the charges are a proper expense under a so-called sue and labor clause.

  • January 16, 2024

    Coverage Case Over Defective Miami Highway Heads To Trial

    A joint venture tasked with a Miami bridge and highway project will have its day in court against an insurer that refused to cover more than $3.6 million in construction defects, a Florida federal court found.

  • January 16, 2024

    Insurer Drops Suit Against Nonresponsive, Defunct Co.

    An insurer dropped its 2-month-old coverage lawsuit against a defunct Houston-based engineering firm for asbestos exposure-related claims, saying the company neither appeared nor asserted any counterclaims.

  • January 12, 2024

    Cyberattack On Insurer Compromised Over 64K, Suit Says

    The private information of over 64,000 individuals was compromised in a data breach of a construction industry insurer, according to a proposed class action filed against the company in North Carolina federal court.

  • January 12, 2024

    AIG Unit Says No Coverage Left For Helicopter Crash Suit

    An AIG unit told an Alaska federal court that it owes no defense to a mountain resort or its owners for claims brought by the surviving passenger of a heli-skiing crash, saying it already settled with the plaintiff for any coverage it could provide.

  • January 12, 2024

    Insurer Disclaims Institutional Furniture Makers' Patent Spat

    Companies accused in underlying litigation of stealing designs from a patent holder and falsely advertising molded plastic furnishings meant for use in prisons and psychiatric facilities shouldn't have defense coverage against the allegations, an insurer told an Illinois federal judge Friday.

  • January 12, 2024

    Axis Loses Reconsideration Bid In Prior Knowledge Dispute

    Axis Insurance Co. must continue to face a cashless payment company's breach of contract claim that is slated for a jury in its suit seeking excess coverage for underlying securities actions, a Pennsylvania federal judge ruled, saying a dispute remains over what the company knew when it entered into the policy.

  • January 12, 2024

    Insurer Seeks To Toss Challenge To Bombing Coverage Award

    A Nashville, Tennessee, property owner can't proceed with an amended suit claiming an umpire's bias invalidates an appraisal award in a coverage dispute over damage caused by a Christmas Day bombing in 2020, a Zurich unit told a federal court, saying the company failed to state a claim for relief.

Expert Analysis

  • Justices May Hesitate To Review Calif. Fraud Coverage Case

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    In Adir International v. Starr Indemnity, the policyholders are asking the U.S. Supreme Court to review their challenge of a California law prohibiting insurers from defending insureds in certain consumer protection claims, but the court may not be ready to decide the issue at this time, says Greg Mann at Rivkin Radler.

  • NY Case Shows Insurance Possibility For SEC Disgorgements

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    Directors and officers insurers almost invariably deny coverage for payments described as disgorgements in settlement agreements with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, but the recent decision of New York's highest court in J.P. Morgan v. Vigilant demonstrates how policyholders can negotiate an insurable settlement with the SEC, say Stephen Weisbrod and Tamra Ferguson at Weisbrod Matteis.

  • JP Morgan Ruling May Have Broad Insurance Implications

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    The New York Court of Appeals' recent decision in J.P. Morgan Securities v. Vigilant Insurance — that settlement funds paid to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission did not constitute a penalty for insurance purposes — could have far-reaching application in other types of insurance litigation where plaintiffs could be characterized as seeking equitable relief, say Robert Shulman and Cristen Rose at Paley Rothman.

  • Insurance Tips For Mitigating DOJ Cyber Initiative Risks

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    For companies and executives involved in False Claims Act actions alleging cybersecurity failures like those envisioned by the U.S. Department of Justice's new cyber fraud initiative, certain insurance policies could help defray the substantial costs of defense and even settlement liability, say attorneys at Hunton.

  • M&A Rulings Provide Guidance On 'Bump-Up' Claim Coverage

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    As M&A activity continues to surge, several recent federal court decisions can guide companies in structuring their insurance programs and assessing whether so-called bump-up claims arising from particular M&A transactions may be covered, say Robin Cohen and Orrie Levy at Cohen Ziffer.

  • BIPA Ruling Should Aid Insurers In Privacy Claims

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    Massachusetts Bay Insurance v. Impact Fulfillment Services, a recent decision by a North Carolina federal court finding that a Biometric Information Privacy Act claim was precluded under an insurance exclusion, represents a potentially significant win for insurers due to its broadly applicable contract interpretation, say Joshua Polster and Conor Mercadante at Simpson Thacher.

  • Insurers Should Honor Astroworld Coverage Obligations

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    While insurers may be eager to shift blame on Astroworld showrunner Travis Scott for conditions that resulted in 10 deaths and dozens of injuries, arguments suggesting the tragedy shouldn't be covered appear baseless in light of the facts and the law, says Benjamin Massarsky at Miller Friel.

  • Ransomware Case Signifies Shift In Cyber Insurers' Stance

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    The pleadings in a recently settled California federal court case, Boardriders v. Great American Insurance, show that cyber insurers are taking an adversarial approach to ransomware-related claims in the wake of increasing attacks, so policyholders should anticipate new policy language, claim-payment avoidance and more, say Lynda Bennett and Michael Scales at Lowenstein Sandler.

  • Cyber Rulings Aren't Helping COVID Biz Interruption Cases

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    Where policyholders have recently tried to draw comparison between the loss of property use from a COVID-19 shutdown order and the loss of data use from a ransomware attack, they have found courts unsympathetic to these arguments for business interruption insurance coverage, say Jane Warring and Kristian Smith at Zelle.

  • 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.