General Liability
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March 12, 2025
Publix Policies Don't Cover Opioid Claims, Court Says
Insurers for Publix have no duty to defend or indemnify the supermarket chain in dozens of public nuisance lawsuits related to the opioid crisis, a Florida federal court said Wednesday, following Publix's renewed request that the court enter a final judgment so it could proceed with appeal.
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March 12, 2025
Chipwich Maker Blames Broker For $4.5M Recall Loss
The maker of Chipwich ice cream sandwiches told a Connecticut state court that its broker negligently failed to secure product recall insurance, causing a preventable loss of $4.5 million to the company, after desserts were destroyed because of potential listeria contamination.
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March 11, 2025
Captive Insurer Shareholders Can't Target Owner, Court Told
The majority owner of a now-defunct North Carolina captive insurer wasn't personally obligated to pay premiums for nursing homes reportedly under his control, his counsel told a state court judge in seeking to pare down a self-dealing suit lobbed by the minority shareholders.
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March 11, 2025
Property Co. Says Insurer Must Pay $10M For Judgment
The insurer for builders of a luxury mixed-use development in Oakland, California, must cover more than $10 million after a judgment was entered against the entities in an underlying suit brought by a property company asserting negligence and trespass claims, according to a complaint removed to federal court Tuesday.
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March 11, 2025
Lyft Driver Says Up To $1M In UIM Benefits Owed Over Crash
A Lyft Inc. driver who said he was severely injured in a head-on collision while completing a ride is accusing the ride-hailing giant and its insurer of failing to provide him up to $1 million in underinsured motorist coverage, even though he said Lyft promised such coverage to its drivers.
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March 11, 2025
Insurer Says AIG Unit Must Cover Water Contamination Suit
An AIG unit can't rely on its policy's pollution exclusion to bar coverage for a Texas water utility accused of providing contaminated water to residents, the utility's other insurer told a federal court, saying the court has already rejected the application of the exclusion in a related case.
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March 10, 2025
Colo. Justices To Review Insurers' Noncooperation Defense
The Colorado Supreme Court will consider whether a pair of insurance companies can defeat a man's bad-faith lawsuit by arguing his failure to turn over medical information about a surgery before his auto accident breached a contractual duty, according to an order Monday granting two petitions for review.
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March 10, 2025
Insurer May Be Liable For Coverage Of School Abuse Suits
A Washington federal judge said an insurer may still be liable for covering underlying claims of physical and sexual abuse against staff at a boarding school for troubled youth on the state's Cypress Island, because one policy year unlike others was missing an endorsement requiring connection to a particular location.
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March 10, 2025
4th Circ. Reverses $10M Coverage Cap For Aluminum Co.
The Fourth Circuit on Monday reversed a lower court's ruling capping an aluminum supplier's total recovery for losses related to a fire at $10 million, saying a molten material endorsement in the company's all-risk policies is ambiguous.
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March 10, 2025
Freight Co. Says Cellphone Dealer Ignoring Discovery Bids
A freight coordination company said it has no choice but to ask a North Carolina federal court to sanction a cellphone dealer who sued it after a truckload of devices was stolen, claiming that it hasn't received adequate discovery responses.
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March 07, 2025
$48M Progressive Deal With NY Drivers Gets Finalized
A New York federal court on Friday officially signed off on a $48 million class action settlement various Progressive Insurance units reached with New York drivers to resolve their claims that Progressive underpaid their claims for totaled vehicles.
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March 07, 2025
Gas Station Asks 11th Circ. To Revive Pollution Coverage Suit
A Florida gas station owner asked the Eleventh Circuit on Friday to revive its lawsuit trying to get Nautilus Insurance Co. to cover the costs to clean up contamination caused by a leaking underground fuel tank, telling the appeals court the company did not learn of the leak until after the policy went into effect.
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March 07, 2025
Cosmetics Co. Sues Insurer Over Calif. Water Pollution Claims
A cosmetics company facing water pollution claims told a California federal court its insurer denied coverage in bad faith, saying though the insurer agreed to defend a lawsuit from the California attorney general, the insurer still wrongly refused to reimburse costs from two prior, related suits that were ultimately rescinded.
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March 07, 2025
False Policy Info Tanks Property Owner's Coverage Suit
A New York federal judge ruled that an insurer doesn't have to cover a property owner and manager embroiled in a dispute with Vrbo tenants who fell through the balcony of a South Carolina condo, because the owner lied to the carrier and said it didn't offer short-term rentals.
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March 06, 2025
Federal Insurance Monitor In Crosshairs Amid Executive Cuts
Republicans on the state and federal level are targeting the U.S. Department of the Treasury's insurance monitor amid President Donald Trump's effort to drastically reduce the size of the federal workforce across many departments, putting the future of the monitor and its work in doubt.
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March 06, 2025
Fla. Report Draws Serious Accusations Of Insurer Misconduct
A Florida analysis showing that carriers in the state were reporting millions in income losses while affiliated companies were earning billions is helping to reveal a long-standing pattern of insurer misconduct, according to consumer advocates.
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March 06, 2025
Experts Stress FAIR Tweaks After NM Proposes Fire Insurance
The announcement of a study looking into the creation of a state-sponsored fire insurance program in New Mexico outlined steps the state is taking toward enhancing its insurance market while underscoring the need for changes to the state's Fair Access to Insurance Requirements Plan and mitigation practices, experts say.
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March 06, 2025
Pricey Privacy Suits Prompt Insurers To Assess Coverage
The Sixth Circuit's ruling earlier this year that an electronic data exclusion in Home Depot's insurance policies barred coverage for a $50 million claim stemming from a 2014 data breach is the latest example of the potential cost of privacy litigation to policyholders — even those who believe they have ample coverage.
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March 06, 2025
Cobalt Miner Gets OK For Debt-For-Equity Swap Ch. 11 Plan
A Texas bankruptcy judge Thursday approved the reorganization plan of Australia-based cobalt mining and refining group Jervois Mining Ltd., overruling a shareholder objection about the case's speed and U.S. ties.
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March 06, 2025
Insurers Seek Toss Of Meta's Social Media MDL Coverage Suit
A group of insurers urged a California federal court to either toss or stay Meta's suit seeking to pause all coverage litigation regarding underlying claims that the company deliberately designed its platforms to be addictive to adolescents, saying the first-to-file rule applies to the carriers' Delaware state court suit.
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March 06, 2025
Insurance Litigation Week In Review
Colorado's last-resort property insurer partnered with an artificial intelligence company, a Hawaii federal court admonished insurers for not complying with an arbitration order, a New York federal judge found reasonable contract interpretations on both sides of an insurance dispute and a Delaware judge sent a coverage battle to trial. Here, Law360 takes a look at this week's top insurance news.
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March 06, 2025
Pigment Co. Not Covered For Asbestos Suits, Court Told
A Liberty Mutual unit doesn't owe coverage to a cosmetic pigment manufacturer in underlying suits alleging injury from exposure to asbestos-containing materials, it told a New York federal court, saying certain claims fall outside the scope of coverage because they're not based on the company's work.
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March 05, 2025
Construction Co. Not Covered For $11M Verdict, Insurer Says
A construction company isn't entitled to coverage for an $11 million jury verdict against it in an underlying personal injury suit because the builder's policy excludes coverage for residential construction activities, an insurer told a Texas federal court.
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March 05, 2025
Insurer Wants Out Of Covering Ill. Pot Potency Suit
Admiral Insurance Co. is asking an Illinois federal court to clear it of any duty to cover a Shelbyville dispensary in a suit alleging that it mislabeled its products to get around the state's limits on THC.
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March 04, 2025
Insurer Says Claims Of Illegally Tracked Info Erase Coverage
An insurer for a fertility treatment provider told an Illinois federal court that an exclusion on the disclosure of personal information precludes commercial general liability coverage for a lawsuit accusing the provider of unlawfully installing tracking technologies to collect website users' private information.
Expert Analysis
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1st Circ. Harvard Ruling Provides Primer On Policy Provisions
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.
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SEC's New Rules Likely Will Affect Cyber, D&O Insurance
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission recently adopted cybersecurity incident disclosure rules that could create new challenges that affect how public companies assess the risk of securities, corporate governance and cyber-related lawsuits, which may implicate novel insurance coverage issues, say attorneys at Reed Smith.
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Potential Marijuana Status Change Would Shift Industry Risks
Cannabis companies and their insurers should pay close attention to how the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' move toward marijuana reclassification plays out, and the potential for a shakeup in the landscape for cannabis regulation at the state and federal levels, says Ian Stewart at Wilson Elser.
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Key Provisions In Florida's New Insurer Accountability Act
Florida's recent bipartisan Insurer Accountability Act introduces a range of new obligations for insurance companies and regulatory bodies to strengthen consumer protection, and other states may follow suit should it prove successful at ensuring a reliable insurance market, say Jan Larson and Benjamin Malings at Jenner & Block.
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Next Steps For Insurers After Ky. OKs Early 3rd-Party Claims
While insurers in Kentucky may face more statutory bad faith claims after a recent state Supreme Court decision clarified that third parties may bring these torts even before determination of coverage is finalized, insurers can adopt a variety of approaches to reduce their exposure, says Jason Reichlyn at Dykema Gossett.
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Insurers, Prepare For Large Exposures From PFAS Claims
With thousands of lawsuits concerning per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances pending across the country, several large settlements already reached, and both regulators and the plaintiffs bar increasingly focusing on PFAS, it is becoming clear that these "forever chemicals" present major exposures to insurers and their policyholders, say Scott Seaman and Jennifer Arnold at Hinshaw.
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What To Know About Duty To Settle Insurance Claims In Texas
Laura Grabouski of Holden Litigation examines the parameters of Texas insurers' duty to settle liability claims within the limits of the primary policy, as knowledge of the requirements — and the potential exposure from insureds, judgment creditors or excess creditors — can pay dividends in the era of nuclear verdicts.
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Ga. Mirror-Image Rule Makes Settlements Fraught For Insurers
The Georgia Court of Appeals' recent decision in Pierce v. Banks shows how strictly Georgia courts will enforce the rule that an insurer's response to a settlement demand must be a mirror image of the demand — and is a reminder that parties must exercise caution when accepting such a demand, says Seth Friedman at Lewis Brisbois.
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Insurance Ruling Shows Notice Letters Need Close Review
A Texas appeals court's recent disapproval of an insured’s presuit notice letter to Westchester Surplus Lines Insurance — which refused to quantify an alleged injury — should prompt courts to probe deeper when considering whether such a letter gives the insurer the information needed to resolve the claim or make a settlement offer, say Jennifer Martin and Timothy Delabar at Wilson Elser.
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11th Circ. Ruling May Impede Insurers' Defense Cost Recoup
The Eleventh Circuit's recent Continental Casualty v. Winder Laboratories ruling that insurers cannot obtain reimbursement of defense costs from their insureds where the policy itself does not require such reimbursement is likely to be cited as persuasive authority in Georgia and other states without clear precedent on the issue, say Christy Maple and Robert Whitney at Phelps Dunbar.
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Groundbreaking Nev. Law May Alter Insurance Landscape
The Nevada Legislature recently passed a law prohibiting insurers from issuing liability policies with eroding limits provisions that has the potential to create massive shifts in the marketplace — and specifically in areas like professional liability, cyber, and directors and officers insurance, says Will Bennett at Saxe Doernberger.
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Insurance Insights From 5th Circ. Blue Bell Coverage Ruling
The Fifth Circuit's recent ruling that denied Blue Bell insurance coverage for the defense costs incurred from a shareholder lawsuit underscores the importance of coordination of different coverages and policies across programs, and the potential perils of seeking recovery for losses under nontraditional policies, say Geoffrey Fehling and Casey Coffey at Hunton.
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The Legal Issues Flying Around The Evolving Drone Market
As the number of drone registrations is expected to more than double over the next three years, the industry faces new risks and considerations related to privacy, Fourth Amendment, criminal, evidentiary, First Amendment, and insurance litigation, say attorneys at Covington.