Specialty Lines

  • December 05, 2023

    Insurer Says No Coverage For 2 Lab Embezzlement Suits

    An insurer told an Illinois federal court Tuesday that it has no obligation to defend or indemnify a property management company or its owner in two underlying suits accusing the owner of embezzling from a medical lab company he partially owned, adding the lab as a defendant.

  • December 05, 2023

    Insurer Urges 2nd Circ. To Uphold No Defense Ruling

    An insurer urged the Second Circuit to affirm a ruling which found that it has no duty to defend Paraco Gas Corp. and its executives in a family shareholder dispute, saying a New York federal judge correctly found that a contract exclusion provision in the policy bars coverage.

  • December 05, 2023

    Car Service Co. Accused Of Selling Noncompliant Contracts

    A Spokane, Washington, woman has lodged a putative class action accusing a vehicle service contract provider and its insurer of violating state law by illegally selling and issuing noncompliant service contracts and protection product guarantees to Washington state customers.

  • December 05, 2023

    Private Equity Firm Can't Opt Out Of $110M Settlement Late

    A Pennsylvania federal judge denied a private equity firm’s late bid to opt out of a nearly $110 million class action settlement over a life insurance company’s rate hikes, finding that accepting the firm’s bid, submitted six weeks after the opt-out deadline, would “render class action settlement opt-out deadlines meaningless.”

  • December 04, 2023

    Insurer, Staffing Co. Drop $10M Overbilling Coverage Row

    A dispute between a healthcare staffing company and a Liberty Mutual unit over $10 million in excess liability coverage for an underlying emergency room overbilling settlement was dropped by both parties Monday in Texas federal court.

  • December 04, 2023

    Wine Co. Sues Chubb Unit For Coverage Of $1.5M Hack

    A wine merchant said a Chubb unit owes it coverage for the near $1.5 million that it lost at the hands of a hacker, telling a New York federal court that the insurer improperly applied the "smallest limit of coverage possible."

  • December 04, 2023

    Title Insurer Settles Coverage Dispute Over Lost Land Value

    A real estate company and a title insurer notified a Texas federal court that the parties finalized a settlement, ending a coverage row alleging that the company's land diminished in value and was subject to unforeseen development restrictions.

  • December 04, 2023

    Insurer Seeks Win Against Property Owner In Texas Title Row

    A Fidelity unit is seeking to end a suit brought by a property owner who claims it was unaware of easements encumbering the land it purchased in Fort Worth in 2014, arguing in Texas federal court that it had no duty to examine its title or point out any encumbrances.

  • December 01, 2023

    Oil Co., AIG Fight Climate Change Row Before Hawaii Justices

    Two AIG units and a Sunoco subsidiary championed opposing Hawaii Supreme Court precedent on whether a covered occurrence includes reckless conduct, in a dispute before the state's justices over the insurers' duty to defend lawsuits alleging the subsidiary is liable for its contribution to climate change.

  • December 01, 2023

    Staffing Co. Wants Broker Out Of $10M Billing Coverage Suit

    A medical staffing company asked a Texas federal judge to dismiss its broker from its insurance dispute against a Liberty Mutual unit seeking $10 million in coverage for an overbilling settlement, telling the court that it has resolved its claims against the broker.

  • December 01, 2023

    No Defense For Tenant's Pneumonia Death Suit, Insurer Says

    An insurer told a federal court that it should not have to defend or indemnify a property manager against a lawsuit alleging the manager should have known about potential mold exposure in a home it rented out to a Billings, Montana, resident who died after the exposure led to pneumonia.

  • December 01, 2023

    Insurer Gets COVID-19 Test Reimbursement Suit Tossed

    A Connecticut federal court tossed a medical practice chain's suit claiming that a third-party health plan administrator failed to properly reimburse its COVID-19 testing costs, finding that the chain does not have a private right of action under federal coronavirus legislation or the Affordable Care Act.

  • December 01, 2023

    Orrick Data Breach Suits Targeted For Consolidation In Calif.

    The plaintiffs in two class actions against Orrick Herrington & Sutcliffe LLP regarding a data breach the firm had in March filed a motion in federal court on Thursday to combine the suits.

  • November 30, 2023

    No Coverage For Ill. Atty's Embezzlement Dispute, Court Told

    An insurer asked an Illinois federal court to find that it need not defend or indemnify an attorney under two professional liability policies for two underlying complaints that allege the attorney used his accounting firm to embezzle from a number of trusts he managed at the expense of trustees.

  • November 30, 2023

    Co. Asks Texas Justices To Undo $16M Fraud Coverage Loss

    A chemical manufacturer asked the Texas Supreme Court to consider undoing a decision barring coverage for $16 million it lost through a fraudulent invoice scheme, saying that an exclusion for theft by an "authorized representative" did not apply to vendors.

  • November 30, 2023

    Lloyd's, Flooring Co. Agree To End Dispute Over $2.8M Fire

    A group of insurers has agreed to dismiss claims against a flooring company accused of causing a fire at a New Orleans high school resulting in $2.8 million in property damage, the insurers told a Louisiana federal court.

  • November 30, 2023

    NC Court Forces Spouse To Return Agency Assets In IP Row

    The North Carolina Business Court ordered the husband of an insurance agency owner to hand over the business records and assets he locked away from her, reasoning that the wife is likely to win on a claim that her spouse took the items to benefit his newly formed brokerage firm.

  • November 30, 2023

    Gas Station Owner Tells 11th Circ. Pollution Cleanup Covered

    A Florida gas station operator urged the Eleventh Circuit to reverse a lower court's judgment relieving an insurer of covering cleanup costs for a pollution incident on the grounds that the incident was discovered before the policy's inception, maintaining the court misinterpreted "first discovered."

  • November 30, 2023

    Insurer Says W.Va Co. Must Cough Up $3M In Premiums

    An insurer told a West Virginia federal court that a company it insures owes it more than $3 million in unpaid premiums for a series of workers' compensation and deductible liability policies, claiming the company did not comply with two audits the insurer attempted to perform.

  • November 30, 2023

    Bojangles Frees Another Insurer Over Rape Suit Coverage

    Bojangles' largest franchise operator has settled with one of its insurers in a coverage dispute over litigation alleging one of the franchisee's employees raped a minor-age worker at a Georgia restaurant location, leaving only one insurer left to fight in the insurance action.

  • November 29, 2023

    No Evidence Defunct Co.'s Policy Ever Existed, Insurer Says

    An insurer told a Texas federal court it owes no coverage to a defunct Houston-based engineering firm for asbestos exposure-related claims, contending that the policy supposedly tying it to the company never actually existed.

  • November 29, 2023

    Spat Settled Between Insurers, Bus Battery Manufacturer

    A dispute between four insurers and the supplier of a bus battery that caused a fire on a Washington, D.C., tour bus came to a close in D.C. federal court after the final insurer and two companies that owned and housed the bus settled with the battery supplier, months after the other insurers did the same.

  • November 29, 2023

    Wash. Judge Halts Unauthorized Policy Case Pending La. Suit

    An insurer pursuing a lawsuit against an insurance broker in Washington federal court over unauthorized policies must wait while the insurer's suit against an underwriters group in Louisiana federal court is pending adjudication, a Washington federal judge said, because the two cases have "significant overlap."

  • November 29, 2023

    Insurer Wants Out Of Georgia Murder Benefits Tangle

    An insurer wants a Georgia federal judge to decide who should receive a slain man's $190,000 insurance payout — his wife accused of killing him or his three surviving children, according to a suit filed in the Peach State.

  • November 29, 2023

    Holding Co., Insurer Agree To End Life Policy Termination Row

    TuYo Holdings LLC and Transamerica Life Insurance Co. agreed to end their dispute in Delaware federal court concerning the termination of a $1.5 million life insurance policy that TuYo purchased from Policy Services Inc., according to a joint dismissal bid.

Expert Analysis

  • 3 AI Regulation Developments Insurers Must Follow

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    Insurance regulators continue to actively develop regulations and guidance on the use of artificial intelligence, so insurers should be aware of recent developments from the Colorado Division of Insurance, the National Association of Insurance Commissioners and the New York Department of Financial Services, say attorneys at Willkie.

  • Deal Over Jets Stranded In Russia May Serve As Blueprint

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    In the face of a pending "mega-trial" over leased airplanes held in Russia after its invasion of Ukraine, a settlement between leading aviation lessor AerCap Holdings NV and NSK, the Russian state-controlled insurance company, could pave the way for similar deals, say Samantha Zaozirny and Timeyin Pinnick at Browne Jacobson.

  • How Shareholder Activists Are Targeting Insurers

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    As shareholder activists take a closer look at the insurance industry, they are pushing insurers to take value-enhancing and climate-related measures — but insurers can prepare by anticipating activist concerns, maintaining robust shareholder engagement, and considering changes in response to the universal proxy rules, say attorneys at Debevoise.

  • Unlocking Value In Carve-Out M&A Transactions

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    Some of the largest mergers and acquisitions in 2023 were carve-out transactions, and despite their unique intricacies and challenges, these transactions offer both buyers and sellers the opportunity to generate outsized returns in an otherwise vigorously competitive landscape, when carefully planned and diligently executed, say Kevin Crews and Rami Totari at Kirkland.

  • Tips For Negotiating Strong D&O Insurance Protection

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    D&O insurance is often the last line of defense for the personal assets of a director or officer, so taking the time to negotiate improvements to their D&O policies and ensuring that the coverage is appropriate for the insureds' risk profile can greatly improve the chances that their policies will protect them when they need coverage the most, says Thomas Bentz at Holland & Knight.

  • Insurers Should Prepare For 'Black Swan' Climate Disasters

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    As rapid climate change results in increased risk of casualties and property loss from rare, severe weather events, the insurance industry should take five crucial steps toward evolving and continuing operations, including advanced analytic techniques and investments in alternative energy sources, say Stephen Brown and Irena Maier at Wilson Elser.

  • 3 Quirks Of New Jersey Insurance Coverage Law

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    There are a multitude of state-specific requirements and nuances that make New Jersey insurance law unique, including in the areas of duty to defend, reservation of rights and bad faith, say attorneys at Goldberg Segalla.

  • How Del. 'Arising Out Of' Ruling May Affect Insurance Cases

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    The Delaware Supreme Court decision in Ace American Insurance v. Guaranteed Rate focused on a professional services exclusion, but the ruling has wide-ranging application in insurance coverage disputes involving any exclusions that employ "arising out of" or similar prefatory language, say Keith McKenna and Maria Brinkmann at Cohen Ziffer.

  • Assessing D&O Coverage Amid Challenges To DEI Policies

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    As the recent backlash against corporate diversity, equity and inclusion policies leads to shareholder litigation and other legal challenges, companies bolstering their DEI efforts should ensure that their directors and officers and employment practices' liability insurance policies provide sufficient coverage for potential claims, say Peter Gillon and Patrick Blood at Pillsbury.

  • Potential Relief For Nevada Insureds Is On The Horizon

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    A proposed regulation recently issued by the Nevada Division of Insurance would severely restrict the state's new law prohibiting burning-limits policies, enacting welcome changes to address businesses' concerns that the law will make it harder to obtain cost-effective liability insurance, says Sheri Thome at Wilson Elser.

  • How Reps And Warranties Insurance Can Aid Sellers In M&A

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    Amid the current slowdown in the M&A climate, representation and warranty insurance offers sellers a number of advantages, including protection against fraud and possible leverage to insist on a no-seller-indemnity deal, say Alex Leibowitz and Eric Jesse at Lowenstein Sandler.

  • 1st Circ. Harvard Ruling Provides Primer On Policy Provisions

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    In its recent finding of no coverage for Harvard due to the school's failure to give Zurich American Insurance timely notice of its claim, the First Circuit provides a good analysis of the distinctions between occurrence and claims-made policies, including the rationale for differences in notice provisions, says Andrew Paliotta at Cozen O'Connor.

  • Nev. Insurance Law May Mean Turmoil In Liability Market

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    Nevada's new law prohibiting insurers from issuing or renewing defense-within-limits liability policies in the state could cause professional liability insurers to withdraw certain products or prohibitively increase premiums — and while an emergency regulation allows for exceptions, the situation remains fluid, says Joshua Leach at Atheria Law.