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

Case No. 01-19-00852-CV
Regular Panel Decision
Sep 21, 2021

National Union Fire Insurance Company of Pittsburgh, PA v. Exxon Mobil Corporation

This case involves two related appeals concerning insurance coverage for bodily injury claims against Exxon Mobil Corporation by its contractor's employees, Kevin Roberts and Arturo Munoz. National Union Fire Insurance Company of Pittsburgh, Pa. challenged a trial court's summary judgment in favor of Exxon and Starr Indemnity and Liability Insurance Company, arguing its umbrella policy did not provide coverage beyond its CGL policy, as dictated by the Exxon-Savage Contract. Exxon also challenged a summary judgment favoring Starr. The appeals court reversed the judgment against National Union, finding that 'Commercial General Liability insurance' in the contract referred only to primary coverage, not umbrella or excess policies. Consequently, Exxon was not entitled to coverage under National Union's umbrella policy. The court affirmed the summary judgment in favor of Starr, as its bumbershoot policy was also considered an umbrella policy. The case was remanded for reconsideration of attorney's fees and costs.

Insurance Policy InterpretationCommercial General LiabilityUmbrella Liability InsuranceExcess Liability InsuranceAdditional Insured EndorsementSummary Judgment ReviewBreach of ContractDeclaratory JudgmentAppellate ProcedurePersonal Injury Claims
References
34
Case No. 03 Civ. 0332(AKH)
Regular Panel Decision
Oct 29, 2004

In Re September 11th Liability Insurance Coverage Cases

This opinion and order addresses two Rule 12(c) motions regarding insurance coverage for the World Trade Center properties following the September 11, 2001, attacks. The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey sought a declaration that it is an "Additional Insured" under Zurich American Insurance Company's policies, while World Trade Center Properties LLC (WTCP) sought a declaration that Zurich is obligated to cover defense costs. The court, presided over by District Judge Hellerstein, denied both motions. It found ambiguity in the binder regarding the Port Authority's "Additional Insured" status, stating that the issue was premature without further discovery. Furthermore, the court held that New York Insurance Regulation 107 does not require rewriting Zurich's binder and policies to include defense costs, considering the unique circumstances, the sophistication of the insured, and the fact that Zurich explicitly excluded defense costs, which Silverstein (WTCP's affiliate) accepted after failing to secure conventional coverage. The court also affirmed supplemental jurisdiction over the insurance claims due to their close relation to the underlying September 11th liability cases.

Insurance CoverageSeptember 11 AttacksWorld Trade CenterRule 12(c) MotionDeclaratory ReliefAdditional Insured StatusDefense CostsInsurance BinderNew York Insurance LawRegulation 107
References
48
Case No. MISSING
Regular Panel Decision

Oneida Ltd. v. Utica Mutual Insurance

Oneida Ltd., a self-insured employer, initiated a declaratory judgment action against its insurers, Utica Mutual and Republic Western, to determine liability for a substantial claim arising from a workplace accident involving the Ketchum brothers. The core dispute centered on whether Republic Western's excess workers' compensation policy, designed for self-insureds, was legally mandated to provide unlimited employer's liability coverage, or if its stated $1,000,000 limit was valid. Oneida Ltd. argued for the validity of the limit, which would then obligate Utica Mutual's $10,000,000 umbrella policy for the excess. Utica Mutual contended that employer's liability coverage must be unlimited in New York and that its policy disclaimed such coverage. The court ultimately sided with Oneida Ltd. and Republic Western, ruling that excess reinsurance policies for self-insured employers are not required to provide unlimited employer's liability coverage, thus upholding Republic Western's $1,000,000 limit. The court also found that Utica Mutual's policy did not effectively disclaim coverage, making it liable for amounts exceeding Republic Western's limit.

Insurance Policy DisputeDeclaratory ReliefEmployer Liability InsuranceExcess CoverageUmbrella LiabilitySelf-Insurance RegulationsInsurance Contract InterpretationThird-Party IndemnificationRegulatory Agency InterpretationSummary Judgment Motion
References
12
Case No. MISSING
Regular Panel Decision

Morris Park Contracting Corp. v. National Union Fire Insurance

This case concerns an appeal regarding an insurer's obligation to defend and indemnify an insured in an underlying personal injury action. The central issue revolved around the timeliness of the notice provided by the insured, Morris Park Contracting Corp., to its excess liability carrier, National Union Fire Insurance Company of Pittsburgh, Pa. The court reiterated that contractual notice requirements are conditions precedent to coverage and must be met within a reasonable time, which is heavily dependent on factual circumstances. The appellate court affirmed the lower court's denial of summary judgment, finding that triable questions of fact existed concerning the reasonableness of Morris Park's delay in notifying its excess insurer. Specifically, the court noted that the mere ad damnum clause in the underlying complaint was insufficient to trigger notice without accompanying evidence of serious injuries, and Morris Park's ongoing investigation raised issues of good faith belief of non-liability.

Insurance CoverageDeclaratory JudgmentNotice RequirementsExcess LiabilityTimeliness of NoticeSummary JudgmentConditions PrecedentReasonable BeliefAd Damnum ClausePersonal Injury Action
References
31
Case No. MISSING
Regular Panel Decision

Taylor Service Company v. Texas Property and Casualty Insurance Guaranty Association

Taylor Service Company appealed a trial-court judgment denying its suit against the Texas Property and Casualty Insurance Guaranty Association. Taylor had purchased primary and excess liability insurance policies from COMCO Insurance Company, which subsequently became an impaired insurer. The Association paid Taylor the statutory limit of $100,000 under the primary policy but refused payment under the excess policy. Taylor argued the excess policy was ambiguous and required an additional $100,000 payment due to the underlying insurer's insolvency. The trial court found no coverage under the excess policy. The appellate court affirmed, holding that the excess policy's insolvency provision was unambiguous and did not mandate "drop-down" coverage to the amount actually paid, maintaining the initial one-million dollar threshold for excess liability.

Insurance lawExcess policyPrimary policyInsolvencyGuaranty AssociationDrop-down coverageContract interpretationAmbiguityTexas lawDeclaratory relief
References
9
Case No. 2025 NY Slip Op 03249
Regular Panel Decision
May 29, 2025

Hartford Fire Ins. Co. v. Hudson Excess Ins. Co.

This declaratory judgment action addresses an insurance coverage dispute stemming from an underlying personal injury claim. Plaintiffs Hartford Fire Insurance Company and Mayer Malbin Realty I, LLC sought defense and indemnity from Hudson Excess Insurance Company for an injury sustained by a worker at a construction site. Although aware of potential coverage in October 2017, plaintiffs did not tender notice to Hudson until May 2020. Hudson subsequently disclaimed coverage due to this significant delay. The Supreme Court initially granted plaintiffs' motion for summary judgment, but the Appellate Division, First Department, unanimously reversed this decision. The appellate court ruled that plaintiffs failed to meet their burden of showing Hudson was not prejudiced by the late notice, which hindered Hudson's ability to conduct a timely investigation.

Insurance CoverageDisclaimer of CoverageLate NoticePrejudice DefenseAdditional InsuredSummary Judgment ReversalAppellate ReviewPersonal Injury ActionConstruction Site AccidentSubcontractor Liability
References
4
Case No. MISSING
Regular Panel Decision

Catania v. Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co.

This case involves a submitted controversy under sections 546 to 548 of the Civil Practice Act, concerning whether a liability policy issued to John Schiro extends coverage to the plaintiff for injuries sustained by Schiro's wife. Schiro's wife alleged negligence against her spouse in the operation of his vehicle during his employment with the plaintiff. The court analyzed Insurance Law section 167 (subd. 3), which states that policies do not cover liability for spousal injuries unless expressly provided. Citing Morgan v. Greater New York Taxpayers Mut. Ins. Assn., the court treated the policy as if issued to the plaintiff alone, determining that Schiro's wife is not the plaintiff's spouse, thus making section 167 (subd. 3) inapplicable. The decision, supported by Manhattan Cas. Co. v. Cholakis, concluded that the insurer is liable. Therefore, judgment was granted in favor of the plaintiff, requiring the defendant to defend the pending negligence action and pay any judgment up to the policy limits.

Liability PolicyInsurance CoverageSpousal LiabilityCivil Practice ActInsurance LawNegligenceDeclaratory JudgmentAutomobile AccidentEmployer LiabilityInterspousal Immunity
References
2
Case No. 2021 NY Slip Op 03990 [195 AD3d 536]
Regular Panel Decision
Jun 22, 2021

Bosquez v. RXR Realty LLC

The Appellate Division, First Department, affirmed two orders of the Supreme Court, New York County. The case involves an injured plaintiff, Jose Rodriguez Bosquez, who sued Hunter Roberts, RXR Pier 57, and Super P57 for negligence and Labor Law violations. The defendants, as third-party plaintiffs, sought contribution and common-law indemnification from Global Iron Works, Inc., the injured plaintiff's employer. Global moved to dismiss the third-party complaint, arguing that the claims were barred by the anti-subrogation rule because Global was covered under the same CCIP GL Tower policies as the third-party plaintiffs. The Supreme Court partially granted Global's motion, ruling that the anti-subrogation rule only applied to the extent of the common coverage provided by the Arch CGL Policy and Corridor Excess Policy, allowing claims to proceed once those policy limits were exhausted. The Appellate Division affirmed, noting that certain AIG Excess Policies contained an "Employer's Liability Exclusion Endorsement," which unambiguously excluded Global from coverage under those policies due to unlimited Workers' Compensation/Employer's Liability coverage, thus not implicating the anti-subrogation rule for those policies. The denial of Global's motion to renew was also affirmed.

Anti-subrogation ruleIndemnificationContributionCPLR 3211(a)(7)CPLR 3212Employer's Liability Exclusion EndorsementCommercial General LiabilityExcess Liability PolicyWorkers' CompensationGrave Injury
References
3
Case No. MISSING
Regular Panel Decision

Northbrook Excess & Surplus Insurance v. Chubb Group of Insurance Companies

This declaratory judgment action addresses the hierarchy of excess insurance policies in a situation where one policy is primary for owned vehicles but excess for non-owned, and the second is an umbrella policy covering multiple risks. The case stems from an accident involving a rented van, which led to a $650,000 settlement. After the primary insurer paid $500,000, Chubb Group of Insurance Companies and Northbrook Excess and Surplus Insurance Co. each contributed $75,000, pending a determination of their respective excess coverage obligations. The Supreme Court initially ruled for ratable contribution. However, citing State Farm Fire & Cas. Co. v LiMauro, the appellate court reversed, holding that Northbrook's umbrella policy constitutes a final tier of coverage, not required to contribute ratably with Chubb's excess policy. Consequently, summary judgment was granted to Northbrook, entitling it to a $75,000 reimbursement from Chubb.

Excess InsuranceUmbrella InsuranceDeclaratory JudgmentInsurance Policy InterpretationInsurance Coverage DisputeAutomobile Liability InsuranceNon-Owned VehicleRatable ContributionFinal Tier CoverageSummary Judgment
References
2
Case No. MISSING
Regular Panel Decision

Pecker Iron Works of New York, Inc. v. Traveler's Insurance

This case involves a dispute between Pecker Iron Works and Travelers Indemnity Company of Connecticut concerning the primary versus excess coverage obligations of two liability insurance carriers. Pecker, designated as an 'additional insured' under Upfront Enterprises' policy with Travelers, sought primary coverage after an Upfront worker was injured on a construction site. Travelers contended its policy provided only excess coverage for additional insureds unless explicitly designated as primary in a written contract. The Supreme Court initially agreed with Travelers, but the Appellate Division reversed, holding that coverage for additional insureds is presumed primary unless unambiguously stated otherwise. The Court of Appeals affirmed the Appellate Division's decision, concluding that Pecker was entitled to primary coverage.

Insurance CoverageAdditional InsuredPrimary CoverageExcess CoverageSubcontractor AgreementDeclaratory JudgmentContract InterpretationLiability InsuranceConstruction ProjectAppellate Review
References
4
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