Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Emily Cousins | February 22, 2023
"The trial court found that the plaintiffs satisfied their burden of establishing ... that the false imprisonment arose out of the defendant's business pursuits, and that the business pursuits exclusion bars coverage," the opinion said.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Emily Cousins | February 2, 2023
"We conclude that, just as the properties were not physically altered in any way by the COVID-19 pandemic, the plaintiffs' activities designed to prevent the transmission of the coronavirus on the properties were not 'repairs' in any ordinary sense of the word," the opinion said.
By Colleen Murphy | January 5, 2023
"As an initial matter, whether COVID-19 causes direct physical loss or damage under a property insurance policy is an open question in Colorado," Judge Timothy M. Tymkovich said. "Relying on relevant precedent from Colorado and other jurisdictions, we answer that question in the negative and conclude Sagome was not covered."
By Michael A. Mora | December 30, 2022
"Our strategy is to send a message to other insurance companies that they have an obligation to pay under those statutes," said Steven Adler, a partner at Mandelbaum Barrett.
By Michael A. Mora | September 29, 2022
"Based on our analysis at this point, we project total insured property loses to be in excess of $30 billion," said Mark Friedlander, a spokesman for the Insurance Information Institute.
By Andrew Goudsward | August 31, 2022
M. Evan Corcoran, a partner at the Baltimore firm Silverman Thompson, is representing former President Donald Trump at a time when few respected lawyers will. The representation is fraught with reputational, and even legal, risks.
By Cheryl Miller | May 17, 2022
"If states could enforce laws compelling third parties to subsidize federal crimes, they could directly undermine congressional determinations," U.S. Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar wrote.
By Ellen Bardash | March 14, 2022
Some parties that have litigation claims not related to sexual abuse say they'd be shortchanged by the plan, including the Girl Scouts of America, which claimed the proportion it would receive of damages from its trademark litigation against the Boy Scouts was smaller than that of other litigants'.
By Aleeza Furman | January 21, 2022
Congress' intent in passing the acts implied a private right of action to enforce the reimbursement requirement, a Texas federal judge ruled.
By Avalon Zoppo | October 4, 2021
Lawyers for seafood chain Legal Sea Food faced skepticism in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit during arguments over whether the company's insurer owes money to cover financial losses caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.
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