Telecommunications equipment and services provider Call One allegedly failed to collect and remit certain excise taxes and infrastructure maintenance fees owed by its customers, resulting in an investigation. Its insurer refused to cover defense.
Insurance regulators are important partners as insurers transform how they work with consumers to move beyond detect and repair and promote Predict & Prevent.
Major biometric damages claims are here to stay, and companies using biometric-based tech must watch out for new exclusions in their liability coverage.
Decades after this worker’s injury, he is prescribed medical marijuana for pain management. But when the employer denies reimbursement, the conversation of coverage is brought into court.
Poorly misjudged inflation rates led people invested in the CalPERS long-term care insurance to pay extremely high rate hikes. The group took the pension plan company to court.
A Georgia officer’s gender-affirming surgery is denied coverage by her employer’s health insurance. The legal battle continues at the federal level in court.
When this injured worker self-weaned off opioids as a pain management medication, he turned to medical marijuana. The court had to decide who was responsible for payments.
Plaintiffs’ attorneys are using a variety of tactics to inflate medical malpractice verdicts in excess of policy limits, but there are ways defense teams can prepare to respond.
After a Maine hotel was found to not comply with ADA regulations, a case that began in a district court has found itself at the feet of the Supreme Court.
When third parties invest large sums in a lawsuit in exchange for a portion of the eventual settlement, it can affect the legal process — and the E&S market — in more ways than one.