Specialty Lines

  • January 02, 2024

    Lawyer's Liability Coverage Suit Sent Back To State Court

    A Pennsylvania federal judge overruled objections to a magistrate judge's recommendation that a dispute over coverage of an attorney accused of abuse of process be remanded to the state court from whence it came.

  • January 02, 2024

    Court Rejects Wells Fargo's Bid To Drop 'Human Wager' Suit

    Wells Fargo must continue facing a lawsuit accusing it of attempting to collect from a $4 million life insurance policy the insurer calls an "illegal human life wager," a New Jersey federal court ruled, also agreeing with the insurer that New Jersey law applies, not New York law.

  • January 02, 2024

    Insurer Drops Coverage Suit Over Firm's $459K Fraud Claim

    ALPS Property & Casualty Insurance Co. has dropped its suit against one of its insureds, a Vermont law firm, that was seeking coverage for a state court lawsuit claiming it lost a $459,000 mortgage payment to a scammer.

  • January 01, 2024

    Top Specialty Lines Rulings From The 2nd Half Of 2023

    The pivotal specialty lines decisions of 2023 tackled the nuances of policy language addressing the limits of exclusions, directors and officers coverage and coverage issues related to government investigation. Here, Law360 breaks down some of the most consequential specialty lines cases that wrapped up the year.

  • January 01, 2024

    Illinois Cases To Watch In 2024

    One of the biggest players in Illinois politics faces a criminal racketeering trial, a host of lawsuits filed under a decades-old genetic information privacy law will advance and the state's high court is expected to further weigh in on insurance coverage for litigation under the state's biometric privacy statute in some of the Illinois cases to watch in 2024.

  • January 01, 2024

    Insurance Legislation And Regulation To Watch In 2024

    The insurance industry is entering 2024 with a full plate of hot topic issues for legislation and regulation, including climate risk and data privacy, as rulemakers attempt to keep up with developing technologies and tackle home insurance challenges in vulnerable states. Here, Law360 looks at legislation and regulation topics the insurance industry will watch in the new year.

  • January 01, 2024

    The 5 Strangest Insurance Cases Of 2023

    Insurance protects policyholders from unforeseen situations, but some circumstances are so strange that even insurers couldn't have predicted them. Here, Law360 looks back on the strangest insurance cases of 2023.

  • January 01, 2024

    Top Specialty Lines Insurance Cases To Watch In 2024

    The new year promises to bring major decisions from the U.S. Supreme Court down to the district court level on issues affecting key questions in specialty lines of insurance coverage. Here, Law360 looks at specialty lines cases to watch in the first half of 2024.

  • December 21, 2023

    Manufacturer Says State Farm Stole Safe Driving Technology

    A New Mexico device manufacturer told a Texas federal court that State Farm is infringing two of its patents for safe driving technology that authenticates drivers and monitors vehicle operations via GPS through the insurer's "Drive Safe & Save" technology.

  • December 21, 2023

    Ky. Horse Breeder Files Motion For Dead Stud Coverage

    A stallion breeder tried to move toward a speedy victory in a dispute over insurance coverage for the death of a horse, telling a Kentucky federal court Thursday that the stud was undergoing legitimate treatment for lacking libido when a vitamin injection killed him.

  • December 21, 2023

    Taxpayer Group Seeks Revival Of San Jose Gun Law Fight

    A California taxpayers association urged the Ninth Circuit to revive its challenge to the city of San Jose's ordinance requiring gun owners to pay an annual gun harm reduction fee to a designated organization, saying a compelled donation to a private nonprofit violates gun owners' First Amendment rights.

  • December 21, 2023

    Crum & Forster, Contractor Settle Sewer Damage Dispute

    Crum & Forster and a general contractor accusing the insurer of failing to provide a "prompt and proper" defense in an underlying lawsuit over a damaged sewer line reached an agreement to resolve their dispute, the pair told a Washington federal court.

  • December 21, 2023

    Insurer Says No Coverage For Flight School Training Row

    A flight school doesn't have coverage for an underlying suit alleging misrepresentations were made about a program's certification and accreditation, its insurer told a North Carolina federal court, saying the flight school waited about two years too long to notify the insurer of the claims.

  • December 21, 2023

    Legal Marketing Biz Wants Hurricane Solicitation Suit Tossed

    A legal marketing company is urging the Southern District of Texas to accept a magistrate judge's recommendation to toss a proposed class action over troubled Houston law firm McClenny Moseley & Associates PLLC's allegedly illegal efforts to solicit clients in hurricane-related property damage cases.

  • December 20, 2023

    Vague Policy Language Should Net Win In BIPA Suit, Co. Says

    A medical device manufacturer told an Illinois federal court it should be granted a win over two Hanover units in connection with an underlying class action alleging biometric privacy violations, claiming the vague language in certain exclusions means they can't apply to bar coverage.

  • December 20, 2023

    Insurers Settle Dispute Over 'Trashed' Art Suit Coverage

    A commercial liability insurer and a museum collections and loan insurer settled a suit in California federal court over defense and indemnity obligations owed in an underlying suit in the same court over supposedly "trashed" art.

  • December 20, 2023

    Marsh Failed To Secure Proper Coverage, Court Told

    The insurer for a trucking company accused insurance broker Marsh USA Inc. of failing to obtain the proper insurance coverage for the company, telling a New York federal court Wednesday that the trucking company wanted to waive underinsured motorist coverage in Pennsylvania.

  • December 20, 2023

    Reinsurer Maiden Holdings Beats Investor Suit On $309M Loss

    A New Jersey federal judge has granted summary judgment to reinsurance company Maiden Holdings Ltd. in a shareholder suit claiming that it misrepresented its underwriting and risk management practices, ruling that the evidence presented shows that the company engaged in a "complex actuarial process" to set loss reserves.

  • December 20, 2023

    Dispute Between BofA, Title Insurer Dropped After Court Stay

    Bank of America dropped its HOA foreclosure title coverage suit against a title insurer, ending the dispute more than a month after asking a Nevada federal court to stay proceedings while the state high court considers rehearing a similar case.

  • December 20, 2023

    Air Carrier, Insurer Settle Fight Over Damaged Delivery Payout

    An insurer told a New York federal court that it has reached a settlement in principle to end its claims against an international air carrier for a damaged shipment that cost the insurer more than $122,000 in resolving a claim from the cargo's owner.

  • December 19, 2023

    Fla. Siblings Charged With Receiving $9M In Medicare Scheme

    Two Florida siblings were arrested Tuesday on charges of accepting $9 million in payments as part of a scheme to fraudulently bill Medicare, according to a U.S. Department of Justice statement. 

  • December 19, 2023

    NY Panel Upholds Rental Airplane Owner's $5M Coverage Win

    A New York appeals panel on Tuesday upheld a more than $5 million verdict in favor of the owner of a rental airplane that was seized by the Brazilian government, finding a jury had adequately determined the company's insurers should cover the loss.

  • December 19, 2023

    'Soft And Dicey' Testimony To Stay In Concrete Coverage Row

    A Florida federal judge rejected a Chubb unit's request to exclude a material expert's testimony in a defective concrete coverage dispute, saying Tuesday that although the insurer "will have a substantial amount of legal ammunition to fire," the challenges to his views are best suited for trial.

  • December 19, 2023

    7th Circ. Got BIPA Insurance Ruling Wrong, Ill. Judges Say

    An Illinois appellate court ruled Tuesday that two insurers are not responsible for part of a $19 million settlement in underlying biometric privacy litigation based on a broad violation-of-law policy exclusion, saying the Seventh Circuit's recent analysis of nearly identical language is not "an accurate reflection of Illinois law."

  • December 19, 2023

    Citgo Wins $49M Jury Verdict In Oil Cargo Loss Dispute

    Lloyd's underwriters and other insurers must pay Citgo Petroleum Corp. over $49 million to cover the costs of oil cargo lost during political unrest in Venezuela, a New York federal jury held on Monday, finding that insurers had violated the terms of the U.S. refiner's policy.

Expert Analysis

  • Boiler And Machinery Insurance Can Boost Cyber Coverage

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    Companies affected by cybersecurity incidents may be covered by their boiler and machinery insurance, which shares many similarities with modern cyber insurance offerings and may apply despite exclusions specifying certain forms of cyber coverage, say attorneys at Cooley.

  • 3 Cybersecurity Questions To Ask Before A Remote Mediation

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    Lawyers preparing to mediate or arbitrate a case through videoconference should take steps to ensure they and their alternative dispute resolution providers are employing reasonable security precautions to protect digital client data and conform to confidentiality obligations, say F. Keith Brown and Michael Koss at ADR Systems.

  • 4 Areas Of Cyberattack Vulnerability For Law Firms

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    Recent data breaches involving Goodwin and Jones Day show that cyberattacks are very real threats to the legal profession, especially in the era of remote work, so law firms should revisit common business practices that expose them to unnecessary risks, says Ara Aslanian at Inverselogic.

  • Ill. Biometric Claim Case Highlights Core Insurance Principles

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    During oral argument in West Bend v. Krishna this month, the Illinois Supreme Court justices' questions on coverage for biometric privacy claims touched on three core principles of insurance policy interpretation and should result in an affirmance of the lower courts' decisions, says Emily Garrison at Honigman.

  • 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.