Property

  • October 27, 2025

    Insurer Says Hotel's $4M Trafficking Judgment Not Covered

    A Chubb unit told a Pennsylvania federal court that it has no duty to defend or indemnify a former Ramada Inn franchise operator that was ordered to pay the hotel chain's parent company over $4 million after it settled claims that the hotel profited from human trafficking.

  • October 24, 2025

    USAA Defends Medical Reimbursement Cuts In Coverage Row

    Two USAA units sought to toss two insureds' proposed class action accusing the companies of under-reimbursing their medical providers via claim handling software, telling a Washington federal court "there is no admissible evidence that plaintiffs' treatments were medically necessary and related to their auto accidents."

  • October 24, 2025

    Minn. Court Backs Insurer In Hail Damage Coverage Dispute

    A Hanover Insurance unit has no duty to cover a Minnesota school district for hail damage to the roofs of both its schools, a Minnesota federal court ruled, finding an exclusion barring coverage for "cosmetic damage" applied.

  • October 23, 2025

    Louvre Heist Exposes Coverage Gaps For Art Collections

    The theft of approximately $102 million worth of historic artifacts from the Louvre Museum in Paris provided a stunning example of the risks that major cultural institutions can face and the often limited insurance options available to cover financial losses.

  • October 23, 2025

    Illinois Seeking Transparency With State Farm Suit, Pros Say

    In suing State Farm for homeowners insurance data, the state of Illinois is taking an approach to regulating carriers with transparency in mind that could be replicated elsewhere, but lowering climate-influenced costs will be a challenge, experts said.

  • October 23, 2025

    Deposit Insurance Increase Needs More Analysis, Experts Say

    Deposit insurance coverage could increase for the first time since 2010 due to a bipartisan proposal to expand the limit to $10 million per depositor for certain transaction accounts, but banking and insurance experts say legislators should conduct further cost-benefit analyses to ensure safeguards are in place for high-insured deposits. 

  • October 23, 2025

    State Farm, Auto Shop End Customer Interference Row

    State Farm and a Tesla-approved auto repair shop asked a Maryland federal court Thursday to formally dismiss the repair shop's lawsuit accusing the insurer of defamation and interfering with its business by dissuading its insureds from using its services.

  • October 23, 2025

    Electric Co. Says Contractor Owes $5M For Denver Airport Job

    An electric infrastructure company accused a contractor in Colorado state court Wednesday of withholding over $5 million in payments for work completed in an expansion project at the Denver International Airport.

  • October 23, 2025

    Insurance Litigation Week In Review

    New Jersey's top court agreed to consider the Third Circuit's underinsured motorist coverage questions, the Fifth Circuit revived an oil company's suit seeking coverage for a faulty cement settlement and the Eighth Circuit affirmed that a cleaning equipment manufacturer didn't obtain adequate coverage under its lease with a warehouse owner. Here, Law360 takes a look at the past week's top insurance news.

  • October 22, 2025

    NC Biz Court Bulletin: COVID Coverage, A Suspect Signature

    The North Carolina Business Court has rounded the corner into fall with insurance disputes over COVID-19 coverage at a chain of outlet malls and the theft of over $900,000 in legal THC reportedly stolen from a warehouse in the Southwest.

  • October 21, 2025

    Hertz Fights Colorado Law Labeling It As Insurer In High Court

    Attorneys for the opposing parties in Hertz's Colorado Supreme Court petition contending it should not be considered an insurer under Colorado statute argued for dramatically differing readings of the state's insurance laws during oral argument Tuesday.

  • October 21, 2025

    Nationwide Settles $3.8M Ga. Storm Damage Dispute

    Nationwide Insurance and a Georgia property owner reached a settlement Monday to end claims that the insurer tried to lowball the owner on $3.8 million worth of storm damage with an offer of less than $8,000.

  • October 17, 2025

    8th Circ. Partially Reverses $14.6M Warehouse Damage Award

    An Arkansas federal court correctly determined that a manufacturer of vacuum products breached its lease with a warehouse owner by failing to purchase insurance coverage equal to the warehouse property's "full replacement cost," the Eighth Circuit ruled Friday, though partially reversing the court's nearly $14.6 million damages award.

  • October 17, 2025

    Liberty Mutual Attys Face Sanctions Bid Over Citation Errors

    A St. Louis federal court is weighing whether to sanction Liberty Mutual Personal Insurance Company's lawyers after they submitted a motion containing citation errors and then, after a warning, "somehow" submitted a second motion with the same types of mistakes.

  • October 17, 2025

    Judge Ends $4.6M Goodyear, Michelin Rubber Damage Suit

    A Louisiana federal court officially dismissed a $4.6 million dispute involving Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., Michelin North America Inc. and the companies' insurers over water damage to bales of rubber, saying the parties have fully settled their claims against CEVA Logistics companies and a New Orleans port operator.

  • October 17, 2025

    Broker Not Covered In Fire Policy Dispute, Insurer Says

    An insurance broker accused of mishandling a furniture retailer's insurance procurement, which left the retailer without coverage for a fire, is not entitled to defense or indemnity under its professional liability policy, the broker's insurer told a California federal court.

  • October 16, 2025

    Future Of 'Ambiguous' Defect Exclusion Remains To Be Seen

    The LEG-3 exclusion, a defect exclusion developed by the London Engineering Group, stood largely untested for nearly three decades, but just two years after a Washington, D.C., federal court found the exclusion to be ambiguous, policyholder attorney Angelia Wesch tells Law360 that whether the underwriting group tightens the exclusion's language remains to be seen.

  • October 16, 2025

    Insurers Settle Bid To Arbitrate $7M La. Hurricane Ida Case

    A group of domestic and foreign insurers including underwriters at Lloyd's of London have asked a Louisiana federal judge to dismiss their lawsuit seeking an order to arbitrate a $7 million Hurricane Ida damage claim, saying they have settled the dispute.

  • October 16, 2025

    Travelers Seeks Over $1M In Camera Theft Subrogation Suit

    Travelers is seeking to recoup around $1 million in costs from a shipping logistics company that it says failed to verify to whom it was providing a shipment of cameras, resulting in their theft, according to a complaint filed in California federal court.

  • October 16, 2025

    Chubb Unit Challenges Tech CEO's Claim For Living Expenses

    A Chubb unit urged a California federal court to rule that it needn't pay a software company CEO and his wife millions of dollars for living expenses related to a 2017 water damage claim, saying the couple made misrepresentations regarding the habitability of their Beverly Hills estate.

  • October 16, 2025

    Insurance Litigation Week In Review

    Illinois' insurance regulator demanded that State Farm turn over data over its homeowners insurance business, the Sixth Circuit affirmed class certification in a dispute over State Farm's payments for totaled vehicles, and the Eleventh Circuit ruled that a policyholder's untimely notice doomed coverage for a gas station's underground fuel tank leak. Here, Law360 takes a look at the past week's top insurance news.

  • October 16, 2025

    AIG Unit, Manufacturers Agree To End $7M Subrogation Suit

    An AIG unit and three manufacturing companies have agreed to end a $7 million suit in which the insurer sought to recoup costs connected to a fire at an iron processing plant in Corpus Christi, Texas, according to a motion filed in federal court.

  • October 16, 2025

    Hospital Insurer Seeks Ch. 15 After NY Child Abuse Claims

    Northeast Insurance Co., a captive insurer for several hospitals and a Jewish nonprofit, asked a New York bankruptcy judge for Chapter 15 recognition of its Bermuda liquidation filing, saying it was rendered insolvent by claims stemming from the state's Child Victims Act.

  • October 15, 2025

    States Seek To Revive FEMA's Disaster-Mitigation Funding

    A group of 22 states and the District of Columbia urged a Massachusetts federal court Wednesday to block the Trump administration's termination of a disaster mitigation program under the Federal Emergency Management Agency, arguing such authority lies with Congress.

  • October 14, 2025

    State Farm Must Submit Underwriting Data, Ill. Regulator Says

    Illinois' director of insurance accused State Farm of failing to turn over nationwide data at a zip-code level relating to its homeowners insurance business, telling a state court that the insurance giant has relied on two "legally baseless objections" to avoid its data-sharing obligations.

Expert Analysis

  • 8 Insurer Takeaways From Sweeping Georgia Tort Reform

    Author Photo

    Insurers should take note of several critical components of Georgia's tort litigation overhaul — including limitations on damages anchoring, procedural rules governing dismissals, and liability standards in negligent security cases — and adapt claims-handling strategies to reduce litigation risk, says Lucy Aquino at Cozen O'Connor.

  • 3 Juror Psychology Principles For Expert Witness Testimony

    Author Photo

    Expert witnesses can sometimes fall into traps when trying to teach juries complex topics by failing to consider the psychology of juror comprehension, but attorneys can help witnesses avoid these pitfalls with a deeper understanding of cognitive lag, chunking and learning styles, says Steve Wood at Courtroom Sciences.

  • State Farm Rate Hike Portends Intensifying Insurance Crisis

    Author Photo

    The California Department of Insurance's unprecedented emergency approval of a 17% rate increase for State Farm General Insurance, the first interim rate relief granted before completing full actuarial justification, represents a regulatory watershed and establishes precedent that could fundamentally reshape insurers' response to climate-driven market instability, says Daniel Veroff at Merlin Law Group.

  • 3 Corporate Deposition Prep Tips To Counter 'Reptile' Tactics

    Author Photo

    With plaintiffs counsel’s rising use of reptile strategies that seek to activate jurors' survival instincts, corporate deponents face an increased risk of being lulled into providing testimony that undercuts a key defense or sets up the plaintiff's case strategy at trial, making it important to consider factors like cross-examination and timing, say attorneys at Dentons.

  • Statistics Tools Chart A Path For AI Use In Expert Testimony

    Author Photo

    To avoid the fate of numerous expert witnesses whose testimony was recently deemed inadmissible by courts, experts relying on artificial intelligence and machine learning should learn from statistical tools’ road to judicial acceptance, say directors at Secretariat.

  • Calif. Bar Exam Fiasco Shows Why Attys Must Disclose AI Use

    Author Photo

    The recent revelation that a handful of questions from the controversial California bar exam administered in February were drafted using generative artificial intelligence demonstrates the continued importance of disclosure for attorneys who use AI tools, say attorneys at Troutman.

  • In 2nd Place, Va. 'Rocket Docket' Remains Old Reliable

    Author Photo

    The U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia was again one of the fastest civil trial courts in the nation last year, and an interview with the court’s newest judge provides insights into why it continues to soar, says Robert Tata at Hunton.

  • Measuring The Impact Of Attorney Gender On Trial Outcomes

    Author Photo

    Preliminary findings from our recent study on how attorney gender might affect case outcomes support the conclusion that there is little in the way of a clear, universal bias against attorneys of a given gender, say Jill Leibold, Olivia Goodman and Alexa Hiley at IMS Legal Strategies.

  • 2nd Circ. Arb. Ruling May Give Foreign Insurers An Edge

    Author Photo

    The Second Circuit's decision this month in Lloyds of London v. 3131 Veterans Blvd that international arbitration agreements take primacy over state anti-arbitration insurance laws opens a division between domestic and foreign insurers that could affect the surplus lines market, says attorney Rosanne Felicello.

  • Oft-Forgotten Evidence Rule Can Be Powerful Trial Tool

    Author Photo

    Rule 608 may be one of the most overlooked provisions in the Federal Rules of Evidence, but as a transformative tool that allows attorneys to attack a witness's character for truthfulness through opinion or reputation testimony, its potential to reshape a case cannot be overstated, says Marian Braccia at Temple University Beasley School of Law.

  • 30 Years Later: 2nd Circ.'s Road To Arbitral Preemption

    Author Photo

    The Second Circuit's recent decision in Lloyds of London v. 3131 Veterans Blvd. overturns its own 1995 precedent and squares its position with decades of circuit court jurisprudence holding that international arbitration agreements must take primacy over state anti-arbitration insurance laws, say attorneys at Linklaters.

  • What Disparate Impact Order Means For Insurers' AI Use

    Author Photo

    A recent executive order seeking to bar disparate impact theory conveys a meaningful policy shift, but does not alter the legal status of federal antidiscrimination law or enforceability of state laws, such as those holding insurers accountable for using artificial intelligence in a nondiscriminatory matter, say attorneys at Eversheds Sutherland.

  • 4 Ways To Leverage A Jury's Underdog Perceptions

    Author Photo

    Counsel should consider how common factors that speak to their client's size, power, past challenges and alignment with jurors can be presented to try and paint their client as a sympathetic underdog, says Ken Broda-Bahm at Persuasion Strategies.

Can't find the article you're looking for? Click here to search the Insurance Authority Property archive.