By Jane Wester | September 1, 2023
The insurer says that sellers of untraceable guns are not entitled to copverage or a defense under their policies.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Michael A. Sirignano | August 31, 2023
In his Insurance Law column, Michael Sirignano discusses how those who commit no-fault automobile insurance fraud using illegally owned and controlled medical corporations no longer have to be concerned solely about potential civil liability—they also should fear criminal prosecution.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Evan H. Krinick | August 21, 2023
During this past term, the Court of Appeals decided a number of important insurance law questions and cases involving insurance carriers that established precedents for insurers and for other parties. The opinions of the court in the four cases discussed here were written by different judges.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By David M. Barshay and Steven J. Neuwirth | August 9, 2023
An insurer may require a no-fault claimant (either the individual injured person or his/her assignee medical provider) to appear for an examination under oath (EUO) 11 NYCRR 65-3.5. If a claimant fails to appear for two scheduled EUOs, the insurer may deny the claim, provided it is raised in a timely denial of claim form.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Michael A. Sirignano | July 6, 2023
Personal injury attorney George Constantine and orthopedic surgeon Andrew Dowd were convicted by a Manhattan federal jury late last year for knowingly profiting from a massive $31 million trip-and-fall accident scheme.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Howard B. Epstein and Theodore A. Keyes | June 28, 2023
In Amerisure v. Selective, the Second Circuit held that the subcontract terms governed the additional insured question while the other insurance clauses in the insurance policies governed the priority dispute.
By Brian Lee | June 21, 2023
A measure to ease insurance claims for serious personal injury was OK'd over the objections of those who said it would creat a "fourth bite at the apple."
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Jeffrey G. Steinberg | May 30, 2023
A discussion of insurance coverage for architects and engineers, specifically, the extent to which common gaps in their professional liability policies may be filled in some instances by their general liability policies.
By Brian Wanat | May 24, 2023
Recent, big-name Chapter 11 filings have brought to the light the importance of insurance solutions for companies in financial distress, as companies in this situation face oftentimes new and uncharted issues.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Jillian Raines and David J. Matulewicz-Crowley | May 22, 2023
While Insurers routinely contend that this prohibition applies equally to policyholders in discovery disputes, a recent decision by Judge Jesse Furman in the Southern District of New York clarifies that this limitation on the scope of work product "applies to insurers ... and not to insureds."
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