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Paddling Down Esopus Creek Image

Paddling Down Esopus Creek

Jonathan Friedland & Mazen Asbahi

An end-of-year (Nov. 29) Delaware Chancery Court decision, <i>Esopus Creek Value LP v. Hauf</i>, is receiving a great deal of attention from corporate transactional and corporate restructuring attorneys alike. In Esopus, the Delaware Chancery Court prevented a financially sound company that was prohibited by federal securities law from holding a shareholder vote, because it failed to meet its reporting requirements, from executing an agreement outside of bankruptcy to sell substantially all of its assets under Section 363 of the Bankruptcy Code without first obtaining common stockholder approval as required under Section 271(a) of the Delaware General Company Law ('DGCL').

Features

Case Briefs Image

Case Briefs

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

Highlights of the latest insurance cases from around the country.

Features

PA Supreme Court Rules on Assignments Image

PA Supreme Court Rules on Assignments

Roberta D. Anderson

Policyholders frequently seek to decrease liability to underlying claimants by assigning their insurance policy rights to the claimants. Typically, a policyholder will assign its rights under its liability policy to the underlying claimant in exchange for a covenant not to execute on any judgment against the policyholder. Under the assignment, the underlying claimant receives the same rights that the policyholder had against its insurer. This strategy may be particularly attractive to the policyholder if an insurer has denied coverage or reserved its right to deny coverage ' thus leaving the policyholder faced with a potentially uninsured exposure. While policyholders have successfully used this strategy to protect themselves from uninsured exposures, it is not free from complication. This article briefly discusses some of the significant issues to be considered, a number of which recently were addressed by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court in <i>Egger v. Gulf Ins. Co.</i>, 903 A.2d 1219 (Pa. 2006).

Features

Property Insurance Policies: Be Vigilant: Courts Do Enforce One-Year Contractual Limitations Provisions Image

Property Insurance Policies: Be Vigilant: Courts Do Enforce One-Year Contractual Limitations Provisions

Andrew M. Reidy & Wara Serry-Kamal

Many property insurance policies contain or incorporate one-year statute of limitations provisions. Such provisions typically provide that 'a claim or suit brought pursuant to the policy must be brought within 12 months of the date on which the direct physical loss or damage occurred.' These contractual limitations provisions may adversely impact the ability of a policyholder to obtain a recovery for a loss. Depending on the type of loss suffered, 12 months may be an insufficient period of time to investigate the loss and to resolve any coverage issues that might arise. In the case of a sizeable loss, it is not unusual for the insurer's appraisers and/or experts to take many months to investigate and/or to make a coverage determination. As such, unless a policyholder is vigilant about resolving the claim within 12 months or tolling the limitations period, the policyholder may face an argument that the claim is barred by the statute of limitations.

Features

Reviewing Jury Verdicts in Two Mega-Insurance Cases: The Second Circuit Decisions in Swiss Re and Olin Image

Reviewing Jury Verdicts in Two Mega-Insurance Cases: The Second Circuit Decisions in Swiss Re and Olin

Lynn K. Neuner & Benjamin D. Bleiberg

In the fall of 2006, the Second Circuit ruled on appeals from the jury trials in two huge insurance cases: <i>SR International Business Insurance Co., Ltd. v. World Trade Center Properties, LLC</i>, 467 F.3d 107 (2d Cir. 2006) ('<i>Swiss Re</i>'), and <i>Olin Corp. v. Certain Underwriters at Lloyd's London</i>, 468 F.3d 120 (2d Cir. 2006). Both cases went to a jury verdict in 2005 against fairly overwhelming odds. Commentators have widely observed that jury trials are a disappearing breed. In 2002, only 1.8% of civil cases in federal courts and only 0.6% of civil cases in state courts went to jury trial. <i>See</i> Marc Galanter, The Vanishing Trial: An Examination of Trials and Related Matters in Federal and State Courts, <i>J. Empirical Legal Stud.</i> 1 (3), 459-570 (2004); Brian J. Ostrom, et al., Examining Trial Trends in State Courts: 1976'2002, <i>J. Empirical Legal Stud.</i> 1 (3), 755-782 (2004). Moreover, both cases define high stakes, mega-insurance litigation: complex fact patterns, major corporate policyholders and insurers, billions of dollars in insurance coverage, and disputes closely watched by the press and public. Given this context, it is fairly extraordinary that the parties in <i>Swiss Re</i> and <i>Olin</i> let a jury of 'peers' determine the outcome of their disputes. The trial proceedings and appellate review in these cases are worthy of study for insurance litigators hoping or planning for a jury trial of their own.

Features

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Drug & Device News

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

The latest happenings in this important area.

Features

Licensees May Challenge a Patent Without Breaching License: The Supreme Court's Decision in MedImmune, Inc. v. Genentech, Inc. Image

Licensees May Challenge a Patent Without Breaching License: The Supreme Court's Decision in MedImmune, Inc. v. Genentech, Inc.

Benjamin Hershkowitz & Scott Kolassa

'We hold that petitioner was not required, insofar as Article III is concerned, to break or terminate its 1997 license agreement before seeking a declaratory judgment in federal court that the underlying patent is invalid, unenforceable, or not infringed.'With this language, the U.S. Supreme Court concluded its 8-1 landmark decision in <i>MedImmune, Inc. v. Genentech, Inc.</i>, reversing the holding of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit ('Federal Circuit'). This decision has potentially wide-ranging ramifications for patent licensing.

Features

Supreme Court Revisits Test for Deciding Obviousness Image

Supreme Court Revisits Test for Deciding Obviousness

Elizabeth Rader & Thomas Goldstein

The U.S. Supreme Court has recently shown an interest in intellectual property in general and patents in particular. Most prominent among the recent cases is <i>KSR International Co. v. Teleflex Inc.</i>, which presents perhaps the most difficult question in substantive patent law: When is the subject of a patent application a true 'invention' ' that is, something that promotes the progress of a useful art sufficient to warrant giving the applicant exclusive rights to the technology claimed for the next 20 years. Conversely, when is the invention 'obvious' ' merely taking a step that anyone of ordinary skill would take, confronted with the same problem and possessing all the knowledge already known to the field?

Features

<b>Litigation:</b> Paternity and Child Support Image

<b>Litigation:</b> Paternity and Child Support

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

Putative father could obtain relief under state statute that granted a substantive, not procedural, right to address potential injustice. <i>The State Ex rel. Loyd, v. Lovelady</i>, 108 Ohio St.3d 86 (Ohio 2006).

Features

Survey Data: What They Tell Us; What They Don't Image

Survey Data: What They Tell Us; What They Don't

David A. Martindale, & James N. Bow

We can think of no form of information that cannot be misused ' either deliberately by the manipulative, or inadvertently by the inept. Survey data are no exception. As psychologists, it is with some reluctance that we offer commentary on the relative merits of different standards for the admissibility of expert testimony, but our experiences in different states have heightened our awareness of how different standards affect the admissibility of testimony offered by psychologists in child custody litigation.

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