- Posts by Lawrence J. BrackenPartner
Larry Bracken has 38 years of experience litigating insurance coverage, class action and commercial cases in federal and state courts throughout the United States. Pro bono representation of clients in habeas corpus, prisoner ...
A Washington state court in The Board of Regents of the University of Washington v. Employers Insurance Company of Wausau, No. 22-2-15472-1, recently held that the University of Washington has made a plausible claim for coverage for losses sustained as the result of the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic under Washington’s “loss of functionality” test.
In HDI Global Specialty SE v. PF Holdings LLC, the Eleventh Circuit recently affirmed a district court ruling that the insurers of two apartment management companies did not have to cover a $54 million arbitration award against the companies for their alleged mismanagement of government-subsidized apartments. The Eleventh Circuit held that management companies’ failure to cooperate breached general liability insurance policies issued by the insurers.
Whether an insurer has a right to reimburse defense costs after a finding that it has no duty to defend remains an open question in Georgia. However, in Continental Casualty Co., et al. v. Winder Laboratories, LLC, et al., Case No. 21-11758 (11th Cir. Jul. 13, 2023), the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals has weighed in with its prediction on the likely answer. Persuaded by the logic of other jurisdictions that, “wide-ranging reimbursement is necessarily inappropriate in a system—like Georgia’s—that is predicated on a broad duty to defend and a more limited duty to indemnify,” the Eleventh Circuit predicted that, “the Supreme Court of Georgia would follow that logic to adopt a ‘no recoupment’ rule to protect its insurance system.”
In ExxonMobil Corp. v. Natl. Union Fire Ins. Co. of Pittsburgh, PA, the Texas Supreme Court held that an insurance policy did not incorporate the payout limits of an underlying service agreement and thus the insured was entitled to the higher limits under the insurance policy. 2023 WL 2939596, at *1 (Tex. Apr. 14, 2023).
In a recent opinion, the Northern District Court of Illinois reaffirmed the bedrock principle that an insurer’s duty to defend is broad and triggered by any allegations in a complaint that potentially fall within a policy’s coverage grant. In Harleysville Pref. Ins. Co. v. Dude Products Inc., et. al., Case No. 21-c-5249 (N.D. Ill. Dec. 21, 2022), the insured, Dude Products, Inc., sought coverage from its insurer, Harleysville Preferred Insurance Company, against a class action lawsuit that alleged Dude Products intentionally and falsely marketed its wipes as “flushable” even though the product allegedly did not break apart and caused “clogs and other sewage damage.”
Hurricane Ian is rapidly approaching the west coast of Florida and is expected to make landfall as a Category 4 hurricane near the Tampa area within the coming days. While the exact track is still being determined, there is a chance the storm may also impact insureds in Georgia and South Carolina. Now is the time to activate your disaster plan and ensure that you have your relevant insurance policies in your possession and that you review them for critical deadlines.
We put together an alert here with tips to help you and your business mitigate potential storm loss and maximize coverage.
The ...
In an appeal to the Ninth Circuit, a private equity firm has asked the court to reverse an order finding there was no coverage for a suit alleging it concealed that a facility it sold was run by Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán. AKN Holdings had purchased a manufacturing facility in Reynosa, Mexico, from Thermo Fisher, unaware that the facility “was overrun” by the drug cartel of “El Chapo.” After discovering the concealment, AKN Holdings sued Thermo Fisher and, while that suit was pending, in turn sold the facility to FINSA, also without disclosing the cartel activities or its pending lawsuit.
Earlier this month, current and former Boeing Company directors agreed to a $237.5 million settlement to resolve claims that they ignored safety issues concerning Boeing’s 737 MAX aircraft. While the settlement, which came quickly on the heels of the Delaware Chancery Court’s September denial of the defendants’ motion to dismiss, ranks as one of the largest derivative settlements of all time, the silver lining for the directors and officers named in the suit is that the entire settlement is to be funded by the company’s D&O insurers. The Boeing case is yet another example of the necessity for public companies to purchase sufficient D&O liability coverage, particularly “Side A” insurance coverage, to protect officers and directors implicated in derivative claims, securities class actions, enforcement actions, and similar claims. Because many states, including Delaware, prohibit companies from indemnifying officers and directors for payments made to the company in settlement of stockholder derivative claims or other suits brought on behalf of the company, securing Side A coverage to protect individuals for non-indemnified loss is essential.
As governments lift COVID-19 lockdown restrictions and economies begin to reopen, consumer demand for products has skyrocketed. Amid the spike in demand, businesses are struggling to meet consumers’ needs due to ongoing global supply chain disruption. The disruption stems from many factors, including the lingering effects of COVID-19 mitigation strategies that slashed the production of goods, as well as a shortage of warehouse workers and truck drivers. Insurance is a key component of supply chain risk management. Policyholders who rely on a supply chain can use insurance to protect against supply chain risks. Here, we explore supply chain risks and how insurance can mitigate those risks.
A company faces two class action lawsuits—filed by different plaintiffs, complaining of different allegedly wrongful conduct, asserting different causes of action subject to different burdens of proof, and seeking different relief based on different time periods for the alleged harm. Those facts suggest the suits are not “fundamentally identical,” but that is what a Delaware Superior Court recently concluded in barring coverage for a policyholder seeking to recover for a suit the court deemed “related” to an earlier lawsuit first made outside the policy’s coverage period. First Solar Inc. v. National Union Fire Ins. Co. of Pittsburgh, Pa., No. N20C-10-156 MMJ CCLD (Del. Super. Ct. June 23, 2021). The decision, which is not on all fours with some of the authority upon which it relies, underscores the inherent unpredictability of “related” claim disputes and need for careful analysis of the policy language against the factual and legal bases of the underlying claims.
Hunton Andrews Kurth's insurance coverage team recently published a client alert discussing a D&O coverage dispute arising from a credit union’s post-acquisition fraud claims.
Everest National Insurance Company has filed a lawsuit denying any obligation to cover a post-acquisition lawsuit by a credit union alleging fraud against two banks and their executives. The seller paid additional premium for an extended reporting period to report claims based on pre-acquisition wrongful conduct, but the insurer denied coverage on the ground that any claims asserted by the buyer are excluded under the D&O policy’s “insured vs. insured” exclusion. The decision underscores the importance of not only ensuring continuity of D&O coverage before and after a transaction but also evaluating all possible claim scenarios arising out of a deal to ensure that all stakeholders are adequately protected.
New Jersey’s highest court heard arguments Monday in the appeal of a ruling that the New Jersey Transit Corp.’s (“NJ Transit”) insurers are required to insure $400 million of water damage loss caused by Hurricane Sandy.
The matter stems from an insurance claim NJ Transit made after the super storm rocked the East Coast in 2012. NJ Transit claimed over $400 million in losses as a result of damage to its tracks, bridges, tunnels and power stations. In response, its tower of property insurers took the position that a $100 million flood sublimit applied to limit NJ Transit’s recovery under its insurance tower, not the policy’s $400 million overall limits.
In American Reliable Insurance Company v. Lancaster, the Georgia Court of Appeals reversed the denial of a property insurer’s summary judgment motion concerning the insurer’s denial of a fire loss claim. The basis of the denial was that the policyholders had failed to pay the policy premium. The policyholders, Charlie and Wanda Lancaster, claimed that they had paid their policy premiums for several years to their insurance agent, Macie Yawn. In October 2014, American Reliable mailed a renewal notice to the Lancasters notifying them that premium payments had to be made directly to the insurer. After it did not receive payment from the Lancasters, American Reliable sent them a cancellation notice in December 2014, again notifying them that payments be made directly to the insurer. The Lancasters denied having received either notice from American Reliable, but the record included a receipt for certificate of mailing.
On October 6, 2020, U.S. District Judge Thomas Thrash Jr. issued Georgia’s first COVID-19 business interruption insurance decision, finding Governor Brian Kemp’s State of Emergency Executive Order did not cause “physical loss of” the policyholders’ closed dining rooms. Henry’s Louisiana Grill, Inc. et al. v. Allied Ins. Co. of Am., No. 1:20-cv-2939-TWT (N.D. Ga. Oct. 6, 2020). The decision takes an unusually narrow view of the phrase “loss of,” as it is used in the policy and, consequently, reaches a conclusion that is inconsistent with how other courts have analyzed the phrase.
Deciding that certain damages claimed by the underlying case plaintiff were covered “Loss” under a professional services policy, the Eleventh Circuit determined that AEGIS must pay to defend a Georgia landlord in a class action for wrongful failure to return tenants’ security deposits under O.C.G.A. § 44-7-35(c). The policy defined “Loss” as “a compensatory monetary amount for which the Insured may be held legally liable, including judgments . . . awards, or settlements,” but specifically excluded:
Last week, a Georgia federal jury popped a motor carrier liability insurer and its insured with a $21 million verdict in a wrongful death suit. According to the Complaint, the insured driver lost control of his tractor-trailer while driving on Georgia Highway 369. As a result, the trailer disconnected and overturned, injuring a pedestrian walking along the highway’s shoulder. The pedestrian eventually succumbed to his injuries, and his estate filed suit against the driver and the driver’s insurer under Georgia’s Direct Action Statute, which allows plaintiffs to name motor carrier insurers as defendants along with their insureds.
On December 9th, the Eleventh Circuit held that a loss of over $1.7 million to scammers was covered under a commercial crime insurance policy’s fraudulent instruction provision.
In Dunn, et al. v. Columbia National Insurance Company, No. 2:17-cv-0246 (N.D. Ga.), an insurance company refused to defend an insured in a personal injury claim contending that the insured failed to cooperate in the defense. The underlying claim stemmed from an automobile accident, where an employee of Lawson Air Conditioning and Plumbing, Inc. (“Lawson”), Ronald Patterson, struck members of the Dunn family with a pickup truck owned by Lawson as the family was walking out of a Walmart store. The Dunn family members suffered bodily injury as a proximate result of the accident. Patterson admitted fault.
Energy industry: is your insurance sufficient to handle a major cyber event? Larry Bracken, Mike Levine, and I address this question and more in our recent article for Electric Light & Power, found here. In the article, we identify three major gaps in cyber insurance that we routinely see when analyzing coverage for energy industry clients. The first major gap is coverage for bodily injury or property damage caused by a cyber event. Most cyber insurance policies exclude coverage for both bodily injury and property damage, even if caused by a cyber event. Meanwhile, many commercial general liability insurance policies now exclude cyber-related risks, thus creating a gap in coverage for these losses. The second gap we identify is coverage for fines and penalties, including those issued under the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). Even where cyber insurance policies expressly purport to cover fines and penalties, it is unclear if these may be deemed uninsurable as a matter of public policy in certain jurisdictions. Finally, we identify a gap in coverage for business income losses when the insured’s network, or that of a vendor on which they rely, goes down. That coverage is a key component of a robust cyber program, but one that is typically only offered for an additional premium.
The U.S. District Court of Appeals for the First Circuit recently held that Zurich American Insurance Company was obligated to defend Electricity Maine, LLC in a class action lawsuit brought by its customers. The case stems from alleged misconduct by Electricity Maine that resulted in customers receiving higher bills than were previously represented. Plaintiffs Jennifer Chon and Katherine Veilleux sought to represent a class of approximately 200,000 customers seeking damages totaling approximately $35 million. Specifically, the complaint asserted claims for negligence, negligent misrepresentation, violations under the federal Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (“RICO”), 18. U.S.C. §§ 1962, 1964, and the Maine Unfair Trade Practices Act.
A recent outbreak of Legionnaires’ Disease has been traced to a Sheraton hotel in Atlanta, Georgia. According to the Georgia Department of Public Health, 11 cases are confirmed and 55 more cases are “probable.” The Atlanta Sheraton closed on July 15 to investigate the outbreak. The closure is certain to result in a substantial immediate loss of revenue for the property. The closure and loss of advanced reservations also will likely result in an extended interruption of hotel revenue. Add to that potential stigma-related losses that will result from those afraid to reenter the property after the hotel reopens. Sheraton will likely turn to its insurers to seek payment for its business interruption costs.
The Georgia Court of Appeals recently affirmed a grant of summary judgment in favor of Mountain Express Oil Company on its breach of contract claim against liability insurer, Southern Trust Insurance Company. Empire Petroleum brought claims against Mountain Express for breach of contract, injunctive relief, and libel or slander, among others. Mountain Express sought a defense to that lawsuit under its insurance policy with Southern Trust. Southern Trust contended that the insurance policy did not cover Empire’s non-libel/slander claims, and therefore reimbursed Mountain Express for only a portion of its attorneys’ fees. After the Empire lawsuit settled, Mountain Express sued Southern Trust for breach of contract and bad faith for failing to pay the remaining defense costs, contending that Southern Trust had a duty to defend the entire lawsuit.
A state-appointed panel advised last week that California should change the standard for determining whether utilities are liable for wildfires. Under the current system, California’s Public Utilities Code § 2106 provides a private right of action by any person or entity that has suffered loss, damages, or injury caused by prohibited or unlawful acts of a public utility. Relying on this statute, property owners have asserted wildfire-related claims directly against allegedly culpable electric utility companies. Public utilities in California also face inverse condemnation claims arising out of wildfires. Under inverse condemnation, where private property is taken for public use and later damaged by the state or its agency, the state or agency is strictly liable to the property owner.
Upper Deck Co. has sued its general liability insurer, Liberty Mutual Fire Insurance Co., in California federal court last week, alleging that Liberty Mutual failed to satisfy its defense obligations in an antitrust lawsuit brought against Upper Deck by rival trading card maker Leaf Trading Cards LLC. According to the complaint, Liberty Mutual agreed that the allegations in Leaf’s suit triggered coverage under Upper Deck’s policy and acknowledged its duty to defend and Upper Deck’s right to independent counsel. However, Liberty Mutual stopped paying the defense fees of one of the firms Upper Deck hired, and also failed to pay the fees of a different firm.
On Wednesday, the Fifth Circuit found that Lloyd’s syndicates may not subrogate against an additional insured and may not force that additional insured to arbitration. Lloyd’s Syndicate 457 v. FloaTEC, LLC, No. 17-20550 (5th Cir. Apr. 17, 2019).
The Southern District of Georgia recently ruled that Evanston Insurance Company is not entitled to summary judgment on whether its policies’ pollution exclusion bars coverage for the release of nitrogen into a warehouse. The case stems from an incident at Xytex Tissue Services, LLC’s warehouse, where Xytex stored biological material at low temperatures. Xytex used an on-site “liquid nitrogen delivery system” to keep the material properly cooled. This system releases liquid nitrogen, which would vaporize into nitrogen gas and cool the biological material. On February 5, 2017, a Xytex employee, Deputy Greg Meagher, entered the warehouse to investigate activated motion detectors and burglar alarms. Deputy Meagher was overcome by nitrogen gas and died as a result. Following Deputy Meagher’s death, his heirs filed suit against Xytex and other defendants. Evanston denied coverage based on the pollution exclusion in its policy. Evanston then brought a declaratory judgment action to confirm its coverage position.
The Georgia Supreme Court ruled this week that First Acceptance Insurance Co. need not pay a $5.3 million excess judgment against its insured, Ronald Jackson. First Acceptance Ins. Co. of Georgia, Inc. v. Hughes, No. S18G0517, 2019 WL 1103831 (Ga. Mar. 11, 2019), even though Jackson’s insurer could have settled the claim for Jackson’s $50,000 policy limits.
An Alabama state court recently ruled that Protective Life Insurance wrongly denied California-based Apex Parks Group’s claim for unpaid key person death benefits. Apex, an amusement park company, insured its founder and CEO Alexander “Al” Weber Jr., who died unexpectedly in November 2016 while on vacation. Eight months earlier, Apex purchased “key person” insurance coverage from Protective. According to the complaint, Protective’s medical examiner had received Mr. Weber’s medical history prior to issuing the policy.
A District Court Judge for the District of Massachusetts recently ruled that Ace Property and Casualty Insurance Co. breached its duty to defend its insured in a lawsuit brought by Plaistow Project, LLC, after a family owned laundromat leaked chemicals onto Plaistow Project’s property. Plaistow Project, LLC v. ACE Prop. & Cas. Ins. Co., No. 16-CV-11385-IT, 2018 WL 4357480, (D. Mass. Sept. 13, 2018). Plaistow Project sued State Line Laundry Services in state court, and ACE denied coverage under the pollution exclusion in State Line Laundry’s insurance policy. Plaistow Project then settled with State Line Laundry. Under the settlement terms, Plaistow Project was assigned State Line Laundry’s rights against ACE.
On May 10, 2018, the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed a Northern District of Georgia decision barring coverage for a loss claimed to arise under a “Computer Fraud” policy issued by Great American Insurance Company to Interactive Communications International, Inc. and HI Technology Corp. Interactive Commc’ns Int’l, Inc. v. Great Am. Ins. Co., No. 17-11712, 2018 WL 2149769 (11th Cir. May 10, 2018). InComm sells “chits,” each of which has a specific monetary value to consumers who can redeem them by transferring that value to their debit card. To redeem a chit, a consumer dials a specific 1-800 number and goes through a computerized interactive voice system. InComm lost $11.4 million when fraudsters manipulated a glitch in the system by placing multiple calls at the same time. This allowed consumers to redeem chits more than once. InComm sought coverage for these losses under its “Computer Fraud” policy.
On April 13, 2018, the Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division, affirmed a trial court decision finding that a bill of sale intended to include the transfer of insurance rights and finding that such transfer did not violate an anti-assignment clause. Cooper Industries, LLC, Plaintiff-Respondent, v. Columbia Casualty Company And One Beacon America Insurance Company, Defendants-Appellants, and Employers Insurance Of Wausau, Allstate Insurance Company, Lexington Insurance Company And Westchester Fire Insurance Company, 2018 WL 1770260,(N.J. Super. A.D., 2018). In May 1986, Cooper Industries merged several entities and transferred assets to a “new” McGraw-Edison Company through a bill of sale. Eighteen years later, on November 30, 2004, Cooper Industries merged the new McGraw-Edison company into itself. In 2009, the Environmental Protection Agency determined that Cooper Industries was responsible for generating and disposing of hazardous substances due to McGraw-Edison’s actions taken years earlier. Cooper Industries sought coverage under the commercial general liability policies McGraw-Edison had in place at the time of the environmental and pollution-related occurrences.
In a ruling earlier this month, an Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals judge ruled in Scott, Blane, and Darren Recovery L.L.C., Anova Foods Inc. v. Auto-Owners Insurance Co., No. 17-12945-E, 2018 WL 1611256 (11th Cir. 2018), that an insurer did not have a duty to defend and indemnify its insured in a false marketing suit. Anova Food Inc. was sued by its competitor, King Tuna, for allegedly falsely asserting in its advertising that it treated tuna meat with a smoking process using filtered wood chips. King Tuna claimed that, in reality, Anova treated its tuna with synthetic carbon monoxide. In finding that King Tuna’s lawsuit did not trigger Auto-Owner’s duty to defend, the court held (1) that the lawsuit did allege a covered “advertising injury”; (2) that coverage was excluded under the policy’s “failure to conform” exclusion; and (3) coverage was barred by Anova’s untimely notice of the lawsuit.
In Selective Ins. Co. of the Southeast v. William P. White Racing Stables, Inc. (http://caselaw.findlaw.com/us-11th-circuit/1882819.html), the Eleventh Circuit recently ruled that a liability insurer is not required to defend its insured against a claim for spoliation of evidence. In the underlying case a jockey, James Rivera, was paralyzed in a racing accident when the horse he was riding suddenly collapsed. Mr. Rivera sued the race track, Mr. Rivera’s employer, and the horse’s veterinarians, claiming that the horse was not fit to be raced due to the negligence of most of the defendants. His claims against his employer, White Racing Stables, did not assert negligence but alleged that by failing to preserve the horse’s remains, White Racing had violated Florida’s workers compensation law by failing to investigate and pursue Mr. Rivera’s claims against the other defendants. He also asserted a claim for spoliation.
In a recent insurer’s failure-to-settle case, Hughes v. First Acceptance Ins. Co. of Ga., the Georgia Court of Appeals reaffirmed that there is no hard-set rule conducive to summary judgment; rather, the court ruled that a jury should determine whether the insurer’s actions had been “reasonably prudent.” Plaintiff Robert Jackson allegedly caused a five-vehicle collision that resulted in his death and the serious injuries of others, including Julie An and her minor child, Jina Hong. An and Hong, through their counsel, communicated with Jackson’s insurance company, First Acceptance, stating that they were “interested” in settling their claims within Jackson’s policy limit of $25,000. Counsel also requested that the insurer send him policy information within 30 days. An later claimed that this communication represented an offer of settlement, when, 41 days later, they sent First Acceptance a letter withdrawing their “offer” and stating their intent to file suit due to the insurer’s failure to respond. An and Hong then filed suit and were ultimately awarded $5,334,220 in damages. First Acceptance paid $25,000 towards the award, leaving Jackson’s estate exposed to over five million dollars in damages.
An eye-popping settlement in Georgia serves as a cautionary tale for insurers who refuse to provide a straight answer when responding to a demand for policy limits and as a lesson for insureds dealing with recalcitrant insurers: Don’t just take “no” for an answer.
In a recent Client Alert, Hunton & Williams insurance attorneys Lorelie Masters, Michael Levine, and Geoffrey Fehling discuss the importance of reviewing historical liability insurance policies and the potential benefit these policies can have on minimizing exposure to environmental hazards. In Cooper Industries, LLC v. Employers Insurance of Wausau, et al., No. L-9284-11 (N.J. Super. Ct. Law Div. Oct. 16, 2017), a New Jersey trial court held that an electrical products manufacturer was entitled to coverage rights under commercial general liability policies issued to a predecessor company for environmental remediation costs stemming from a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency cleanup of a 17-mile stretch of the Passaic River in New Jersey.
A case decided last week by the Sixth Circuit illustrates the importance of seeking bankruptcy claim policy amendments when placing D&O coverage. Indian Harbor Ins. Co. v. Zucker (6th Cir. Jun. 20, 2017) involved the application of the insured-vs.-insured exclusion and specifically, whether the policy’s insured-vs.-insured exclusion precluded coverage for a claim brought by a company’s liquidating trust, to which the company’s claims had been assigned by the company as debtor-in-possession after the company filed for bankruptcy. After the company’s claims were assigned to the liquidating trust, the trustee sued several of the company’s former executives for breach of fiduciary duty.
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- Office Depot
- Office of the Insurance Commissioner of Puerto Rico
- Officers
- OH
- Ohio
- Oil
- Oil & Gas
- Oil and Gas
- Oil and Gas Petroleum
- Oil Categories: Defense Costs
- Oklahoma
- Olin
- Olin Corporation
- Olympics
- Omission
- On-Demand Insurance
- One Beacon America Insurance Company
- One Beacon American Insurance Company
- OneBeacon
- Online Banking
- Operations
- OPF Enterprises LLC
- Opioids
- Optical Services USA/JC1
- Orders
- Ordinary Disease of Life
- Oroville
- Other Insurance
- Other Insurance Clauses
- Other Insurance Provision
- Otsuka America Inc.
- Out West
- Overvalued Stock
- Owners Insurance Company
- P.F. Chang's
- Pacific Management
- Palestine
- Pamrapo Bancorp
- Pandemic
- Paperweight Development Corp.
- Parametric
- Partnership
- Party Line Arguments
- Passaic River
- Patent
- Patent Infringement
- Patriarch Partners
- Patriarch Partners LLC
- Patrick M. McDermott
- Paycheck Protection Program
- Paypal
- Peer-to-Peer Insurance
- Pella
- Peloton
- Penalties
- Penalty
- Pending or Prior Claim
- Pennsylvania
- People’s Trust Insurance Co.
- Performance Trans. Inc.
- Period of Liability
- Period of Restoration
- Permanent Property Insurance
- Permissible Evidence
- Personal and Advertising Injury
- Personal Catastrophe Policy
- Personal Information
- Personal Injury
- Personal Jurisdiction
- Personal Lines Insurance
- Personal Property
- Petrochemical
- Petroterminal de Panama
- PFAS
- Pfizer
- Pfizer Inc.
- PG&E Corp.
- Pharrell Williams
- Philadelphia Indemnity
- Philadelphia Indemnity Insurance Co. Pennsylvania
- Phishing
- Physical Alteration
- physical damage
- Physical Injury
- Physical Loss
- Physical Loss or Damage
- PICC Property and Casualty Company Limited Suzhou Branch
- Piggly Wiggly
- Pilkington North America Inc.
- Pipeline
- Pitzer College
- Pizza Hut
- Places of Public Accommodations
- Plain Language
- Plaistow Project LLC
- Plantation Pipe Line Company
- Plantation Pipeline
- Platinum Management
- Plausibility
- Players Disability Insurance
- Pleading
- Pleading Standard
- Plitt
- Point-of -Sale
- Policy
- Policy Application
- Policy Buyback
- Policy Construction
- Policy Interpretation
- Policy Interpretation Principles
- Policy Limit
- Policy Limits - Bad Faith
- Policy Limits Demands
- Policy Premium Payment
- Policy Release
- Policy Renewals
- Policy Terms
- Policy Wording
- Policy-Language Exception
- Policyholder
- Policyholders
- Political News
- Political Risk Insurance
- Political Risks Insurance Policy
- Pollutant
- Pollution
- Pollution Condition
- Pollution Exclusion
- Pollution Liability
- Ponzi Scheme
- Port Authority
- Portal Healthcare
- Posco Daewoo
- Post-Close Dispute
- Post-judgment Interest
- Potential for Coverage
- Potentiality
- Potentiality Rule
- Potentially Covered
- Poultry Farm
- Poultry Industry
- Poway Academy
- Power
- Power Cell LLC
- Power Loss
- Power of Grace
- Power Outage
- PPLI
- PPP
- Practicable
- Practical Law Q&A Guide
- Pre-Judgment Interest
- Pregnant
- Prejudice
- Preliminary Injunction
- Premises Pollution Liability Insurance
- Premium
- Premiums
- PRI
- Primary Insurance
- Primary Policy
- Principal Solutions
- Principal Solutions Group
- Principle Solution Group LLC
- Principle Solutions
- Prior Acts
- Prior And Pending
- Prior Consent/Consent To Settle
- Prior Insurance Provision
- Prior Knowledge
- Prior Knowledge Exclusion
- Priority of Coverage
- Privacy
- Privacy Breach
- Privacy Insurance
- Private Company
- Private Equity
- Private Power
- Privilege
- Privilege Protection
- Pro Bono
- Pro Rata
- ProBuilders Specialty Insurance
- Product
- Product Contamination
- Product Contamination Coverage
- Product Defect
- Product Disparagement
- Product Liability
- Product Manufacturer
- Product Recall
- Product Safety
- Product-Completed Operations Hazard
- Products
- Products Liability
- Products-Completed Operations Hazard
- Professional Excellence Award
- Professional Liability
- Professional Liability/E&O
- Professional Malpractice
- Professional Services
- Professional Services Exclusion
- Professional Services Policy
- Professional Sports
- Professional Sports Insurance
- Professionalliability
- Progressive Casualty Insurance
- Prop. 65
- Property
- Property Coverage
- Property Damage
- Property Insurance
- Property Management
- Property Manager
- Property Policies
- Prophet Equity
- Proportional
- Proposition 64
- Proposition 65
- ProSight
- Protecting Assets
- Protecting Insurance
- Protection Plus
- Protective Life Insurance
- Proximate Causation
- Proximate Cause
- PRP letter
- Prudential
- Public Access
- Public Authority
- Public Entity
- Public Policy
- Public Safety Orders
- Publication
- Published Information
- Puerto Rico
- Punitive Damages
- punitive wrap insurance
- Quality Sausage Co. LLC
- Quantification
- Queensridge Towers LLC
- Qui Tam
- R&W
- R&W Coverage
- R-T Specialty
- R.T. Vanderbilt
- R.T. Vanderbilt Co. Inc.
- Rachel E. Hudgins
- Rachel Hudgins
- Racing Accident
- Railroad Liability
- Randy S. Parks
- Rankings
- Ransom and Extortion
- Ransomware
- Ransomware Attacks
- Ransomware Policies
- Rapid-American
- Ravenswood
- Ray Duerr Logging
- real estate
- Real Estate Investment Trust
- Real Property
- Reasonable Expectation
- Reasonable Interpretation
- Reasonable Investigation
- Reasonable Settlement
- Reasonableness
- Recall
- Recall Coverage
- Recall Insurance
- Recall Roundup
- Recalled Product Exclusion
- Recalls
- Receivership
- Reconsideration
- Recoupment
- Recoverable Damages
- Reformation
- Refunds
- Registered Agent
- Regulation
- Regulations
- Regulatory
- Regulatory Coverage
- Regulatory Investigation
- Regulatory Investigations
- Reimbursement
- Reinsurance
- Reinsurance Accepted Amount
- Reinsurance Limits
- REIT
- Related
- Related Acts
- Related Claim
- Related Claims
- Relief and Economic Security Act
- Relitigate
- Relocation
- Remand
- Remediation
- Remediation Costs
- Removal Insurance
- Renewal
- Renewals
- Rensselaer
- Renters Insurance
- Repair Expenses
- repairs
- Replacement Cost
- Replacement Expenses
- Reporting Requirements
- Representations & Warranties
- Representations and Warranties
- Reps & Warranties
- Reps and Warranties
- Reputational Harm
- Rescission
- Reservation of Rights
- Residential Insurance
- Restatement
- Restatement of the Law
- Restitution
- Resulting Directly
- Retail
- Retail Year in Review
- Retention
- Retrac
- Retroactive Date
- Return of Funds
- Revco D.S. Inc.
- Rewards
- Richardo Lara
- Riddell
- Ride-Sharing
- Ridesharing
- Ridley Park Fitness
- Right of Privacy
- Right of Publicity
- RIMS
- RIMS Atlanta Chapter
- Ringling Bros. Barnum and Bailey
- Riot
- Ripeness
- Ripple
- Ripple and Zcash
- Rising Stars
- Risk
- Risk Insurance
- Risk Management
- Risk Management Magazine
- Risk Mitigation
- Risk Modeling
- RISKWORLD
- RLI
- Robert Pepper
- Robert W. Hughes
- Rockefeller University
- Roger Clemens
- Rolling Stones
- RollingStone
- Romantik Seehotel Jaegerwirt
- Rookie of the Year
- Roses 1 LLC
- RSUI Indemnity Co.
- Rule 26
- Runoff
- Runoff Coverage
- RWI
- Ryan A. Glasgow
- S.A. de C.V.
- S.B.C. Flood Waste Solutions Inc. f/k/a Flood Waste Solutions Inc.
- Saddleback Inn
- SAFE Banking Act
- SAFETY Act
- Sales Practice Risks
- Salmonella
- Same Condition
- San Antonio Fire & Police Pension Fund and Fire & Police Health Care Fund
- San Jose
- Sanctions
- Sanders v. Illinois Union Insurance Co.
- Sandersville Railroad
- Santam Hollard Insurance Company
- Sapa Extrusions Inc.
- SARS-CoV-2
- Saudi Arabia
- SBS Insurance
- Scapa Dryer Fabrics
- Schleicher & Stebbins Hotels LLC
- Schneider Electric
- Schur
- Scope Of Coverage
- Scott Kimpel
- Scottsdale Insurance Co.
- Scottsdale Insurance Company
- SDNY
- Seattle Times Company
- Sebo
- SEC
- Second Circuit
- Second-Guess
- Secondary Evidence
- Section 2802
- Section 533
- Secura
- Secura Insurance
- Securities
- Securities and Exchange Commission
- Securities Claim
- Securities Claims
- Securities Law
- Securities Lawsuits
- Securities Liability
- Securities Litigation
- Securities Regulation
- Securities Violations
- Security Breach
- Security Failure
- Securityroundtable.org
- Seguros Afirme
- Selective
- Selective Insurance Company of America
- Selective Way Insurance Company
- Self-Insured
- Self-Insured Retention
- Separation of Insureds
- Service Interruption
- Service of Process
- Service Provider
- Settlement
- Seung Park
- Seventh Circuit
- Sexual Abuse
- Sexual Assault
- Sexual Harassment
- Sexual Misconduct
- SFBJ Influential Business Women
- Shannon Shaw
- Shareholder Actions
- Shareholder Lawsuits
- Shareholder Liability
- Shareholder Litigation
- Shareholder Suit
- Shareholder Suits
- Sharing Economy
- Shawn Flood
- Shawn P. Regan
- Sheraton Hotels & Resorts
- Shipping
- shoes
- Shooting
- Side A Coverage
- Sideco
- SIFI
- Silent Cyber
- single occurrence
- SIR
- SITW
- Sixth Circuit
- Skyjet
- Slice
- Slogan
- Smart Contracts
- Smartphone
- Smith Drug Company Inc.
- Smoke
- Snap Removal
- sneaker culture
- Sneakers
- Social Distancing
- Social Engineering
- Social Engineering Scheme
- Social Media
- Software
- Solera Holdings Inc.
- Something In The Water
- Sompo Japan Insurance Company of America
- SonicWall
- Sonoma
- Sony Corp.
- Sout Risius Ross Inc.
- South Africa
- South Carolina
- South Carolina Law
- South Florida Business Journal
- Southern California Pizza Co.
- Southern District of New York
- Southern Owners Insurance
- Southern Trust Insurance Company
- Southern-Owners Insurance Company
- Sovereign
- SP Plus
- Sparta Insurance Co.
- Special Hazard Endorsement
- Specific versus General
- Spoliation
- Spoof Email
- Spoofing
- Sports
- Sports & Entertainment
- Sports Injuries
- Sports Injury
- Spring Window Fashions LLC
- Springpoint
- Sr.
- SS&C
- SS&C Technology Holdings Inc.
- St. Paul
- St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Co.
- St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Company
- St. Paul Mercury
- St. Paul Mercury Insurance Co.
- Stacking
- Stadium
- Star Insurance
- Stardock Systems Inc.
- Starr Indemnity
- Starr Surplus Lines Insurance Companies
- Starr Surplus Lines Insurance Company
- Starstone Specialty Insurance Company
- State Auto Property and Casualty Insurance Company
- State Farm
- State Farm Lloyds
- State Line Laundry Services
- State of Louisiana
- State-Sponsored
- Statute
- Statute of Limitations
- Statutory Damages
- Statutory Merger
- Statutory Schemes
- Steadfast Insurance Company
- Sterling
- Stock Valuation
- Stone-E-Brick Inc.
- Storm
- Storm Damage
- Storm Loss
- Storm Surge
- Stout Risius Ross LLC
- Stowers
- Stowers Demand
- Strafford
- Strategic
- Strategy
- Strathmore Insurance Company
- Strip Club
- Strip Search
- Structural Alteration
- Studio 417 Inc.
- Subcontractor
- Subcontractors Cyber
- Sublimit
- Subpoena
- Subrogation
- Subsidiary
- Successor Coverage
- Successor Liability
- Successor Rights
- Sudden and Accidental
- Sue and Labor
- Suit Limitations
- Summary Judgment
- Sunoco
- Super Lawyers
- Superfluous
- Superfund
- Supervision
- Supplementary Payments
- Suppliers
- Supply Chain
- Supply-Chain
- Supreme Court
- Supreme Court of California
- Supreme Court of Texas
- Surety Bond
- Surviving Entity
- Suspension of Operations
- Sweetgreen
- Swiss Re
- Sydney Embe
- Syed S. Ahmad
- T-Mobile Northeast LLC
- T-Mobile USA Inc.
- Tactic Security Enforcement
- Tail Coverage
- talc
- Tangible Alteration
- Tapestry Inc.
- Taps & Bourbon on Terrace LLC
- Target Corp.
- Tax Avoidance
- TCPA
- Telephone Consumer Protection Act
- Television
- Tenants and Neighbors Provision
- Tender of Policy Limits
- Tennessee Supreme Court
- Terrorism
- Terrorism Insurance
- Terry Bollea
- Tesco
- Texas
- Texas Insurance Code
- Texas Insurance Law
- Texas Prompt Payment of Claims Act
- Texas Supreme Court
- Texting
- Thailand
- The Cincinnati Insurance Co.
- The Cincinnati Insurance Company
- The Great Recession
- The National Black Lawyers Top 40 Under 40
- The National Law Review
- The North River Insurance Company
- The Traveler's Property Casualty Company of America
- The Travelers Indemnity Company of Connecticut
- The Wattles Company
- Thee Sombrero Inc.
- Theft
- Third Circuit
- Third Party
- Third Party Beneficiary
- Third Party Liability
- Third-Party
- Third-Party Consultants
- Third-Party Coverage
- Third-Party Insurance
- Third-Party Property
- Thomas F. Segalla Service Award
- Thruway
- Time Element
- Timely Notice
- Timothy Monahan
- Title III
- Title Insurance
- TNCs
- Tobacco
- Todd Clem
- Token
- Tom Taylor
- Top 50 Women's List
- Top Insurance Cases
- Top Insurance Ruling
- Tort Reform
- Tourism
- Toxic Chemicals
- Toxics
- Trade Dress
- Trade Secret
- Trademark
- Trademark Infringement
- Transatlantic
- TransCanada
- Transfer
- Transportation
- Travel Insurance
- Travelers
- Travelers Casualty & Surety
- Travelers Casualty and Surety Company
- Travelers Casualty and Surety Company of America
- Travelers Casualty Insurance Company of America
- Travelers Property Casualty Company of America
- Treasure Island LLC
- Treble Damages
- Trevor Maynard
- Trial Record
- Triconex
- Trigger
- Trigger of Coverage
- Triton
- Trucking Liability
- Turbine
- Twin City Fire Ins. Co.
- Twin City Fire Insurance Company
- Twombly
- U.S Department of Health and Human Services
- U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia
- U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
- U.S. Fire Insurance Co.
- U.S.D.C. Western District of Texas
- Uber
- UK
- Ultimate Net Loss
- Umbrella
- Umbrella Coverage
- Umbrella Insurance
- Umbrella Liability
- Umbrella Policy
- Unavailability Exception
- Unavailability of Insurance
- Under 40 Hotlist
- Underinsured
- Underlying Adjudication
- Underwriters and Lloyd's
- Underwriters at Lloyd's London
- Underwriting
- Underwriting Manual
- Unfair Competition
- Unfair Trade Practices
- Unilateral Settlement
- Uninsurable Loss
- Uninsured Periods
- Uninsured/Underinsured
- Unintended Consequences
- United Church of Marco Island
- United Kingdom
- United Specialty Insurance Company
- United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
- United States Fire Insurance Company
- United Water Services Milwaukee
- Universal Cable Productions LLC
- Universal Manufacturing Corp.
- Universal Photonics Inc.
- Universities
- University of New Hampshire Franklin Pierce Law Center’s Alumni CLE Program
- Unjust Enrichment
- Unmanned Aerial Vehicles
- Unmanned Systems
- Up and Coming Lawyers
- Upper Deck Co.
- Upper-Layer Policies
- UPS
- Uriel A. Mendieta
- US Department of Justice (DOJ)
- US News & World Report
- US Securities and Exchange Commission
- US Supreme Court
- USAA
- USAA Texas Lloyd's Co.
- Utilities
- utility
- Vacate
- Valuation
- Vandalism
- Vendor Service Agreement
- Vendors
- Venmo
- Venue
- Veolia Water Milwaukee
- verdicts
- VEREIT Inc.
- Vermont Supreme Court
- Vertical Exhaustion
- Very Good Touring Inc.
- Vibram
- Viking Pump
- Vineyard
- Violation of Law Exclusion
- Virginia
- Virginia Beach
- Virginia Court of Appeals
- Virginia Lawyer Magazine
- Virginia Lawyers Weekly
- Virus
- Virus Exclusion
- Voluntary Parting
- Voluntary Recall
- Voss
- W. Jeffery Edwards
- Wage and Hour
- Wage and Hour Exclusion
- Wage-And-Hour
- Waiver
- Wall Street Journal
- Walmart
- Walter J. Andrews
- Wanda Kaye Lancaster
- War
- War Exclusion
- Wardlaw Claims Service Inc.
- Warlike
- WARN Act
- Warren Pumps
- Washington
- Washington DC
- Washington DC 2018 Top 100
- Washington Post
- Washington Supreme Court
- Watson Laboratories Inc.
- Watson Pharma Inc.
- Watson Pharmaceuticals Inc.
- Wayne Mutual
- weather-related cancellation
- Weather-Related Losses
- Weatherby-Eisenrich Inc.
- Webinar
- Website Accessibility
- Well Blowout
- West Bend Mutual
- West Bend Mutual Insurance Company
- West Virginia
- Westchester Fire Insurance Co.
- Westchester Fire Insurance Company
- Western Litigation Inc.
- Western Truck Insurance Services Inc.
- Western World Insurance Company
- Westfield Insurance Company
- Westlaw
- Westlaw Journal: Computer and Internet
- Whaling
- Whistleblower
- White Pine Insurance Company
- Wilderness Oaks Cutters LLC;
- Wildfire
- Wildfire Insurance Coverage Series
- Wildfires
- Wiley Rein
- Willful Misconduct Exclusion
- Willfulness
- William P. White Racing Stables
- Willis Re
- Wind Damage
- Windstorm
- Windstorm Insurance
- Wine
- Wing
- Winter Storm Uri
- Wire Transfer
- Wisconsin
- Wisconsin Supreme Court
- Withdraw
- Women in Business Law Awards 2021
- Women's Bar Association
- Women’s Bar Association of DC
- Work Product Doctrine
- Workers' Compensation Insurance
- Workplace
- World Trade Center
- Written Consent and Cooperation
- Wrongful Act
- Wrongful Acts
- Wrongful Death
- Wrongful Employment Practices
- Wuhan
- Xia
- XL Catlin
- XL Insurance America Inc..
- XL Insurance Company Ltd.
- XL Specialty Insurance Co.
- Xytex Tissue Services LLC
- Yahoo
- Yahoo Inc.
- Yahoo!
- Yaniel Abreu
- Yates Memo
- Year In Review
- Young Lawyers Network Leadership Council
- Your Product Exclusion
- Your Work Exclusion
- Zeig
- Zenith Aviation
- Zero Day
- Zeus Battery Products
- Zika
- Zurich
- Zurich America Insurance Company
- Zurich American
- Zurich American Insurance Company
Authors
- Yaniel Abreu
- Veronica P. Adams
- Syed S. Ahmad
- Walter J. Andrews
- Jorge R. Aviles
- Lawrence J. Bracken II
- Olivia G. Bushman
- Lara Degenhart Cassidy
- Casey L. Coffey
- Christopher J. Cunio
- Andrea DeField
- Scott P. DeVries
- Mayme Donohue
- Latosha M. Ellis
- Geoffrey B. Fehling
- Philip M. Guffy
- Jae Lynn Huckaba
- Rachel E. Hudgins
- Yosef Itkin
- Kevin W. Jones
- Andrew S. Koelz
- Charlotte Leszinske
- Michael S. Levine
- Lorelie S. Masters
- Patrick M. McDermott
- Madalyn “Mady” Moore
- Leah B. Nommensen
- Justin F. Paget
- Alex D. Pappas
- Christopher M. Pardo
- Adriana A. Perez
- Matthew J. Revis
- Madison W. Sherrill
- Kevin V. Small
- Cary D. Steklof
- Nicholas D. Stellakis
- Koorosh Talieh
- Javaneh S. Tarter
- Thomas W. Taylor
- Shauna R. Twohig
- Laura Thayer Wagner
- Evan Warshauer
- S. Alice Weeks
- Malcolm C. Weiss
- Alexandrea Haskell Young
- Torrye Zullo