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Access over workers' compensation decisions, including En Banc, Significant Panel Decisions, and writ-denied cases.

Case No. ADJ7110663
Regular
May 09, 2016

WILLIAM BO MATTHEWS vs. SAN DIEGO CHARGERS, ZENITH INSURANCE COMPANY, NEW YORK GIANTS, INSURANCE COMPANY OF NORTH AMERICA/ACE USA, DENVER GOLD, THE NORTH RIVER INSURANCE COMPANY

This case involves a petition for reconsideration of an arbitrator's decision regarding workers' compensation liability for a professional football player's cumulative trauma injuries. The Workers' Compensation Appeals Board (WCAB) granted reconsideration and modified the arbitrator's award, finding the applicant sustained two separate cumulative trauma injuries due to distinct periods of employment exposure. Consequently, the WCAB ruled that the petitioner, Insurance Company of North America/ACE USA (ESIS), is not liable for contribution to another insurer, The North River Insurance Company (NRIC), which had mistakenly paid a portion of a settlement. The Board affirmed the finding of two injuries, citing a significant break in employment as creating separate compensable periods, but rescinded the award to NRIC, holding NRIC should recover nothing from ESIS.

WCABPetition for ReconsiderationArbitration DecisionContributionCumulative InjuryProfessional Football PlayerInsurance Company of North America/ACE USAZenith Insurance CompanyThe North River Insurance CompanyLabor Code Section 5500.5
References
9
Case No. MISSING
Regular Panel Decision
Feb 28, 1991

North River Insurance v. United National Insurance

This appellate decision addresses the apportionment of liability between North River Insurance Co. and United National Insurance Company arising from a settlement for an injured employee. The court clarified that North River, as the workers' compensation carrier, is solely responsible for its waived lien, reversing a lower court's finding. It further determined that both insurers' "other insurance" clauses called for pro rata contribution, not equal shares, for the $588,245 settlement payment and defense costs. The court calculated specific shares for each insurer and ruled that North River is entitled to interest from the original payment date in 1982. The Supreme Court's order was thus modified to reflect these findings.

Insurance disputePro rata contributionEquitable apportionmentWorkers' compensation lienDefense costsOther insurance clausesSettlement apportionmentInterest calculationAppellate decisionInsurer liability
References
10
Case No. MISSING
Regular Panel Decision

Insurance Co. of North America v. Norris

This nonjury trial concerns an automobile accident where claimants Gladys M. Norris and her daughter Lisa were injured by a stolen Cadillac owned by Arc Leasing Corp. and insured by American Transit Insurance Company. The core issue was whether American Transit properly disclaimed coverage given its failure to provide written notice. The court, citing Insurance Law § 167(8) and precedent like Zappone v Home Ins. Co., determined that a denial of coverage based on lack of permissive use (due to a stolen vehicle) is akin to a policy exclusion, thus requiring written notice. American Transit's failure to provide such notice, even if claimants had actual knowledge, precluded it from asserting the 'stolen car' defense. Consequently, the petitioner's application for a permanent stay of arbitration was granted, and American Transit was ordered to afford coverage to Arc Leasing within policy limits.

Automobile AccidentInsurance Coverage DisputeDisclaimer of CoverageLack of Permissive UseStolen VehicleUninsured Motorist ClaimDeclaratory Judgment ActionWaiver of DefenseStatutory Notice RequirementPolicy Exclusion Interpretation
References
10
Case No. MISSING
Regular Panel Decision

Maida v. Life Insurance Co. of North America

Plaintiff Anthony Maida sued Life Insurance Company of North America (LINA) after his long-term disability benefits were terminated. Maida initially claimed physical disability due to a fall and later asserted mental disability from post-traumatic stress disorder. The court granted LINA's motion for summary judgment on the physical disability claim, finding LINA's denial was not arbitrary and capricious based on multiple medical reports. Additionally, LINA was awarded $10,155 on its counterclaim for overpaid benefits. However, the court vacated LINA's rejection of the mental disability claim, deeming it arbitrary and capricious due to the lack of proper medical review, and remanded the matter to LINA for reconsideration, while retaining jurisdiction.

Disability BenefitsERISA LitigationSummary JudgmentArbitrary and Capricious ReviewRemand to AdministratorPost-Traumatic Stress DisorderPhysical Injury ClaimMental Health ClaimInsurance Policy DisputeOverpayment Reimbursement
References
19
Case No. MISSING
Regular Panel Decision
Feb 21, 2008

Indemnity Insurance Co. of North America v. St. Paul Mercury Insurance

In this insurance coverage dispute, IICNA, Romano's excess insurer, sought reimbursement from St. Paul (Yonkers' insurer) and Yonkers (general contractor) for a $2 million payment made to settle an underlying personal injury suit involving Eugene Flood. Flood, a Yonkers employee, was injured due to a cable left by subcontractor Romano. IICNA settled the underlying action without St. Paul's consent, believing St. Paul's policy was primary and Yonkers was contractually obligated to indemnify. The court denied IICNA's claims, finding St. Paul was not bound by the non-consented settlement and had properly tendered defense to Romano. Furthermore, IICNA's subrogation claim against Yonkers was barred by the antisubrogation rule, as Yonkers was an additional insured under IICNA's policy.

Insurance CoverageReimbursementSubrogationAntisubrogation RuleAdditional InsuredIndemnification AgreementLabor LawSummary JudgmentAppellate ReviewSettlement Consent
References
8
Case No. LAO 0762226, LAO 0762227
Regular
Sep 05, 2007

SHIRLEE DYERLY vs. LAWRY'S RESTAURANT, CALIFORNIA INSURANCE GUARANTEE ASSOCIATION for SUPERIOR NATIONAL INSURANCE COMPANY, INTERCARE INSURANCE SERVICES, ZURICH NORTH AMERICA INSURANCE COMPANY

This case involves a dispute over insurance coverage for an applicant's neck and back injuries sustained across specific and cumulative trauma incidents. The Workers' Compensation Appeals Board (WCAB) is reconsidering an arbitrator's decision that ordered Zurich North America Insurance Company to reimburse the California Insurance Guarantee Association (CIGA) for all benefits paid by the liquidated California Compensation Insurance Company (Cal Comp). The WCAB rescinds the arbitrator's order, ruling that CIGA can only recover the amount Cal Comp would have been entitled to collect had it not been liquidated, not the full amount paid.

CIGACal CompZurichliquidationcontributionreimbursementspecific injurycumulative traumastatute of limitationsjoint findings
References
7
Case No. 2014 NY Slip Op 08848 [123 AD3d 933]
Regular Panel Decision
Dec 17, 2014

Public Service Mutual Insurance v. Fiduciary Insurance Co. of America

This case involves an appeal by Fiduciary Insurance Company of America (appellant) from an order and judgment confirming an arbitration award in favor of Public Service Mutual Insurance Company (respondent), as subrogee of Peter Daversa. The Supreme Court, Queens County, granted the petition to confirm and denied Fiduciary's cross-petition to vacate the arbitration award. The Appellate Division, Second Department, dismissed the appeal from the intermediate order, finding it merged into the judgment, and affirmed the judgment. The court applied closer judicial scrutiny to the compulsory arbitration award, determining that the arbitrator's decision had ample evidentiary support and was not arbitrary or capricious. The appellant's contentions regarding proximate cause, burden of proof, and prejudgment interest were found to be without merit.

Arbitration Award ConfirmationInsurance SubrogationAppellate ReviewJudicial ScrutinyEvidentiary SupportArbitrator's DeterminationProximate CausationBurden of ProofPrejudgment InterestCPLR Article 75 Proceeding
References
8
Case No. MISSING
Regular Panel Decision

Tracey Road Equipment, Inc. v. Village of Johnson City

This case involves two appeals from orders and judgments of the Supreme Court in Broome County. Action No. 1 concerned Tracey Road Equipment, Inc.'s request for a declaratory judgment against the Village of Johnson City regarding insurance coverage for a street sweeper involved in an accident. The Supreme Court granted summary judgment to Johnson City, finding it not obligated to defend or indemnify Tracey Road, which was affirmed on appeal. Action No. 2 involved the Insurance Company of North America (INA) seeking a declaratory judgment against St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Company, contending St. Paul was a coinsurer for Johnson City in the same accident. The Supreme Court denied INA's motion, but the appellate court reversed, declaring INA and St. Paul to be coinsurers and obligating St. Paul to pay half of Johnson City's defense and indemnification costs.

Insurance Coverage DisputeDeclaratory JudgmentSummary JudgmentLease Agreement InterpretationCoinsuranceVehicle LiabilityAppellate ReviewContractual IndemnityMotor Vehicle AccidentInsurance Policy Interpretation
References
5
Case No. ADJ 4359672 (VNO 0478019)
Regular
Apr 08, 2016

JORGE OROZCO vs. MARRIOTT DOWNTOWN LOS ANGELES/INTERSTATE HOTELS AND RESORTS, CALIFORNIA INSURANCE GUARANTEE ASSOCIATION for AMERICAN PROTECTION INSURANCE COMPANY, ZURICH NORTH AMERICA, CENTURY PLAZA HOTEL

This case concerns the California Insurance Guarantee Association's (CIGA) liability for an insolvent insurer's obligations under a workers' compensation settlement. The applicant settled a cumulative trauma injury claim, and the settlement agreement apportioned liability for remaining lien claims among insurers, including American Protection Company. After American Protection Company became insolvent, CIGA stepped in, but sought dismissal, arguing its liability was not joint and several and no "other insurance" existed. The Board affirmed the dismissal of CIGA, holding that the original joint and several nature of the insurers' liability, as established by case law and the settlement, means Zurich North America's remaining liability constitutes "other insurance" relieving CIGA.

CIGAAmerican Protection Insurance CompanyMarriott Downtown Los AngelesInterstate Hotels and ResortsZurich North AmericaCentury Plaza HotelBroadspireSedgwick Claims Management ServicesCompromise and Release Agreementcumulative trauma
References
4
Case No. MISSING
Regular Panel Decision
Jul 05, 2006

Wilson v. Sirius America Insurance

Stephen Wilson, a foreman for a plumbing subcontractor, was injured at a construction site and, along with his wife, sued the general contractor, K.J. Gold, LLC, for Labor Law violations. K.J. Gold's insurer, Sirius America Insurance Company, disclaimed coverage based on an exclusion requiring a prior written indemnification contract between K.J. Gold and the subcontractor, which was absent. After K.J. Gold defaulted in the underlying action, the Wilsons commenced a new action against Sirius America to recover the unsatisfied judgment. The Supreme Court initially granted summary judgment to the Wilsons, deeming the exclusion void under General Obligations Law § 5-322.1. However, the appellate court reversed, holding that the insurance exclusion itself did not violate General Obligations Law § 5-322.1, and since K.J. Gold never met the policy's condition of obtaining a written indemnification agreement, Sirius America was entitled to summary judgment dismissing the complaint.

Insurance Coverage DisputeIndemnification AgreementSummary Judgment AppealConstruction AccidentLabor Law ViolationsPolicy ExclusionGeneral Obligations LawContract InterpretationAppellate ReversalThird-Party Action
References
3
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