0 results for 'Travelers'
Family Sues Airbnb Over Baby's Fentanyl Overdose
"Somebody is going to be held accountable for this little baby's death," attorney Thomas Scolaro said.Lawyer Tackles Airbnb Over Baby's Overdose, but is there a Hurdle?
"Somebody is going to be held accountable for this little baby's death," Miami-based attorney Thomas Scolaro said.Couple Sues Travelers Over Tropical Storm Zeta Property Damage Claims
This suit was surfaced by Law.com Radar. Read the complaint here.Who Got the Work: Fabian VanCott Tapped to Defend Aetna Life Insurance in ERISA Suit
Aetna Life Insurance Co. and AGS LLC Employee Welfare Benefit Plan have tapped lawyer Matthew Brahana of Fabian VanCott as defense counsel in a pending ERISA lawsuit.Cosmopolitan Shipping Co. v. Cont'l Ins. Co.
The judges of the Second Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed a district court decision that though the existence of a missing policy was proven, it did not mean the missing policy afforded coverage for an underlying settlement.View more book results for the query "Travelers"
Partington Builders, LLC v. Nautilus Ins. Co.
A federal judge in Massachusetts has ruled that Nautilus Insurance Company has a duty to defend based on the possibility that the policyholder had accidentally removed trees and dirt from a property without permission.Index to Verbal Threshold Opinions
Since 1988, there have been over 120 published cases that deal with some aspect of the verbal threshold. These cases are listed here in chronological order by subject matter.Regan Heating & Air Conditioning v. Arbella Prot. Ins. Co.
The Supreme Court of Rhode Island faced the question of whether the definition of "pollutant" in a CGL policy was ambiguous.Another Claim Bites the Dust in COVID-Related Business Litigation
"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.Victory for Insurance Companies in Claims Cases Over COVID-Related Business Interruption
"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.Trending Stories
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