The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | August 27, 2020
A case that resulted in a twice-vacated $21 million bad-faith verdict has left the Pennsylvania Supreme Court evenly split on whether that award should be reinstated.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Evan H. Krinick | August 26, 2020
In his column on Insurance Fraud, Evan Krinick notes that, as unique as the past term of the New York Court of Appeals was—taking place in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic—there were some important similarities to prior terms.
By Ronald L. Kammer | August 24, 2020
Litigation has already started and courts in Michigan, New York, Texas and Washington, D.C. have already ruled in favor of the insurance industry in four decisions. In stark contrast, only one Missouri court refused to dismiss a similar suit on procedural ground as opposed to the merits.
Daily Business Review | Commentary
By Ronald L. Kammer | August 24, 2020
Litigation has already started and courts in Michigan, New York, Texas and Washington, D.C. have already ruled in favor of the insurance industry in four decisions. In stark contrast, only one Missouri court refused to dismiss a similar suit on procedural ground as opposed to the merits.
By Michael A. Mora | August 21, 2020
The defendants immediately accepted the proposal that was $90,000 less than the intended amount.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Michael H. Sampson | August 21, 2020
As the world becomes more interconnected, cyber attacks unfortunately are becoming more frequent, more sophisticated and more dangerous. So-called "cyber-physical attacks," for instance, pose a unique threat—specifically, the risk of bodily injury (including, but not limited, to death) to third parties.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Eric S. Poe | August 21, 2020
What happens when the public is required by law to buy a product that does not come with transparency? That scenario, unacceptable to most, is happening in the world of car insurance, here in New Jersey—and nationwide.
By David Gialanella | August 20, 2020
"The whole concept of total case cost has really caught on in the last six or seven years," Joseph Fowler of Fowler Hirtzel McNulty & Spaulding said. "It's a sales pitch kind of thing, but it's important, and there's a reason why it's become everyone's sales pitch."
By Katheryn Tucker | August 19, 2020
A Florida lawyer says the plaintiff's bar is "energized" by a federal judge's ruling allowing a lawsuit to go forward against an insurance company for a coronavirus pandemic business interruption claim.
By Katheryn Tucker | August 19, 2020
To borrow a word from a trial lawyer, the plaintiff's bar is "energized" by a Missouri federal judge's ruling allowing a lawsuit to go forward against an insurance company for a coronavirus pandemic business interruption claim.
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