General Liability

  • January 19, 2024

    Club Shooting Victim Seeks Toss Of Insurer's Coverage Fight

    The victim of a 2019 shooting at a South Carolina nightclub urged a federal court Friday to toss a suit brought by the club's insurer over coverage for an $18.1 million default judgment, saying any ruling regarding the carrier's coverage obligations under the policy is moot.

  • January 19, 2024

    State Farm Denied New Coverage Trial Over Atty's Remarks

    State Farm cannot get a new trial after a jury found one of its policyholders suffered permanent injuries from an auto accident, a Florida appeals court ruled Friday, rejecting the insurer's claim that the policyholder's counsel "obliterated" State Farm's witness credibility arguments in a handful of sentences.

  • January 19, 2024

    Proposed $350B Federal Reinsurance Program Draws Scrutiny

    A proposed national reinsurance program lacks important details for legislation that would dramatically change the federal government's role in insurance markets, experts said, while offering competing ideas about whether such a program is needed at all.

  • January 19, 2024

    Cleaning Co. Eyes Deal In Firing Suit Coverage Bid

    A kitchen exhaust system cleaning company, two Hartford units and an insurance agency are considering mediation to resolve the company's suit seeking $250,000 in damages over the insurer's denial of coverage for an underlying judgment entered against it in a wrongful termination lawsuit, according to a Friday court order.

  • January 19, 2024

    Insurer Drops Coverage Dispute Over $11.5M Judgment

    Great American E&S Insurance Co. dropped its declaratory claims against a lumber company in California federal court regarding coverage for a more than $11.5 million judgment over a construction worker's injuries, resolving the coverage dispute before the lumber company answered the insurer's complaint.

  • January 19, 2024

    Ala. Restaurant Gets Deboning Injury Coverage Suit Tossed

    An Alabama federal court tossed an insurer's dispute over coverage for a settlement demand made against a restaurant after a patron claimed that she had to undergo emergency surgery due to an improperly deboned fish, saying the court lacks subject-matter jurisdiction.

  • January 18, 2024

    Biz, Insurer Settle $10.5M Military School Construction Dispute

    A contractor and its insurer have settled a $10.5 million lawsuit seeking coverage for shoddy construction work on a school on a military base, according to a joint statement Thursday in Maryland federal court.

  • January 18, 2024

    5th Circ. Tosses $1.7M MDL Subpoena Coverage Row

    A company seeking coverage from a Zurich unit for more than $1.7 million it spent responding to a nonparty subpoena cannot litigate such issues in Texas federal court, the Fifth Circuit ruled Thursday, finding both of their connections to Texas "too attenuated to warrant exercising specific personal jurisdiction."

  • January 18, 2024

    Mich. School District Says Shooting Coverage Exceeds $5M

    A Michigan school district mired in litigation over a 2021 school shooting told a state court its insurer wrongfully capped coverage at $5 million by labeling the event as a single occurrence, arguing that the policy's definition is ambiguous and that each injured individual constituted an occurrence.

  • 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

    Late Claim Voids Coverage For Ga. Shooting, Nationwide Says

    A Georgia Citgo gas station's claim for defense against an underlying wrongful death suit was filed too late, Nationwide General Insurance Co. told a Georgia federal court Thursday.

  • 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

    Travelers Workers Ordered To Testify In Shoe Co.'s PFAS Suit

    Travelers claims handlers must testify about the insurer's practices for handling complex commercial and environmental insurance claims in a footwear company's PFAS coverage dispute, a special master in the Michigan federal court suit ordered.

  • January 17, 2024

    Rented Lamborghini Not Covered For $200K Crash Into Tree

    A New Jersey federal judge on Wednesday granted California Casualty & Fire Insurance Co.'s request for a declaration that the insurer does not have to cover damages for a totaled $200,000 Lamborghini that was crashed while rented, finding that the insurer's policy excludes coverage for the car.

  • January 17, 2024

    NJ Panel Reverses Zurich Win Over Auto Crash Coverage

    A New Jersey trial court wrongly dismissed a temporary staffing company's lawsuit seeking coverage from a Zurich unit for four employees' auto accident injury claims, a state appeals court ruled Wednesday, finding the summary judgment record was "bereft of undisputed facts."

  • January 17, 2024

    Barge Co. Says Insurer Reneged On Superfund Suit Coverage

    A Washington barge company said its insurer owes it coverage for legal expenses in an underlying lawsuit claiming the company is liable for environmental pollution at an Oregon Superfund site, according to a complaint moved to federal court Tuesday.

  • January 17, 2024

    Ill. Panel Upholds State Farm's Coverage Win Against Stacking

    State Farm doesn't owe an Illinois woman nearly $1.5 million in underinsured motorists coverage for injuries she suffered after being ejected from a motorcycle during a car accident, an Illinois appeals court panel said Wednesday, finding that the three policies she obtained unambiguously prohibited stacking.

  • 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

    Hyundai, Kia Beat Insurers' Engine Fire Defect Class Claims

    A California federal judge has axed putative class claims brought by insurers seeking to recover their purported losses from paying claims to roughly 7,000 customers whose Hyundai and Kia vehicles' engines allegedly caught fire due to a defect.

  • January 16, 2024

    Insurer Must Defend Contractor In Construction Death Suit

    A Florida federal judge found an insurer had a duty to defend a contractor in an underlying lawsuit alleging its negligence led to the death of a subcontractor who was electrocuted by an uninsulated high-voltage line, ruling the incident falls outside the scope of multiple exclusions.

  • January 16, 2024

    Food Flavoring Co. Seeks Coverage For Worker Injury Suits

    A manufacturer of food and beverage ingredients told a Kentucky federal court that its primary and umbrella insurers must provide coverage for nearly two decades of lawsuits brought by workers who said they were injured by exposure to certain chemical compounds in flavoring products.

  • January 16, 2024

    Allstate Can't Send LG Washer Damage Row To State Court

    A Texas federal judge declined to remand a dispute between Allstate and LG over reimbursement for costs the insurer covered after a washing machine flooded a policyholder's home, finding that the lawsuit was not improperly removed to federal court.

  • January 16, 2024

    New Orleans Gas Station Owed No Coverage For Assault Suit

    A New Orleans gas station's insurer owes no defense or indemnity coverage for a suit accusing a security guard of assault, a Louisiana federal court ruled, finding that the dispute fell plainly under the policy's assault and battery exclusion.

Expert Analysis

  • Court Split On Amazon's Seller Liability Could Be Moot

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    Courts across the country have split on Amazon's liability for products sold on its marketplace, but if more e-commerce platforms follow its lead on insurance coverage requirements for vendors, it may not matter how courts resolve the seller liability issue, says Thomas Kurland at Patterson Belknap.

  • 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.

  • 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.

  • Resolving Asbestos Suits Faster In The Pandemic And Beyond

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    Trial delays due to COVID-19 are an incentive for asbestos plaintiffs and defendants to adopt litigation reforms that can help bring cases to verdicts or settlements faster — changes that will be valuable even after the pandemic ends, says Lisa Oberg at Husch Blackwell.

  • Priority Of Coverage Lessons From 2nd Circ. Insurance Ruling

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    The recent Second Circuit decision in Century Surety v. Metropolitan Transit Authority — holding that, for priority of coverage determination, a contractual indemnity agreement governs over an insurance policy's terms — highlights the importance of understanding how the dynamics between commercial contracts and insurance policies may help shift liability, say Syed Ahmad and Yaniel Abreu at Hunton.

  • 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.

  • Insurance Considerations Amid Increased Use Of Drones

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    The growing use and rapidly evolving regulation of drone technology across industries raise tricky insurance coverage questions and increase exposure to third-party liability and first-party loss, say attorneys at Covington & Burling.

  • Nursing Homes May See Litigation Spike After 7th Circ. Ruling

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    The Seventh Circuit’s recent Federal Nursing Home Reform Act ruling in Talevski v. Health and Hospital Corp. opens skilled nursing facilities to federal litigation from private plaintiffs and could require exhaustion of administrative remedies before invoking state or federal court jurisdiction, say Randall Fearnow and Edward Holloran at Quarles & Brady.

  • 2 Cases Will Help Shape Opioid Litigation Insurance Coverage

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    Upcoming decisions from the Ohio and Delaware high courts in Acuity v. Masters Pharmaceutical and Rite Aid Corp. v. ACE American Insurance, respectively, on whether insurers must defend policyholders in prescription opioid litigation filed by government entities are sure to provide precedent for resolution of these coverage issues nationwide, say Courtney Horrigan and Kateri Persinger at Reed Smith.

  • Pa. Lawmakers Must Save Medical Liability Venue Rule

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    The Pennsylvania Legislature should stop the state's Civil Procedural Rules Committee from rolling back a rule banning medical malpractice forum shopping, to avoid a return to rampant liability claims in high-verdict courts, sky-high insurance premiums for doctors and less public access to care, says Curt Schroder at the Pennsylvania Coalition for Civil Justice Reform.

  • What 9th Circ. Arbitration Case May Mean For Insurance

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    If the plaintiffs in CLMS Management Services v. Amwins Brokerage of Georgia appeal the Ninth Circuit's recent decision that state law does not bar the enforcement of arbitration clauses in insurance contracts, the case may have a significant effect on the different dispute resolution options for insurers and policyholders, say attorneys at Sheppard Mullin.

  • Enviro Review Standard Tweaks May Clarify Cleanup Liability

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    Forthcoming revisions to the standard for Phase I environmental site assessments will likely afford property owners and operators clearer protection from liability for hefty environmental cleanups, so interested parties in real estate and M&A deals should pay close attention, say Lorene Boudreau at Ballard Spahr and Mitchell Wiest and Sara Redding at Roux Associates.

  • Ill. BIPA Ruling May Significantly Affect Insurers' Exposure

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    In Tims v. Black Horse Carriers, an Illinois state appeals court held that certain claims under the Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act are subject to a one-year statute of limitations only, which may reduce commercial general liability insurers’ exposure to litigation under this act for several reasons, say attorneys at Kennedys.