Severability Clause Given No Effect on Exclusion Applicable to "Any Insured"

On June 23rd, Sara reported on a recent California Supreme Court decision which held that an intentional acts exclusion that applied to the conduct of “an insured” did not apply to negligent supervision claims against a co-insured, reasoning that the severability clause rendered the exclusion ambiguous.  A contrary result obtained in Howard & Norman Baker, Ltd. v American Safety Casualty Insurance Company, 2010 NY Slip Op 06077 (July 13, 2010), in which a New York appellate court gave no effect to the severability clause in the context of an employee exclusion that applied to “any insured.”   In this case, a landlord that qualified as an additional insured under its tenant’s policy sought coverage for claims asserted against it by the tenant’s employee.  The insurer denied coverage because the policy excluded coverage for “bodily injury to . . . [a]n employee of any insured arising from and in the course of . . . [e]mployment by any insured.”  Though short on explanation, the court found no ambiguity in the exclusion despite the severability clause, holding that the “plain meaning of the exclusion . . . was that the Policy did not provide coverage for damages arising out of bodily injury sustained by an employee of any insured in the course of his or her employment,” and that “reference to ‘any insured’ makes it unmistakably clear that the exclusion is not limited to injuries sustained by [tenant’s] employees.”

Oregon District Court Rejects Insurer's Challenge To A Collapse Verdict

In Malbco Holdings, LLC v. Amco Ins. Co., 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 61848 (June 22, 2010), the Oregon District Court denied the insurer’s motion for judgment as a matter of law or, in the alternative, for a new trial, following a $941,268.00 verdict in a first-party collapse case.  The subject policy defined “collapse” as an “abrupt falling down or caving in of a building or any part of a building with the result that the building or part of a building cannot be occupied for its intended purpose,” and also provided several examples of circumstances that did not qualify as a “collapse,” including where a “part of a building is standing … even if it has separated from another part of a building.”

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A Oregon District Court Considers Whether A Dissolved Corporation's Liability Policy Constitutes An Undistributed Asset

The issue of whether a liability policy of a dissolved corporation is an undistributed corporate asset capable of being distributed has not been addressed by Oregon’s state appellate courts. In the recent Oregon District Court opinion, Ironwood Homes, Inc. v. Bowen, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 59933 (D. Or. June 14, 2010), Oregon District Court Judge Anna Brown examined a dissolved corporation’s motion to dismiss claims against it for failure to state a claim based on the plaintiffs’ failure to allege that the dissolved corporation holds any undistributed assets, and thus lacks the capacity to be sued.  The Ironwood court’s opinion is of interest because the court considered the fact that the dissolved corporation’s liability insurer was paying the attorney representing the dissolved corporation as a factor in its denial of the motion.

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Oregon's Court Of Appeals Considers ERISA Definitions For Undefined Policy Terms

In Employers-Shopmens Local 516 Pension Trust and Western States Health and Welfare Trust Fund of the OPEIU v. Travelers Casualty and Surety Company of America and Hartford Fire Insurance Company, 2010 Or. App. LEXIS 653 (Or. Ct. App. June 16, 2010), the Oregon Court of Appeals affirmed a trial court’s grant of defendant insurers’ summary judgment motions.  The central issue of the coverage dispute was the meaning of the term “employee” in both the “Welfare and Pension Plan ERISA Compliance” endorsement to the commercial crime policy that Travelers issued to Local 516 and the materially identical policy that Hartford issued to Western.  The issue before the Court of Appeals was whether the principals of a company that provided investment management services to the plaintiffs were “employees” under the definition contained in the policy’s endorsement.

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Forum Nominated for LexisNexis Top 50 Insurance Law Blogs

As we complete our third year of blogging, we're pleased to report that the National Insurance Law Forum has been selected as a candidate for the LexisNexis Top 50 Insurance Blogs of 2009.  The Top 50 will be selected in mid-July, when Insurance Law Center readers will be asked to vote for the Top Blog of the Year.  The insurance community is invited to comment on and support nominees at the Insurance Law Center site through July 9, 2010.  We look forward to reading your comments, and many more years of blogging.  Thanks for your continued interest and support.