Don’t forget you can visit MyAlerts to manage your alerts at any time.
Copyright © 2024 ALM Global, LLC. All Rights Reserved.
Get alerted any time new stories match your search criteria. Create an alert to follow a developing story, keep current on a competitor, or monitor industry news.
Thank You!
Don’t forget you can visit MyAlerts to manage your alerts at any time.
judge:"Steven Andrews"
court:Florida
topic:"Civil Appeals"
practicearea:Lobbying
"Steven Andrews" AND Litigation
"Steven Andrews" OR "Roger Dalton"
Litigation NOT "Roger Dalton"
"Steven Andrews" AND Litigation NOT Florida
(Florida OR Georgia) judge:"Steven Andrews"
((Florida AND Georgia) OR Texas) topic:"Civil Appeals"
87 total results Advanced Search Filter This Search
Your Alert Has Been Created. You will receive email alerts daily. Edit Preferences
Commercial General Liability
Content Type
Workers Compensation and Employers Liability
In a 600 page complaint, the insurers are seeking a declaration that they are not obligated to defend or indemnify McKesson Corporation against lawsuits seeking to hold McKesson liable for its role in the opioids epidemic under insurance policies issued by AIG to McKesson.
Additional Insured Coverage and Contractual Assumption of Liability By Don Malecki From the August 2014 issue of Claims Magazine When it…
The Nebraska Supreme Court says a NE county might be able to recoup costs to cover part of a $28 million judgment for the Beatrice Six wrongful convictions.
A Potentially Responsible Party Letter Triggers the Duty to Defend.
The Mississippi Supreme Court has found the pollution exclusion to be ambiguous because it was found to be susceptible to more than one reasonable interpretation.
Court opinion on whether the additional insured is covered for its own negligent acts or has coverage for vicarious liability.
After 31 years of litigation, the California Supreme Court has finally issued what has been deemed another groundbreaking ruling.
The 10th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals recently affirmed the ruling of the lower court and held that an insurer can recover an underlying settlement that it made on behalf of its insured as fraud damages, effectively avoiding a bad faith claim.
Serial commas can still carry legal significance, as is shown in this case where the court read the exclusion with serial commas, resulting in the preclusion of the insured from defense for a suit arising from an injury caused by a giant inflatable beach ball.
The courts thus far have disagreed.