General Liability

  • January 10, 2024

    Geico Drops No-Fault Charges Suit Against NY Pharmacy

    Geico informed a New York federal court that it has put to rest a lawsuit alleging a New York pharmacy exploited the Empire State's no-fault insurance system by submitting $1.4 million in fraudulent billing for pharmaceutical products to treat individuals involved in car accidents and eligible for coverage through the insurer.

  • January 10, 2024

    Background Check Co. Had Duty To Defend Security Provider

    A background check company breached its duty to defend a security services provider accused of negligently hiring a security guard who two patients alleged assaulted them at a California medical center, a Colorado federal court ruled, saying the underlying allegations clearly triggered the company's indemnity obligations.

  • January 10, 2024

    Contractors Haven't Paid Up After Default, Insurer Says

    An insurer told a New York federal court Wednesday that an engineering firm and several related entities left it on the hook for losses suffered by the owner of a solar power facility after they defaulted on their contract.

  • January 09, 2024

    Insurer Asks NC Justices To Help Secure $524M Judgment

    An insurer urged the North Carolina Supreme Court to review a state appeals court's judgment reversing limitations on an embattled insurance mogul's transfer of assets, maintaining that the decision "substantially diminishes" its ability as a judgment creditor to collect a more than $524 million award.

  • January 09, 2024

    Insurance Broker Says Competitor Infringed Trademarks

    An insurance broker sued another insurance broker it claimed has infringed on its trademarks and variations of the marks, telling a Texas federal court to find that it is entitled to collect its competitor's profits from the infringement.

  • January 09, 2024

    Insurers May Continue With Silica Exposure Coverage Dispute

    A pair of Hanover units can proceed with their coverage dispute against a granite distributor facing numerous silica dust exposure suits after resolving a California federal court's order to show cause as to why their case should continue despite a lack of response from the distributor.

  • January 09, 2024

    Oakland Diocese, Creditors And Insurers To Hold Plan Talks

    The Roman Catholic Diocese of Oakland, its unsecured creditors and a number of its insurers told a California bankruptcy judge Tuesday that they will begin mediation on the diocese's Chapter 11 plan once they come to an agreement on the mediators.

  • January 09, 2024

    Insurers Must Cover Loss Of 500K Bushels Of Soybeans

    A New York state judge said three insurers must cover a commodity company's loss of over 500,000 bushels of soybeans resulting from a Mississippi-based warehouse's entrance into bankruptcy in September 2021, finding the loss occurred during the policy period.

  • January 09, 2024

    Hinshaw Adds 6-Atty Insurance Team In LA, San Francisco

    Hinshaw & Culbertson LLP announced Tuesday that it has brought on six insurance attorneys in San Francisco and Los Angeles, including three partners and three senior counsel, from now-closed Coddington Hicks & Danforth.

  • January 09, 2024

    Insurer Owed Defense In Parking Garage Damage Suit

    A second insurer for a concrete subcontractor had a duty to defend the company against accusations it damaged a parking garage, a California federal court held, saying the carrier failed to show that the alleged damage occurred outside the policy period.

  • January 09, 2024

    Insurance Boutique Co-Founder Joins McGuireWoods

    A founding partner of insurance boutique Pasich LLP and former adviser at consultancy AECOM is joining McGuireWoods LLP's national insurance recovery team, the firm said Monday.

  • January 08, 2024

    $5M Settlement For Fatal Bike Accident Covered, Court Told

    A Markel unit must cover a $5 million settlement reached between a policyholder's employee and the estate of a woman fatally struck in a motor vehicle accident, the estate told a Florida federal court, arguing that because the perpetrator's car wasn't owned by the policyholder, an auto exclusion wasn't triggered.

  • January 08, 2024

    Store Says Insurers Owe $2.7M In Jewelry Heist Coverage Row

    A California jewelry store that won a $2.7 million judgment against a security company it accused of negligence after the store was burglarized said the security company's insurers must pay the judgment, arguing the insurers wrongly denied coverage for the security company.

  • January 08, 2024

    Excess Insurer Says Landscaper Payment Row Isn't Covered

    The excess insurer for a general contractor told a Texas federal court that it doesn't owe coverage for a landscaper's suit alleging nonpayment, saying that neither its policies nor an agreement to resolve unrelated cross-claims obligated it to cover the suit.

  • January 08, 2024

    Ruling In Home Defect Coverage Fight Unripe, Judge Says

    A South Carolina federal judge dismissed a suit lodged by a contractor's insurer over coverage for damage supposedly caused by building defects in a man's home, finding the court lacks jurisdiction because no decision on liability has been reached in an underlying state court suit.

  • January 08, 2024

    11th Circ. Revives State Farm Vehicle Valuation Suit

    A State Farm policyholder can continue to litigate his claim that the insurer systematically undervalues totaled vehicles, the Eleventh Circuit ruled, finding that an appraisal dispute process outlined in his policy did not bar him from filing his proposed class action.

  • January 08, 2024

    Travelers Unit Owes $2.5M For Injury Suit, Liberty Mutual Says

    A pair of Liberty Mutual units told a New York federal court Monday that a Travelers insurer owes them more than $2.5 million for the costs of defending and settling claims against a construction company after an employee was injured at a work site.

  • January 08, 2024

    9th Circ. Must Define 'Occurrence' In Opioid Coverage Fight

    The question of what constitutes an occurrence, an accident that triggers an insurer's defense obligations, will take center stage before the Ninth Circuit and legal experts say the panel must clarify whether California law requires units of AIG and Chubb to defend McKesson against government opioid suits.

  • January 08, 2024

    High Court Won't Review Tossing Of UPS' Dispute With Airline

    The U.S. Supreme Court declined on Monday to review a Second Circuit ruling upholding the dismissal, for lack of personal jurisdiction, of UPS' indemnification fight against Taiwanese airline EVA Airways after an AIG unit had sued UPS over damaged vitamin pallets the airline was contracted to transport.

  • January 05, 2024

    Insurance Mogul Fights Bid To Clarify Fraud Case Review

    An embattled insurance mogul has urged the North Carolina Supreme Court to resist a bid by a group of allegedly defrauded insurers to explain the terms of the court's agreement to review a potential $420 million judgment, arguing that it would be an "unprecedented" move.

  • January 05, 2024

    Drunken Driver Says Geico Forced $14M Settlement On Him

    A drunken driver accused of causing two deaths claimed Geico failed to settle a wrongful death claim against him for a reasonable value, forcing him to take a $14 million settlement deal one day before trial, according to a suit removed to Nevada federal court.

  • January 05, 2024

    Sanctioned Co. Can't Get Coverage For Ga. Murder, Court Told

    An insurer tried again in Georgia federal court Friday to escape defending a property management company that was sanctioned for spoiling evidence in underlying litigation accusing it of failing to maintain safety at an apartment complex where a man was shot to death in 2021.

  • January 05, 2024

    Insurer Sued Over $3.5M Colo. Sewer Damage Award

    A Colorado county water authority has accused Gemini Insurance Co. of failing to defend a construction company that was found liable for $3.5 million in damages related to a botched construction project that caused a sewage line failure.

  • January 05, 2024

    Texas Co. Says It's Owed Coverage In Antitrust Class Actions

    Willow Bridge Property Co. is suing its insurers after it was denied coverage in 35 putative class actions alleging that it and others conspired to use RealPage software to inflate apartment lease rates.

  • January 05, 2024

    Property Co. Can't Get Coverage In Equipment Damage Row

    An industrial contractor's insurer has no duty to indemnify a commercial property owner over claims that the contractor caused more than $500,000 in damages for wrongly removing and damaging electrical equipment at a Pennsylvania property, a federal court ruled, finding a policy's faulty workmanship exclusion was applicable.

Expert Analysis

  • Ill. BIPA Ruling Marks Critical Win For Silent Cyber Coverage

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    The Illinois Supreme Court's recent decision in West Bend Mutual v. Krishna Schaumburg Tan, confirming that commercial general liability policies do not have to include specific language to cover claims under the Biometric Information Privacy Act, represents a critical victory for policyholders, but leaves unresolved issues in the battle over BIPA coverage, says Tae Andrews at Miller Friel.

  • NY Badly Needs Bad Faith Bill To Hold Insurers Accountable

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    Contrary to a recent Law360 guest article that contends New York state's insurance reform bill would unfairly tip the scales against insurers, Edward Steinberg at the New York State Trial Lawyers Association argues the law is necessary to hold insurers accountable for acting in bad faith, and would protect policyholders and injured parties alike.

  • When Your 9th Circ. Case Needs California High Court Input

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    With the Ninth Circuit increasingly certifying state law questions to the California Supreme Court, litigants should pay careful attention to the rules for ancillary proceedings, study recent issues the state high court decided on certification, and consider strategic options, say attorneys at Buchalter.

  • Cos. Should Review Insurance Policies For PFAS Coverage

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    The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s creation of a council on perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances signals the federal government's intent to accelerate PFAS-related regulatory action and enforcement — so companies with relevant liabilities must understand what their insurance policies will and won’t cover, say attorneys at Lathrop GPM.

  • Insurance Ruling Clarifies Excess Coverage For Opioid Suits

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    A Pennsylvania federal court's ruling this week in Giant Eagle v. American Guarantee Insurance, reversing an earlier finding that two excess insurers had duties to defend opioid injury suits, provides invaluable assurance to excess carriers that opioid defendants can’t use immense defense costs as a basis to leapfrog their primary coverage, says Adam Fleischer at BatesCarey.

  • Indoor Air Pollution Fix Will Require New Laws, New Tech

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    The COVID-19 pandemic, an aging population and changing workplace dynamics all foretell more exposure to indoor air pollutants, so a multidisciplinary policy approach combining technology, insurance, funding and regulation will be needed to improve indoor air quality and health, says Ann Al-Bahish at Haynes and Boone.

  • Cannabis Legalization's Effects On Insurance Industry

    Excerpt from Practical Guidance
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    Resolution of the legal uncertainty presented by the dueling federal and state approaches to cannabis will pave the way for legal cannabis businesses to access the insurance protections the industry needs for everything from workers' compensation to auto insurance to general liability, says Christy Thiems at the American Property Casualty Insurance Association.

  • Biden Admin.'s Climate Strategy Should Include Insurance Innovations

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    To successfully meet the Biden administration's climate-related goals, the federal government must fill gaps in state regulation of environmental insurance, and help create an insurance framework that incentivizes and facilitates carbon impact reduction in four key areas, say Michael Hill and Paul Tetenbaum at Blue Dot Climate Insurance.

  • Where Health Care Enforcement Is Headed Under Biden

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    Early actions by President Joe Biden's administration signal a robust health care enforcement environment in which federal agencies will aggressively scrutinize pandemic-related and Medicare Advantage fraud, nursing homes, and medical technology, and False Claims Act activity will likely increase, say attorneys at Alston & Bird.

  • Key Considerations For Litigation Settlement Trustees

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    Robert Weiss and David Vanaskey at Wilmington Trust describe some of the core considerations for trustees that administer settlements resulting from mass tort and class action litigation, based on their experience working on the Volkswagen diesel emissions settlement.

  • 3 Key Environmental Takeaways From Biden's First 30 Days

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    President Joe Biden has heavily prioritized environmental policy during his first month in office, with three key themes emerging that will immediately change enforcement practices and affect regulated industries, say attorneys at Gibson Dunn.

  • What Airports Need To Know About PFAS Risks

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    As Congress, federal regulators and litigants express increasing concern over the dangers of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, airports are in the spotlight as likely sites of PFAS contamination — so airport management and boards should take steps now to prepare for regulation and litigation, say Renée Martin-Nagle and David Rockman at Eckert Seamans.

  • Time For Cos. To Walk The Walk On Environmental Justice

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    With the Biden administration pledging to consider environmental justice across all agencies and in all federal decisions, companies must candidly assess their operations in order to make sure their statements on environmental justice are backed by measurable results, say attorneys at King & Spalding.