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Property

  • September 27, 2022

    Seattle Cafe Drops 9th Circ. Virus Coverage Appeal

    A Seattle cafe ended its quest Tuesday for COVID-19 business interruption coverage, asking the Ninth Circuit to dismiss its case against Scottsdale Insurance Co. following a unanimous Washington Supreme Court decision in a similar case siding with insurers.

  • September 27, 2022

    La. Biz Sues Allianz Over $500K In Hurricane Ida Coverage

    A Louisiana torque wrench manufacturer accused Allianz Global Corporate & Specialty Marine Insurance Co. of failing to cover more than $500,000 in Hurricane Ida damage, arguing Tuesday that the insurer handled its claim in bad faith.

  • September 27, 2022

    Church Lawyer Calls Hurricane Insurance Delays 'Deliberate'

    A New Orleans church sued its insurers including Certain Underwriters at Lloyd's, London in Louisiana federal court for "deliberate and unreasonable" delays in adjusting its claims for more than $2.7 million in 2021 storm damages from Hurricane Ida and Tropical Storm Nicholas, its lawyer told Law360 on Tuesday.

  • September 27, 2022

    Property Owner's Quick Win Bid Flawed, Title Insurer Says

    A title insurer being sued by a property owner who accused the company of improperly denying coverage for a sale told a Virginia federal court it should reject the owner's motion for summary judgment, saying it lacked supporting evidence and the owner shouldn't be allowed to add evidence in an untimely filing.

  • September 27, 2022

    Insurers, Art Exhibitor Settle Forgery Coverage Fight

    An art exhibitor and a group of European insurers have settled their dispute over insurance payments amid an investigation into paintings seized by the Italian government in 2017 under suspicions of forgery, according to an order dismissing the case Tuesday.

  • September 27, 2022

    Insurer Fights Hartford's Bid For Defense Reimbursement

    A Hartford unit isn't entitled to reimbursement of what it has spent defending a contractor involved in litigation with Gallaudet University over a residence hall construction project, Ohio Security Insurance Co. told a D.C. federal court, saying it didn't receive timely notice of the initial claim.

  • September 26, 2022

    Vegas Mall Cites Vt. Decision In Virus Case At Nev. High Court

    The owner of a Las Vegas mall asked the Nevada Supreme Court to deny its insurer's bid to reverse a lower court's ruling allowing the mall's COVID-19 coverage suit to move forward, citing a first-of-its-kind ruling from the Vermont Supreme Court allowing a separate virus coverage suit to continue.

  • September 26, 2022

    Chubb Unit's $8.5M HVAC Fire Suit Partially Moves Forward

    An Ohio federal judge partially allowed a Chubb unit on Monday to move forward with its bid to recoup coverage paid to a Minnesota broadcaster for an $8.5 million HVAC fire, finding the parties disagree on whether the installer of the ventilation system knew or should have known it was defective.

  • September 26, 2022

    Insurer Must Face Mold Claims In Suit Over Burst Pipe

    United National Insurance Co. cannot avoid mold damage claims raised by a former owner of a Wyndham Garden hotel seeking more than $20 million in total coverage, a Louisiana federal judge ruled, rejecting the insurer's argument that all mold caused by a pipe breach is excluded.

  • September 26, 2022

    Insurer Wants Out Of $950K UV Lamp Fire Suit Coverage

    A State National unit asked an Indiana federal court to find that it doesn't owe coverage to Daisy Nail Products Inc., arguing its policy doesn't cover the company's liability for a salon fire at the center of underlying lawsuits that sought more than $950,000.

  • September 26, 2022

    Travelers Can't Rescind Agency's Crime Policies, Gov't Says

    Travelers cannot revoke crime policies issued to an organization that oversees government benefit payments, the federal government told a New Mexico federal court, saying the insurer waived its right to rescission by waiting too long to raise the argument.

  • September 23, 2022

    Treasure Hunter Seeks Redo Of IP Suit Coverage Dispute

    An underwater treasure hunter requested that a Washington federal judge reconsider granting insurance coverage in an underlying lawsuit over his stalled hunt for gold from an early 20th-century Alaskan shipwreck.

  • September 23, 2022

    Ga. Comfort Suites Hotel Sues Insurer Over Trashed Room

    A Comfort Suites hotel sued its insurance company in Georgia federal court for refusing to fully cover its damages after a man barricaded himself inside a guest room and proceeded to destroy everything he could lay his hands on, including a sprinkler that caused extensive water damage.

  • September 23, 2022

    Calif. Panel Allows Consultant To Amend Virus Coverage Suit

    A California appellate panel affirmed the dismissal of a utility consultant's COVID-19 coverage suit, but allowed it to amend its suit, in a decision giving both sides something to praise.

  • September 23, 2022

    California Jewelers' COVID-19 Coverage Suit Tossed

    Los Angeles-area jewelry stores were the latest businesses to have their case for COVID-19 loss coverage tossed by a California federal court judge who found, like many others before him, that the virus does not cause the physical damage needed to trigger coverage.

  • September 23, 2022

    Vt. Justices Revive Huntington Ingalls' Virus Coverage Suit

    The Vermont Supreme Court on Friday revived Huntington Ingalls' lawsuit seeking coverage for losses it suffered during the COVID-19 pandemic, a first for a state high court, saying the shipbuilder has sufficient allegations to proceed past the motion-to-dismiss stage.

  • September 22, 2022

    Insurer Drops Suit Against Ex-Condo Board President

    An insurer voluntarily dismissed its case Thursday in Illinois federal court against a former condo board president who is suing his homeowners association, its board and others in an insured-versus-insured suit brought over mismanagement, bullying and theft claims, among other things.

  • September 22, 2022

    Costco Sues Liberty Mutual Over Slip-And-Fall Suit Coverage

    Liberty Mutual owes Costco coverage for costs related to a slip-and-fall lawsuit, the wholesale and retail giant claimed, arguing the insurer wrongfully refused to pay for its defense.

  • September 22, 2022

    Fla. Condos Sue Insurers Over Hurricane Irma Damage

    Two Miami-area condo associations sued their insurers Wednesday for allegedly not covering millions of dollars of damage from Hurricane Irma.

  • September 22, 2022

    Storm Damage Suit Against Nationwide Unit Moves Forward

    A Florida federal judge rejected a Nationwide unit's bid for summary judgment in a suit over Tropical Storm Eta damage, finding that Scottsdale Insurance Co. agreed to the policyholder's version of the facts and didn't properly challenge them when it had the chance.

  • September 22, 2022

    Clifford Chance Adds Ex-Sidley Partner To US Practice

    Top international firm Clifford Chance LLP announced on Thursday that a New York-based insurance and financial services partner has joined the firm as co-head of its U.S. insurance practice, adding his more than 23 years of experience in the industry to its team.

  • September 21, 2022

    8th Circ. Judge Blasts Casino Over Jurisdiction In Virus Suit

    An Eighth Circuit judge on Wednesday accused an Iowa casino operator of lying and wasting the court's time after its attorneys realized in March that there wasn't federal diversity jurisdiction in its COVID-19 coverage suit against Zurich American Insurance Co.

  • September 21, 2022

    Ill. Panel Upholds Insurer's Win In Bad Workmanship Suit

    American Family Mutual Insurance has no duty to defend a landscaper accused of botching its work for a pair of homeowners, an Illinois appeals court affirmed, finding that the homeowners failed to allege property damage outside the landscaper's own work.

  • September 21, 2022

    Insurer Ducks Coverage In Unpermitted Demolition Row

    A California federal judge ruled a Berkshire Hathaway unit isn't responsible for covering a state court judgment related to unauthorized demolitions at a historic San Francisco building, finding the damages won in the underlying suit are excluded under its policy.

  • September 21, 2022

    Insurers Wrongly Denied COVID Claim, Del. Justices Told

    An attorney for a multi-state water park venture told Delaware's Supreme Court on Wednesday that a lower court wrongly tossed its challenge to an insurer's rejection of COVID-19 business loss coverage based on an "overly interpreted and expanded" policy exclusion covering pollutants.

Expert Analysis

  • Fla. Evidence Code Update Lowers Burden For Image Use

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    Florida's recent evidence code change permits judicial notice of images and certain other graphics, a hugely meaningful development for litigants across a wide range of practice areas, though the effect will likely be immediately felt in property insurance cases, say Eve Cann and David Levin at Baker Donelson.

  • Courts Are Not Shifting On COVID Biz Interruption Stance

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    Although a recent Law360 guest article suggested that the pendulum is about to swing in favor of policyholders seeking business interruption coverage for pandemic-related losses, the larger body of appellate case law — applying the laws of 25 states — continues to find no coverage, say attorneys at Dentons.

  • What Snap Removal Debate Means For Insurance Disputes

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    A potential circuit split regarding the permissibility of snap removal to federal court, which allows defendants to circumvent the forum defendant rule, is particularly a concern in insurance cases due to the difficulty of removing such cases, and the perception that some state courts are more favorable to policyholders, says Greg Mann at Rivkin Radler.

  • Questions Remain On Computer Fraud Coverage For Phishing

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    There are questions regarding the applicability of computer fraud coverage to phishing scheme losses in the wake of the Ninth Circuit's decision in Ernst & Haas v. Hiscox earlier this year, with a backdrop of differing case results and evolving fact patterns over the past few years, say Robert Callahan and Melissa D’Alelio at Robins Kaplan.

  • Storm Insurance Considerations For Cos. New To Florida

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    As more and more businesses migrate to Florida, commercial property owners and tenants should carefully consider specific contract terms in order to avoid insurance issues and litigation in the event of storm damage, say Philippe Lieberman and Marko Cerenko at Kluger Kaplan.

  • Business Insurance Considerations Amid Conflict In Ukraine

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    As the conflict in Ukraine continues to wreak havoc on global business operations and supply chains, companies should carefully assess all the various types of insurance coverage that may mitigate corporate losses, say attorneys at Morgan Lewis.

  • Recent State Rulings Buck Trend In COVID Insurance Disputes

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    For the last two years, policyholders have been mostly unsuccessful in arguing that commercial property policies should cover losses suffered due to the COVID-19 pandemic, but a trio of recent state court decisions suggests that the pendulum may swing in policyholders' favor, say attorneys at Reed Smith.

  • NY Waterborne Property Ruling Is A Warning To Policyholders

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    A New York state court's recent decision in Mill Basin v. Markel, adopting an expansive interpretation of a waterborne exclusion, is a reminder to policyholders that courts may rule against them even when case law and insurance principles are seemingly in their favor, say Catherine Doyle and Caroline Meneau at Jenner & Block.

  • 2 Reasons Why Ill. Virus Coverage Ruling Is Significant

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    An Illinois federal court's recent decision in Dental Experts v. Massachusetts Bay Insurance is especially useful due to the scarcity of relevant pandemic-related business interruption case law involving first-party policies, and because it clarifies how the cause test should be applied in similar cases, say Christopher Kuleba and Adrienne Kitchen at Reed Smith.

  • Tracking Class Certification Changes, 1 Year After TransUnion

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    In the year since the U.S. Supreme Court's TransUnion v. Ramirez decision, defense lawyers have invoked it as support for denying class certification or decertifying classes — but an analysis suggests that the main impact of the ruling has simply been closer scrutiny of class definitions by district courts, say James Morsch and Jonathan Singer at Saul Ewing.

  • What's At Stake In Fla. Insurance Appraisal Case

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    The Florida Supreme Court's decision in Weston Property & Casualty Insurance v. Riverside Club Condominium Association, determining whether trial courts should have discretion to sequence appraisal and fraud in insurance disputes, will influence how claims are handled on a national basis, say attorneys at Reed Smith.

  • Hurricane Insurance Prep Is Key For Fla. Condos And HOAs

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    As this year's hurricane season gets underway, Florida associations for homeowners, condos and communities should review their insurance policies and protocols in advance of potential inclement weather, says Kelly Corcoran at Ball Janik.

  • Property Insurance Coverage Can Hinge On 'Riot' Or 'Protest'

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    As protests erupt across the U.S. in response to the U.S. Supreme Court overturning Roe v. Wade, Alycen Moss and Elliot Kerzner at Cozen O'Connor examine important property insurance questions that depend on whether a gathering of people is classified as a protest or a riot.