In a significant victory for plaintiffs, a federal judge has ruled that a negligence standard applies in 'excess verdict bad faith' suits against insurance companies whose refusal to settle a claim results in a verdict in excess of the policy limits.
- October 02, 2003Shannon P. Duffy
Over the last 2 years, there has been an explosion in lawsuits by owners of residential and commercial properties seeking compensation for the cost of remediating mold-related damage. Mold has become the new 'tort du jour' in the construction industry. With the rise in mold claims, homeowners and owners of commercial property have scurried to review their first-party property insurance policies to determine whether they are insured for such damage.
October 02, 2003Stephen R. MysliwiecHighlights of the latest insurance cases from around the country.
October 02, 2003ALM Staff | Law Journal Newsletters |Can an insured's resident spouse be precluded from receiving no-fault coverage if the insured has commited fraud? On January 29, 2003, the New Jersey Supreme Court decided the case of Palisades Safety & Insurance Association v. Leonel Bastien and Paule Bastien, 814 A.2d 619 (2003) and decided for the first time 'whether an insured's resident spouse is precluded from receiving no-fault coverage when the insured lies to the insurer about his marital status and represents that there were no other persons of driving age residing in his household.' Id. at 620. The court affirmed a prior decision by the Appellate Division of the New Jersey Superior Court.
October 02, 2003Thomas L. MulvihillEven one relatively simple single-plaintiff employment discrimination lawsuit may result in substantial losses, which can be devastating for small- to mid-sized employers, particularly if punitive damages are awarded. And the legal expenses of defending such a lawsuit, even if successful, may be just as costly as losing the court battle. Moreover, the number of discrimination cases remains on the rise ' sexual harassment charges alone jumped nearly 50% from 1992 to 2001.
October 02, 2003Steven T. Catlett and Michael J. GrayInsurance carriers are routinely presented with claims for insurance benefits that contain elements of fraud. As a practical matter, fraudulent claims may be classified in three categories: fraud at the inception of the policy; fraudulent enhancement of an otherwise valid claim; and the staged loss. The elements of these types of claims often overlap, and the successful defense of a fraudulent claim for insurance benefits is based on a thorough understanding of the insurance policy and a complete analysis of the claim. Due to the scope of the subject matter, this topic will be addressed in a monthly series of articles. Each will focus on a different part of the investigation process. This first article begins with an overview of the investigative process.
October 02, 2003Anthony J. Golowski IIVeriSign Inc., the leading provider of infrastructure services for the Internet and charged with managing the .com and .net Internet name registries, recently suspended its Site Finder service because the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), which oversees the Internet's domain-naming system, ordered it to shut down the service.
October 01, 2003Samuel Fineman, EsquireThere are a variety of new and newly discovered Web sites of interest to legal professionals. Here are a few that are worth a look. Decisions in domain-name…
October 01, 2003Robert J. AmbrogiA former employee floods his employer's servers with e-mail criticizing the company and urging some 35,000 employees to quit. The company alleges significant…
October 01, 2003Adam I. Cohen and Gina Dombosch

