0 results for 'Travelers'
Travelers Auto Plans Targeted in Class Action
This suit was surfaced by Law.com Radar. Read the document here.'They Have the Audacity to Blame Jurors': Do 'Bad' Lawyers Lead to Nuclear Verdicts?
"Jurors award a lot of money when there are significant injuries, usually permanent, combined with defendants, their lawyers, and their insurance companies taking unreasonable positions," said Atlanta plaintiff attorney Mike Rafi.Franks v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.
The policyholders claimed they should have been offered another opportunity to waive stacking for UM/UIM coverage when they removed a vehicle from their auto policy.John Moriarty & Associates, Inc. v. Zurich American Insurance Co.
The Appeals Court of Massachusetts reversed the dismissal of claims against an insurance company after it admitted it had a duty to defend its insured in an underlying matter but refused to do so, remanding its insured's allegations of breach of contract and unfair or deceptive practices.Insurance Coverage Q&A: Hidden Wear and Tear
How does the age of a structure affect a denial of coverage for "wear and tear"?Gov. Lamont Announces 20 Superior Court Nominations
The governor announced 20 nominations to the Superior Court, along with two nominees for family support magistrates.Prior or Pending Litigation Exclusion Bars Coverage for Natural Resource Damages Claim
In the case of prior or pending litigation exclusions, the policyholder-insurer dispute is typically over whether a later filed claim arises out of the same subject matter or alleged activities as a prior or pending litigation.Judicial Ethics Opinion 22-105
May a full-time judge attend an overseas educational trip as the guest of a not-for-profit entity that does not appear in the judge's court?Voltaire: Law School Dropout, Ex-Con, Hero of the Age of Enlightenment, and Pro Bono Counsel
While always serious, Voltaire's writings were poisonous with wit, sarcasm and irony. And the irony of his life was that while he dropped out of law school complaining about "the vast amount of useless rubbish they wanted to lord into my brain," his life was inextricably entwined with the law.Ryan, LLC v. National Union Fire Ins. Co.
A Texas appellate court found the $346,612 paid to Weaver was an unlawful taking by Weaver to the deprivation of Ryan and, thus, there is coverage under the Employee Theft provision of the policy.Download Now
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