In what seems like the culminating trial court clash in the long-running effort of J.P. Morgan, as successor in interest to Bear Stearns, to try to obtain insurance coverage for amounts Bear Stearns paid to settle charges that it had facilitated market timing and late trading, New York (New York County) Supreme Court Judge Charles E. Ramos, applying New York law, on April 17, 2017 entered a summary judgment order (here) comprehensively rejecting the insurers’ various remaining coverage defenses. While further appellate proceedings in the case seem likely, Judge Ramos’s order makes for interesting reading.
Continue Reading In Long-Running Bear Stearns Dispute, N.Y. Court Rejects Insurers’ Remaining Coverage Defenses
personal profit exclusion
Court Holds Professional Liability Insurance Covers Restitutionary Settlement
On July 3, 2014, in an interesting decision that is sure to stir up much discussion and controversy, District of Minnesota Judge Paul Magnuson, applying Delaware law, held that U.S. Bank was entitled to coverage under its professional liability insurance for restitutionary amounts it paid in settlement of an overdraft fee overcharge class action. The …
D&O Insurance: Guilty Pleas Trigger Coverage Exclusions, Entitle Insurer to Recoupment
In a detailed April 23, 2014 opinion (here), Eastern District of Virginia Judge Liam O’Grady, applying Virginia law, held that the guilty pleas of executives of Protection Strategies, Inc. triggered four separate exclusions in the D&O coverage section of PSI’s management liability policy and that the management liability insurer was entitled to …
D&O Insurance: How Many Different Ways Can Coverage Be Precluded for a Single Case?
Due to the complexity both of the D&O insurance policy and of the kinds of claims that can arise, the question of whether and to what extent a particular claim may be covered is often disputed. Sometimes though a particular claim is simply not covered. That was the case in a recent coverage dispute in…