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Environmental Claims, CGL Policies and Bankruptcy Image

Environmental Claims, CGL Policies and Bankruptcy

Christine A. Picker & Patricia L. Boye-Williams

A Policyholder/Debtor with Comprehensive General Liability ("CGL") insurance has a strategic decision to make: Should the Policyholder/ Debtor protect and preserve its insurance for post-bankruptcy claims, or seek to maximize the insurance proceeds available to satisfy third-party claims? Although the Policyholder/Debtor cannot dictate how its policies are treated during the bankruptcy proceeding, without determining a strategy the Policyholder/Debtor cannot hope to influence the outcome. This article addresses the situation where a Chapter 11 Policyholder/Debtor faces third-party environmental claims. Although this area of law is still developing and varies from one jurisdiction to another, the Policyholder/Debtor should consider certain key issues when determining its strategy for dealing with its CGL insurers.

Features

You Said You'd Pay: The Myth of Pre-Tender Defense Costs Image

You Said You'd Pay: The Myth of Pre-Tender Defense Costs

John N. Ellison & Shruti D. Engstrom

Insurance companies have increasingly seized upon the argument that they are not liable, under occurrence-based general liability insurance policies ("CGL policies"), for defense costs incurred before a policyholder has notified the insurance company of a claim or suit. They contend that policyholders are not entitled to these "pre-tender" defense costs primarily for two reasons. First, insurance companies assume that their duty to defend does not arise until they are provided with notice, and therefore, they have no obligation to pay defense costs incurred prior to that notice. Second, insurance companies categorize pre-tender defense costs as voluntary payments for which they are not responsible since they did not consent to such costs. Based on the commercial purpose of CGL policies, the language in the policies and established case law on notice and prejudice, policyholders can successfully argue that insurance companies are responsible for reimbursement of pre-tender defense costs.

Features

Intentional Waiver of Unintentional Misstatements: Contractual Limitations to Insurance Policy Rescission Image

Intentional Waiver of Unintentional Misstatements: Contractual Limitations to Insurance Policy Rescission

Michael T. Sharkey

Rescission" is a dirty word that no policyholder wants to hear, especially when one considers the law relating to this potential forfeiture of coverage in many locales. While some jurisdictions require that a policyholder's misrepresentation or omission be both material and intentional, others do not require a showing of intent to support rescission — a negligent or unintentional misrepresentation is enough, as long as it is "material." Given the amount of information typically requested by insurance companies when coverage is purchased or renewed, and the potential for an inadvertent error during the process, even the most careful policyholder must then wonder: Could I forfeit all of my coverage?

In The Marketplace Image

In The Marketplace

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

Highlights of the latest equipment leasing news from around the country.

Dangers of Waiver-of-Defense Clauses in Leases Image

Dangers of Waiver-of-Defense Clauses in Leases

Alicia Schehr

A lessee entering into a new lease agreement must be mindful of a waiver-of-defense clause. If a lease agreement contains a waiver-of-defense clause and the lease is later sold or assigned, the purchaser or assignee, if it is a holder in due course, will take the lease free and clear of numerous defenses (including a fraud in the inducement defense) otherwise available to the lessee had the lease not been sold or assigned.

Come 'Hell or High Water,' the Lessee Must Pay: Federal Court Upholds Defense Waiver Image

Come 'Hell or High Water,' the Lessee Must Pay: Federal Court Upholds Defense Waiver

Anthony Michael Sabino

Come hell or high water" has been a motto of movie tough guys since the genre was invented. But as melodramatic as it may sound, it also has application in the world of business as well. Specific to the leasing industry, the phrase connotes a clause or condition of a leasing agreement that mandates the payment of all rent, fees, and costs to the lessor by the lessee, regardless of any intervening circumstances. Put succinctly, a lessee executing a deal with a "hell or high water clause" waives all of its defenses and is indefeasibly bound to pay its due to the lessor.

Managing the Risks of Doing Business in Latin America Image

Managing the Risks of Doing Business in Latin America

Rafael Castillo-Triana

Every business must manage some degree of risk. Venturing into the Latin American marketplace, according to popular perception, is a particularly risky business.

Features

<b><i>Commentary</b></i> The Strange Case Of Justice Breyer Image

<b><i>Commentary</b></i> The Strange Case Of Justice Breyer

James C. Goodale By Samuel B. Fineman

After the U.S. Supreme Court came down with its last decision in June, <i>Ashcroft v. American Civil Liberties Union</i>, PBS Newshour commentator Margaret Warner asked rhetorically: Why in the world was Supreme Court Justice Stephen G. Breyer in the dissent?

Features

Grokster Wins Peer-to-Peer Battle Image

Grokster Wins Peer-to-Peer Battle

Samuel B. Fineman

In what is poised to spark a debate of significant economic impact for the entertainment industry in the United States Supreme Court, a unanimous panel of the Ninth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals recently ruled that Grokster, Ltd. and StreamCast Networks, Inc. ' distributors of the Morpheus program ' will live another day, as they do not infringe film and music copyrights by facilitating file-sharing over the Internet.

Features

Cases of Note Image

Cases of Note

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

Cases of interest to the Internet law community.<br><b>Commercial Web Site Does Not Violate DMCA <br>Texan's Web Site Not Violative of ACPA<br></b>

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