New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Jonathan Isaacson and Brett Scher | September 19, 2022
While some states have given legal malpractice attorneys the green light to disregard workers' compensation liens, New York is not one of them.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Michael A. Sirignano | September 1, 2022
Telemedicine will no doubt continue to play an expanded role in the health care system. Yet both practitioners and insurers should be aware of the potential for abuse of these telemedicine services and the criminal, civil and administrative ramifications.
By Evan H. Krinick | August 19, 2022
The Court divided in all four of its notable insurance decisions this past term—and Judge Wilson dissented in two of them, both on the policyholder side.
By Jane Wester | July 1, 2022
Jason Kurland, a former partner at Rivkin Radler who represented the winners of lottery jackpots, had a professional liability insurance policy through Fireman's Fund Insurance Co.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Alan W. Clark | June 29, 2022
It is readily apparent that proving bad faith against an insurer for failure to settle within the policy limits is very difficult, especially in medical malpractice cases where there are usually opposing experts for each side raising questions about the defendant's liability.
By Jason Grant | June 17, 2022
The Appellate Division, First Department court also allowed the Botanical Garden to proceed with a related breach of the implied covenant of good faith claim against the insurance company.
By Jane Wester | June 9, 2022
The judges revived a case that had been dismissed by an Eastern District of New York judge on the grounds that the plaintiff did not exhaust his administrative remedies. But the 2nd Circuit faulted Hartford Insurance's decision as not final.
By Andrew Denney | June 7, 2022
In recent legislative sessions, proposals like the Grieving Families Act generally never made it past committee for full votes by either chamber.
By Jane Wester | May 27, 2022
Engelmayer found that the merger failed to close because a mortgage company CEO "had developed an acute case of buyer's remorse."
By Angela Turturro | May 23, 2022
In this Special Report: "New York State Finalizes Changes to Insurance Disclosure Law," "While New Biometric Privacy Laws Have Led to Widespread Litigation and Large Settlements, Most Courts Have Held That Insurance Covers These Claims," "An Insurer's Ongoing Battle To Limit Disputable Discovery," "The 'Related Claims' Provision in Insurance Coverage Disputes," "Supply Chain Woes Bring Contingent Business Interruption Recovery—and Its Limitations—Into Sharp Focus" and "Call to Action: Modernizing the 'War Exclusion' for the 21st Century."
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