White Paper
Legal System Abuse Has Costs for Businesses and Individuals Alike. Why Reform Matters
White Paper Summary
In the past few years, insurers and their insureds have been forced to navigate increasing legal costs, which have been driven by the collision of economic inflation and abuse of the legal system.
Consider just two lines of business for a moment. In commercial and personal auto liability combined, there has been an increase from $96 billion to $105 billion in claim payouts in the years between 2013 and 2022, an Insurance Information Institute report notes. Moreover, product liability, bodily injury liability and other forms of liability insurance have seen significant increases as well.
Early on, industry experts attributed these increases in claim payouts to so-called legal system abuse — a phenomenon where jurors are delivering increasingly high verdicts because of certain abusive tactics used by plaintiff attorneys and mistrust of corporations. Now, add in economic inflation, and claim costs have skyrocketed.
“The combination of legal system abuse and monetary inflation has led to a spiral of plaintiffs and their attorneys seeking larger and larger jury awards with a lack of favorable settlements taking place,” said Josh Hackett, head of casualty, Munich Reinsurance America, Inc. (“Munich Re US”). “It has grown into a very lucrative venture for some less than scrupulous actors.”
Insureds and their carriers need to understand the factors driving legal system abuse in order to effectively combat them. Seasoned adjusters who are aware of the latest judicial trends can help.
Ultimately, legal reforms are needed in order to reduce legal system abuse, but it will take time to educate individuals and legislators about the costs plaintiff attorneys abusing the legal system are putting on everyone. Reinsurers play a key role in educating clients and brokers about the risks of legal system abuse and the need for reform.
“The prevalence of the awards, and the ubiquity of them is obviously highly concerning,” Hackett said. “I think reform is really going to be the key source of remedy here.
To learn more about Munich Re, please visit their website.