Insurance coverage law continued to evolve through 2016. As the year draws to a close, we take this opportunity to reflect on the cases and law that made this year memorable and will influence coverage decisions and disputes in 2017.
LITIGATION DEVELOPMENTS
The critical court decisions of 2016 departed from established precedent or forged new ground, interpreted traditional and new policies, and, overall, gave policyholders much to be thankful for as they embark on 2017. Here is our selection of the top cases for 2016.
Most Important Bad Faith Decisions of 2016
- Denial of Coverage Unreasonable, Even Where Coverage was Only “Fairly Debatable.” Home Loan Inv. Co. v. St. Paul Mercury Ins. Co., Case No. 15-1018, 2016 WL 3610054 (10th Cir. July 5, 2016). Click here for Hunton Insurance Recovery Blog Post.
There should be no debate that Home Loan Investment Company v. St. Paul Mercury Insurance Company was one of the most significant “bad faith” decision of the year. After a jury verdict in favor of a policyholder on its breach of contract and statutory bad faith claims, a Colorado federal court rejected an insurer’s motion for judgment as a matter of law (JMOL) on the policyholder’s statutory bad faith claim. The insurer argued that, because coverage was “fairly debatable,” the insurer’s coverage decision could not be, as a matter of law, unreasonable (as required by the statute). On appeal, the Tenth Circuit disagreed and, relying on Colorado appellate authority, held that “fair debatability is not a threshold inquiry that is outcome determinative as a matter of law; it is not necessarily sufficient, standing alone, to defeat a bad faith claim.” The decision, therefore, represents a significant departure from the frequently seen argument by insurers that issues of fact necessarily preclude a finding of bad faith.
- Bad Faith Claim Survives, Despite No Coverage. Travelers Property Casualty Company of America et al. v. Federal Recovery Services et al., Case No. 2:14-cv-00170 (D. Utah Jan. 12, 2016). Click here for Hunton Insurance Recovery Blog Post.
Not to be outdone by the Tenth Circuit (in Home Loan Investment, discussed above), a federal judge in Utah saw fit to allow a claim for bad faith even in the absence of coverage, thereby dispelling the notion that proof of coverage is a prerequisite to bad faith. The decision is an important reminder that bad faith claims apply to all insurer activities – not just coverage determinations. The coverage dispute occurred when Federal Recovery Services (FRS) sought defense and indemnity for suit brought by a fitness center. The fitness center alleged that FRS intentionally misused customers’ private financial information, which interfered with FRS’s business dealings. The court found no coverage under the Travelers’ “CyberFirst Policy” because the alleged misconduct was willful and malicious – not negligent, as required for coverage. However, the court refused to dismiss FRS’s claim that Travelers acted in bad faith by imposing inappropriate conditions precedent to claim initiation and failing to diligently investigate, fairly evaluate, and promptly communicate with FRS. The decision is a reminder that bad faith conduct may exist in more than just the carrier’s ultimate claim decision.
Most Important Claims-Made Decision of 2016
- Insurers in New Jersey Not Required to Show Prejudice From Late Notice. Templo Fuente De Vida Corp. v. Nat'l Union Fire Ins. Co. of Pittsburgh, 224 N.J. 189, 129 A.3d 1069 (2016) Click here for Hunton Insurance Recovery Blog Post.
The New Jersey Supreme Court dealt a blow to policyholders in February when it refused to apply the state’s Cooper doctrine to claims-made insurance policies, making late notice potentially fatal when coverage depends on a claim being made during the policy period. The underlying suit arose when a financial group failed to fund a loan for intended purchasers of property, causing the intended sellers to terminate the purchase agreement. The intended purchasers served their complaint against the financial group in February, but the group did not provide notice to its D&O carrier until August (during the policy period, but well after the policy’s requirement that notice be given within 30 days after first receipt of the claim). The insurer denied coverage for late notice, among other reasons – a decision affirmed by the trial court, intermediate appeals court and New Jersey Supreme Court. In doing so, the New Jersey Supreme Court limited application of its decision in Cooper v. Government Employees Insurance Company, 51 N.J. 86 (1968), which requires that insurers prove how late notice under occurrence-based policies caused prejudice to the insurer. Nevertheless, the decision is not an absolute bar in the absence of prejudice: the Court noted that its decision was not “a sweeping statement about the strictness of the as soon as practicable notice requirement in claims made policies generally,” but rather applied only where the policy’s unambiguous requirements of the policy were negotiated between sophisticated business entities.
Most Important Cyber/Crime Decisions of 2016
Pro-Policyholder
- Cyber Loss Covered Where Essential Employee Negligence Was Not Overriding Cause of Bank Loss. State Bank of Bellingham v. BancInsure, Inc., 823 F.3d 456, 460 (8th Cir. 2016). Click here for Hunton Insurance Recovery Blog Post.
In May, the Eighth Circuit gave an important boost to policyholders in State Bank of Bellingham v. BancInsure, Inc., when it rebuffed a common insurer argument – that employee negligence breaks the causal chain between third-party criminal acts and otherwise covered losses. The bank’s insurance claim arose from fraudulent wire transfers achieved by a Trojan horse virus after an employee inadvertently left physical tokens in a bank computer, which were part of the multi-pronged wire transfer approval process. The bank’s insurer denied coverage under a financial institution bond based on employee-caused loss exclusions, a theft of confidential information exclusion, and exclusions for mechanical failure. The Court found the loss covered by the policy, holding that “[e]ven if the employees’ negligent actions ‘played an essential role’ in the loss and those actions created a risk of intrusion into Bellingham's computer system by a malicious and larcenous virus, the intrusion and the ensuing loss of bank funds was not ‘certain’ or ‘inevitable.’ The ‘overriding cause’ of the loss Bellingham suffered remains the criminal activity of a third party.” The holding – that employee negligence did not convert direct loss into indirect loss – came at a critical time for financial institutions, who faced a spike in cyber-attacks in 2016.
- Availability to Public was Sufficient to Trigger Duty to Defend under CGL’s “Electronic Publication” Coverage. The Travelers Indem. Co. of America v. Portal Healthcare Solutions, 644 Fed. Appx. 245 (4th Cir. 2016).
The Fourth Circuit’s decision in Portal Healthcare was one of the more controversial rulings for 2016. The underlying class action alleged that Portal Healthcare failed to protect confidential patient medical records by inadvertently posting those records on the Internet in a manner that could be publicly accessed. Portal Healthcare sought coverage under a provision of its commercial general liability policy that covered “electronic publication of material” in certain circumstances. The dispute between Portal Healthcare and its insurer centered on whether there had been “publication.” In finding that the insurer had a duty to defend Portal Healthcare against the class action, the district court (whose decision was affirmed) emphasized that (1) “‘publication’ does not hinge on the would-be-publisher’s intent”, (2) that “unintentional publication is still publication” and (3) that “publication does not hinge on third-party access.” As Hunton & Williams LLP partner Syed Ahmad explained to Law360, Portal Healthcare was a “critical ruling because this issue of what constitutes a publication comes up in a lot of different kinds of policies that most businesses have, such as [general liability] and specialized policies.” The decision was also an important victory for policyholders who seek coverage for cyber claims under traditional insurance policies.
Pro-Insurer
- No Coverage Where Expectations Did Not Meet Policy Language. P.F. Chang's China Bistro, Inc. v. Federal Ins. Co., No. 2:15-cv-1322 (SMM), 2016 WL 3055111 (D. Ariz. May 31, 2016) (on appeal; pending dismissal following successful mediation on Nov. 22, 2016).. Click here for Hunton Insurance Recovery Blog Post.
Perhaps the worst decision of the year for cyber insurance consumers came from a federal court in Arizona in May 2016. In P.F. Chang's China Bistro, Inc. v. Federal Insurance Company, the court rejected the restaurant giant’s attempt to recover $2 million it paid following a 2013 breach where hackers obtained and posted on the Internet approximately 60,000 credit card numbers belonging to Chang’s customers. At the time of the loss, Chang’s was insured by Federal under a “CyberSecurity by Chubb Policy.” Federal agreed to reimburse Chang’s nearly $1.7 million for claims brought by injured customers and issuers, but refused to reimburse an additional $2 million in fees and PCI-DSS assessments that were passed down to Chang’s by credit card service providers. The court agreed that Federal had no liability for the fees, holding, in part, that a common contract exclusion applied and that Chang’s had no reasonable expectation of coverage. The court reached its holding despite Federal’s aggressive marketing of the policy as “a flexible insurance solution designed by cyber risk experts to address the full breadth of risks associated with doing business in today’s technology-dependent world,” and despite the insurer’s full knowledge of Chang’s critical PCI-DSS exposure. As Hunton & Williams LLP attorneys Michael Levine and Sergio Oehninger explained to Law360, policyholders should expect continued litigation about issues like these, since cyber forms remain mostly untested in court. However, because the meaning of these new policies is still debatable, businesses should not be discouraged from taking the fight to the insurer in the face of a coverage denial.
- No Coverage Where Email Was Not Direct Cause of Loss. Apache Corp. v. Great Am. Ins. Co., No. 15-20499, 2016 WL 6090901 (5th Cir. Oct. 18, 2016). Click here for Hunton Insurance Recovery Blog Post.
In October 2016, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals rendered a surprising reversal that stands to limit coverage for cyber-crime losses under commercial crime policies. The insured, Apache Corporation, sought coverage after an employee inadvertently made authorized payments of legitimate vendor invoices to criminal bank accounts. The criminal scheme started with a fraudulent phone call and was confirmed by a fraudulent e-mail that appeared to be on the vendor’s letterhead, which contained a fake vendor number that Apache Corporation used to confirm the payment. Shortly after the transfer, Apache Corporation learned about the fraud and was able to recover some, but not all, of its losses. It sought to recover the balance from its insurer, which denied coverage. The district court ruled in Apache Corporation’s favor, but the Fifth Circuit reversed, holding that the loss was not a “direct result” of “computer use” as required by the policy. The “computer use” – i.e., the fraudulent email – was merely one part of a larger fraudulent scheme and, thus, incidental to the unauthorized transfer of money. The case – Apache Corporation v. Great American Insurance Company – is illustrative of the significant gaps that still exits for cyber and other technology-related losses and the need for targeted negotiation for specific coverage at the application stage.
Most Important Excess Decisions of 2016
- Excess Policy’s Ambiguity Required Payment of “Limits” Twice. Westchester Surplus Lines Inc. Co. v. Keller Transport Inc., 365 P.3d 465 (Mont. 2016).
Careful attention to detail won the day in Westchester Surplus Lines Inc. Co. v. Keller Transport Inc. when the Montana Supreme Court awarded what the insurer considered to be double excess coverage for losses arising from the same incident. The dispute, here, centered on the meaning of “General Aggregate” in an excess insurance policy. After a tanker truck spill, the primary insurer paid limits on the auto part of its commercial policy, as did the excess carrier (or so it thought). When a later suit triggered and exhausted the general liability (GL) portion of the policy, the policyholder sought excess coverage again, making the argument that the policy was ambiguous and, thus, should be interpreted in favor of coverage because it was not clear whether “General Aggregate” (undefined in the excess policy) was intended to be the maximum liability for the entire policy, or with respect to each coverage part (auto and GL). The Court agreed and ordered payment of excess coverage for the GL claims. The decision decimated insurer expectation about excess limits and underscored why it is important to never assume policy meaning based on past experience.
- All Sums Interpretation Causes Duty to Pay Defense Costs Above Limits. In re Viking Pump, Inc., 27 N.Y.3d 244, 52 N.E.3d 1144 (2016) (unanimous), opinion after certified question answered, No. 518, 2014, 2016 WL 4771312 (Del. Sept. 12, 2016) (excess insurers had duty to defend pump manufacturers and to pay defense costs in addition to policy limits, but were not responsible for expenses above policy limits). Click here for Hunton Insurance Recovery Blog Post.
Responding to certified questions from the Delaware Supreme Court, the New York Court Appeals unanimously held that the “all sums” allocation method, under which each of an insured’s policies can be liable for an entire loss, applied to this asbestos injury coverage dispute where the relevant policies contained “noncumulation” and “prior insurance” provisions; the court expressly rejected the pro rata approach advocated by the carriers. The court also held that vertical, not horizontal, exhaustion was appropriate, even where all triggered primary policies have not be drained. As Hunton & Williams partner Syed Ahmad explained to Law360, the decision is a boon to policyholders: “Under all-sums, policyholders can seek to recover all amounts owed from one insurer, which will make things much easier for them to recover for a particular loss, . . . [and] [v]ertical exhaustion provides additional pathways to recovery. Instead of requiring the policyholder to exhaust all primary coverage first, they can select particular policies and go up vertically.”
Most Important First Party Property Decision of 2016
- Covered Cause + Not Covered Cause = Coverage. Sebo v. American Home Assurance Co., Inc., Case No. SC14-897, 2016 WL 7013859 (Fla. Dec. 1, 2016). Click here for Hunton Insurance Recovery Blog Post.
The Florida Supreme Court’s decision in Sebo v. American Home Assurance Company, Inc. dealt a victory to the state’s policyholders by resolving –in part – a common Hurricane Alley struggle over what causation theory applies where multiple covered/not covered causes are at play (like wind, water, or workmanship). The debate is between the efficient proximate cause theory (which affords coverage if a covered cause sets other causes in motion) or concurrent cause theory (which affords coverage if the perils combine to cause the loss, neither peril alone could have done so, and at least one peril is covered). In this case, the Court held that, where there was no reasonable way to distinguish the proximate cause of loss between rain (a covered cause) and construction defect (not covered), the concurrent causation doctrine afforded coverage under an all-risk insurance policy. Although the decision may be limited to the all-risk context, the Sebo decision has far-reaching implications for Florida policyholders as it solidifies the application of the concurrent cause doctrine and supports the general rule that policies are interpreted in favor of finding coverage. The straightforward application of the concurrent cause doctrine also promotes the predictability and judicial efficiency that has been lacking in other jurisdictions. For example, in the areas affected by Hurricane Katrina, cases vary considerably on whether wind or rain was the efficient proximate cause of hurricane damage.
Most Important Product Contamination Decision of 2016
- Potential Product Contamination Is Covered Under Accidental Contamination Policy.Foster Poultry Farms, Inc. v. Certain Underwriters at Lloyd's, London, No. 1:14-953, 2015 WL 5920289 (E.D. Cal. Oct. 9, 2015), amended, 2016 WL 235211 (E.D. Cal. Jan. 20, 2016), bench trial award, 2016 WL 541441 (E.D. Cal. Feb. 11, 2016) (settled April 2016). Click here for Hunton Insurance Recovery Blog Post.
Foster won coverage for its contamination losses back in October 2015, but since the case continued into 2016 (with an award of $2.7 million in damages), it is worth mention again. The case arose from a USDA order to suspend operations due to prevalence of salmonella and cockroaches in Foster’s largest chicken-processing plant. Foster’s insurer denied coverage under its “accidental contamination” and “government recall” forms. In subsequent litigation, the court granted Foster’s motion for summary judgment, finding that Foster’s noncompliance with federal sanitation regulations were “error[s] in production” covered by the policy. The court also held that there need not be absolute certainty of bodily injury; rather, the government standard – where possible contamination was sufficient to warn against public consumption – triggered coverage. Chief among the lessons offered by this decision is the importance of policy phrasing, whether with respect to the nature of the insured event, the danger affecting a consumable product or causation. Policyholders should ensure, therefore, that they understand the implications of the provisions in their policies based on the varying factual scenarios that may present an insurance claim arising out of food contamination.
Most Important Case-Lessons from 2016
- Even Inadvertent Omissions at Application Stage Can Lead to Rescission. H.J. Heinz Company v. Starr Surplus Lines Ins. Co., No. 15-cv-0631 (W.D. Pa. Feb. 1, 2016) (appeal argued before 3d Cir. on Dec. 6, 2016). Click here for Hunton Insurance Recovery Blog Post.
A Pennsylvania federal court imposed a policyholders’ nightmare in February 2016 by ordering rescission of an accidental contamination and government recall insurance policy issued to the H.J. Heinz Company. The case arose after Heinz sought $25 million from its insurer for its business interruption losses after Chinese authorities discovered lead in its baby cereal. Despite a jury verdict in the policyholder’s favor, the court rescinded the policy on the grounds that Heinz made material misrepresentations and omissions regarding its claim history, which Heinz claimed were inadvertent errors by its new Global Insurance Director. Although a jury agreed that Heinz’s errors were unintentional, the court found that even unintentional material misrepresentations were sufficient to void the contract. The decision is an important reminder that an insurance application is not just procedural hurdle to obtaining a policy; the representations made therein may be a later bar to coverage if the policyholder is not careful and thorough when answering questions.
- The Best Defense May Plead You Out of Coverage.Petroterminal de Panama, S.A. v. Houston Cas. Co., No. 15-2941-cv (2d Cir. Sept. 8, 2016). Click here for Hunton Insurance Recovery Blog Post.
Litigators like few things more than winning a case, but sometimes a cracker-jack defense team can plead the client right out of coverage. Such was the case in Petroterminal. In the underlying dispute, Castor Oil sued Panama-based Petroterminal de Panama for losses resulting from an oil spill. Petroterminal tendered the Castor suit under its primary marine liability and excess bumbershoot policies. The insurer agreed to advance defense costs, subject to recoupment in any later coverage action. After Petroterminal successfully defended the lawsuit, the insurer denied coverage and sought to recoup its earlier payments based on Petroterminal’s successful underlying defense (which established that the alleged losses were not due to its negligence, but rather the Panamanian government’s “attachment” of Castor’s oil). On appeal, the Second Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed, holding that the “duty to reimburse” required recoupment where the loss was not covered, as was the case here. However, the apparent dilemma facing Petroterminal – win the case but lose coverage – could have been avoided. For instance, had Petroterminal settled the Castor litigation without obtaining a factual finding as to the cause of Castor’s losses, that settlement would have been covered, as would all of Petroterminal’s defense costs – a far-greater victory of sorts. The lesson? Where insurance coverage is at stake, be cognizant of the requirements for coverage and consider those requirements as you determine the optimal strategy for your underlying defense.
LEGISLATIVE, REGULATORY & RULE OF LAW DEVELOPMENTS
2016 also welcomed a handful of regulatory and rule-making developments affecting the insurance policyholders.
Flood Insurance Market Parity and Modernization Act (FIMPMA) Passed U.S. House
FIMPMA amends the Flood Disaster Protection Act of 1973. The bill was unopposed in the U.S. House, with 419 yeas and 14 not voting . Supporters claim the bill would open the flood insurance market to more private insurers by clarifying acceptable policies which, to date, mortgage lenders have by-and-large limited to National Flood Insurance Program policies. The act was referred to the U.S. Senate’s Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs in May, where there has been no subsequent reported action.
New York Moves Forward on Proposed Cyber Security Regulations Affecting Financial Services Companies
On December 19, 2016, the New York State Assembly Standing Committee on Banks heard testimony about a proposed regulation that would require financial services companies to develop and implement cybersecurity programs to defend against cyber-attacks. This would be the first regulation of its kind in the United States. Financial services companies remain concerned that the proposed legislation does not account for cost and burden to small- and mid-sized firms, trickle-down effects on consumers, or the diversity of risk facing the market.
New Jersey Sends Ride-Hailing Bill to Governor Christie’s Desk
On December 19, 2016, the New Jersey state legislature passed, by overwhelming majority, a measure that set minimum insurance requirements, among other constraints, for ride-hailing businesses like Uber and Lyft. Minimum limits include at least $1.5 million in insurance coverage for death, bodily injury and property damage occurring during a hired ride.
Pending Restatement of the Law of Liability Insurance
In May, the American Law Institute (ALI) approved the first three Chapters of the forthcoming Restatement of the Law of Liability Insurance. (Final chapters will be voted on in May 2017). ALI Restatements are typically highly regarded by judges, meaning that this new restatement may prove to be a critical resource for courts in coverage disputes. Key provisions of the draft include:
- Improved standard for the duty to cooperate, by clarifying that a breach of the duty to cooperate will bar coverage “only if the insurer demonstrates that the failure caused or will cause prejudice to the insurer.” Thus, the draft rejects the minority rule that a breach of the duty to cooperate allows the insurer to avoid its obligations, regardless of whether the breach prejudiced the insurer. Click here for Hunton Insurance Recovery Blog Post.
- Adoption of the “complaint-allegation” rule, which determines the insurer’s duty to defend based on the allegations of the complaint alone, subject to limited exceptions.
- Favored reservation of rights letters over outright denial of the duty to defend. Click here for Hunton Insurance Recovery Blog Post
- Prevention of insurer control over the defense or settlement of an action if the insurer breaches the duty to defend. Click here for Hunton Insurance Recovery Blog Post
- Elimination of the right to contest coverage if the insurer lacks a reasonable basis for its failure to defend. Click here for Hunton Insurance Recovery Blog Post
- “Clearer” standard for “reasonable insurer,” including duty to make “reasonable settlement decision[s]” through investigation, negotiation, and pursuit of informed advice about exposure and risk.
- Adoption of the majority rule that an insurance policy term is interpreted according to its plain meaning, but with a policyholder-favored exception where “extrinsic evidence shows that a reasonable person in the policyholder’s position would give the term a different meaning”.
Until next year, Cheers!
- Partner
Mike is a Legal 500 and Chambers USA-ranked lawyer with more than 25 years of experience litigating insurance disputes and advising clients on insurance coverage matters.
Mike Levine is a partner in the firm’s Washington, DC ...
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- 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