By Steven A. Meyerowitz | September 11, 2019
Six crew members claimed they survived by eating rats and insects for nearly a year, a Miami federal judge noted in his order.
By Steven A. Meyerowitz | September 11, 2019
The Fourth District Court of Appeal has rejected an insured's contention that, while she continued to try to persuade her homeowner's insurance company to pay a claim it had closed, the insurer had to remind her that she had one year to sue from the date it initially closed her claim.
By Steven A. Meyerowitz | September 9, 2019
A roofer who fell into a pool of hot tar sought other coverage after a company and a subcontractor went without workers' compensation insurance.
By Xiumei Dong | September 5, 2019
Continuing their growth in the Silicon Beach tech hub, two Silicon Valley firms, Fenwick & West and Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe, have each added a partner to their Santa Monica offices.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Laura Foggan and Rachael Padgett | September 5, 2019
Critics of the restatement of the law, liability insurance (RLLI) published by the American Law Institute (ALI) this June point out that its provisions often deviate from established state rules.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Evan H. Krinick | September 5, 2019
In his Insurance Fraud column, Evan H. Krinick discusses and compares how Florida and New York treat insurance company actions alleging no-fault fraud under their unfair business practices acts—the FDUTPA and GBL §349, respectively.
By Steven A. Meyerowitz | September 3, 2019
The California Supreme Court has ruled that the notice-prejudice rule is a "fundamental public policy" that applies to consent provisions in first party liability insurance policies.
By Steven A. Meyerowitz | September 3, 2019
The judge found an excess insurer was not liable for coverage on a claim filed after a 2017 stabbing at a Kissimmee hotel.
Daily Business Review | Commentary
By Susan C. Odess | August 28, 2019
The prolonged litigation from a property insurance claim involving damage to several apartment buildings caused by Hurricane Frances in 2004 recently yielded a precedent-setting ruling and a certified question to the Florida Supreme Court by the state's Fifth District Court of Appeal.
By P.J. D'Annunzio | August 27, 2019
Relying on the New Jersey Supreme Court's answer to its certified question earlier this year, the Third Circuit has ruled on a dispute between Sun Life and Wells Fargo over a stranger-originated life insurance policy.
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