Coverage & Claims
The United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan granted summary judgment to an excess insurer and held that the excess policy would not be triggered until the underlying limits were exhausted by actual payment from the primary carrier.
Sixth Circuit Permits Excess Carriers to Sue Primary Carriers For Excess Verdicts
By Troutman Pepper Locke on
Posted in Coverage & Claims, United States
The Sixth Circuit has held that, under Kentucky law, an excess carrier can recover against a primary carrier for alleged bad faith failure to settle within the primary limits leading to an excess verdict.
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California Supreme Court Finds Reinsurance Information Outside the Scope of Discovery Rules
By Troutman Pepper Locke on
Recently, the California Supreme Court held that the alleged victims of child abuse by certain priests in the Catholic Church will not have access to the reinsurance information of the defendant Church’s nonparty liability insurers in the course of discovery.
Fifth Circuit Affirms District Court’s Decision in Leonard v. Nationwide and Enforces ACC Clause
By Troutman Pepper Locke on
As discussed here, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals recently heard oral argument on the appeal in the Katrina case of Leonard v. Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company. Last week, the Fifth Circuit affirmed the August 2006 holding of the district court, and held that most of the damage to the Leonards’ property was not the result of covered wind damage, but the Fifth Circuit disagreed with much of the district court’s rationale.
Louisiana State Appellate Court Tackles Valued Policy Law
By Troutman Pepper Locke on
A Louisiana state appellate court was recently faced with the question of the applicability of Louisiana’s Valued Policy Law in a Katrina-related case, in the case of Landry v. Louisiana Citizens Property Insurance Company, and the Louisiana state court followed the holding of the Fifth Circuit’s decision in Chauvin v. State Farm Fire & Casualty Co. In so holding, the state appellate court ruled that insureds who suffered a total loss from a hurricane are not entitled to recover the full amount of their loss if the loss was due to both covered and non-covered perils.
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Federal District Court Asks Washington Supreme Court to Clarify Availability of Bad Faith Claims
By Troutman Pepper Locke on
Earlier this summer, a federal district court in Washington certified questions to the Supreme Court of Washington concerning whether an insured can maintain a procedural bad faith claim despite the fact that coverage was properly denied. The case, entitled St. Paul Fire and Marine Ins. Co. v. Onvia, Inc., Docket No. C06-1056RSL (W.D. Wash.)(see here), involved a claim based on a class action involving the insured’s practice of distributing advertisements via fax.
Investigation of Police Handling of Duke Lacrosse Case Temporarily Suspended at Request of City’s Insurer
By Troutman Pepper Locke on
Posted in Coverage & Claims, United States
A special committee investigating the Durham, North Carolina Police Department’s handling of the Duke lacrosse rape case has halted its investigation after the city’s liability insurer warned that the committee’s findings could provide material for civil lawsuits and requested that the investigation cease.
Storm Surge is Not Excluded by an Excess Policies Flood Exclusion According to a Federal Court in California
By Troutman Pepper Locke on
Earlier this month, a federal district court in California granted an insured’s motion for partial summary judgment in a Katrina-related coverage case, holding that flood damage arising out of storm surge is not excluded under the policy’s flood exclusion.
Rating Agency Says that Property and Casualty Insurers Face “Minimal” Subprime Lending Exposure
U.S. property and casualty insurers face only “minimal” exposure to risks associated with the subprime lending crisis, according to a recent report by credit rating agency Fitch Ratings.
Alabama Jury Hears State’s First Wind Versus Water Trial
By Troutman Pepper Locke on
Mississippi and Louisiana are not the only states to be affected by Hurricane Katrina and last week, an Alabama jury heard its first Katrina-related wind versus water insurance case.
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