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Case Law Database

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

Case No. MISSING
Regular Panel Decision
May 01, 1980

In re the Arbitration between Allstate Insurance & O'Kelly

Wynona O'Kelly, injured in an automobile accident in 1977, was denied no-fault benefits by Allstate Insurance Company, leading to an arbitration award in her favor. Allstate subsequently applied to vacate this award, which Special Term granted. On appeal from the Supreme Court, Rockland County, the judgment was reversed. The appellate court denied Allstate's petition to vacate the award and granted O'Kelly's cross-petition to confirm it, reinstating the arbitrator's decision. The court found the arbitrator's conclusion, that O'Kelly was not injured in the course of her employment, to be a rational interpretation of the facts, upholding the no-fault benefits despite potential workers' compensation coverage.

Arbitration AwardNo-fault BenefitsWorkers' CompensationAutomobile AccidentEmployment InjuryJudicial ReviewError of LawInsurer LiabilityAppellate ReversalStatutory Interpretation
References
5
Case No. MISSING
Regular Panel Decision

Nationwide Insurance v. Empire Insurance Group

This case concerns a dispute over insurance coverage. Marcos Ramirez was injured while working for Fortuna Construction, Inc. at premises owned by 11194 Owners Corp. Fortuna had subcontracted work from Total Structural Concepts, Inc. and agreed to add Total Structural as an additional insured on its general liability policy with Empire Insurance Group and Allcity Insurance Company. Ramirez sued 11194 Owners Corp. and Total Structural. Total Structural then commenced a third-party action against Fortuna. Nationwide Insurance Company, as Total Structural's insurer and subrogee, initiated a declaratory judgment action against Empire and Allcity after discovering Total Structural was an additional insured on their policy, demanding coverage for the Ramirez action. The Supreme Court granted Nationwide's motion for summary judgment, but the appellate court reversed, finding that Total Structural failed to provide timely notice of the Ramirez action to Empire and Allcity as required by the policy. The court emphasized that timely notice is a condition precedent to recovery and that lack of diligent effort to ascertain coverage vitiates the policy. Consequently, the appellate court granted Empire and Allcity's cross-motion, declaring they are not obligated to defend or indemnify Nationwide/Total Structural.

Insurance CoverageTimely NoticeCondition PrecedentDeclaratory JudgmentAdditional InsuredSubrogationSummary JudgmentBreach of ContractPersonal InjuryGeneral Liability Policy
References
8
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
Jul 13, 2001

A.I. Transport v. New York State Insurance Fund

The Supreme Court, New York County, denied a liability insurer’s application to stay an arbitration initiated by a workers’ compensation insurer. The workers’ compensation insurer sought to recover benefits paid to a bus passenger injured in an accident, where the bus was insured by the liability insurer. The court interpreted Insurance Law § 5105 (a) to allow a workers’ compensation provider, paying benefits in lieu of first party benefits, to recover amounts paid from the insurer of a liable party, even if one of the vehicles involved is a bus. It was determined that an exception for losses arising from the use of a motor vehicle (Insurance Law § 5103 [a] [1]) did not apply, as the respondent was a workers’ compensation insurer and not an automobile insurer. Consequently, the arbitration was allowed to proceed, and the petition to stay it was dismissed and unanimously affirmed.

Arbitration DisputeInsurance Law InterpretationNo-Fault BenefitsWorkers' Compensation SubrogationBus AccidentLiability CoverageStatutory ConstructionAppellate ReviewInsurer Recovery
References
4
Case No. MISSING
Regular Panel Decision

GuideOne Specialty Insurance v. Admiral Insurance

This case involves an insurance coverage dispute where Weingarten Custom Homes (WCH) contracted with Torah Academy for construction, designating Torah Academy as an additional insured under WCH's liability policy with Admiral Insurance Company. The Admiral policy had lower coverage limits ($1,000,000) than required by the contract ($2,000,000/$5,000,000), with GuideOne Specialty Insurance Company providing secondary and excess coverage to Torah Academy. After a construction worker's injury led to a $1,225,000 settlement, Admiral paid $1,000,000, and GuideOne paid $225,000. GuideOne then sued Admiral to recover its payment, arguing that a letter signed by Admiral's claims superintendent effectively modified Admiral's policy to higher limits. The appellate court reversed the Supreme Court's decision, ruling that the letter did not constitute a valid policy endorsement and that the policy's unambiguous terms could not be altered by extrinsic evidence, thereby granting Admiral's motion to dismiss GuideOne's complaint.

Insurance Policy DisputeContract InterpretationLiability InsuranceAdditional InsuredPolicy LimitsMotion to DismissAppellate ReversalDocumentary EvidenceExtrinsic Evidence RulePolicy Amendment
References
12
Case No. MISSING
Regular Panel Decision

In re the Arbitration between Country-Wide Insurance & Manning

Daisy P. Manning, an employee of the Department of Transportation, was injured by an uninsured vehicle while driving a city-owned vehicle. She sought arbitration from her personal insurer, Country-Wide, which then moved to permanently stay arbitration. Country-Wide argued that the City of New York, a permissibly self-insured municipality, should provide primary uninsured motorist coverage. Judge Bloom dissents in part, agreeing with the necessity of reversal but advocating for a remand with specific directions to join the City of New York as a party. This would allow for a full determination of rights, particularly concerning the City's potential primary liability under uninsured motorist provisions and the exclusivity of the Workers' Compensation Law.

Uninsured Motorist CoverageWorkers' Compensation LawSelf-Insured MunicipalityStay of ArbitrationPrimary vs. Secondary LiabilityJoinder of PartiesVehicle and Traffic LawInsurance LawExclusive RemedyAppellate Dissent
References
1
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

Commissioners of the State Insurance Fund v. Hermitage Insurance

The State Insurance Fund (SIF) initiated a declaratory judgment action to determine its obligation to defend and indemnify Frank Tricarico Contractors, Inc. (FTC) in a separate personal injury lawsuit. Frank Tricarico, FTC's sole stockholder, had previously opted out of Workers' Compensation coverage but was injured in a job-related accident. In the underlying action, Tricarico sued a third party, who then impleaded FTC. SIF initially provided a defense for FTC, but questioned its duty after Tricarico alleged he was not an employee. Hermitage Insurance Company, FTC's general liability insurer, disclaimed coverage. While the Supreme Court initially ruled that SIF was obligated to defend, the appellate court reversed this decision. The appellate court concluded that SIF had no duty to defend or indemnify FTC because Frank Tricarico was not an employee, and the failure to disclaim coverage cannot create coverage where the policy itself does not apply.

Workers' CompensationInsurance Coverage DisputeDeclaratory JudgmentSummary JudgmentEmployer LiabilityEmployee ExclusionDuty to DefendDuty to IndemnifyAppellate Review
References
3
Case No. MISSING
Regular Panel Decision

In re the Arbitration between Progressive Northeastern Insurance

This case concerns an appeal regarding the vacatur of an arbitration award. An accident occurred where a vehicle insured by 'Petitioner' struck another vehicle, leading to Michael Chesebro receiving workers' compensation benefits from 'Respondent'. 'Respondent' sought reimbursement from 'Petitioner' via arbitration, arguing the 'Petitioner's' insured vehicle was used principally for hire under Insurance Law § 5105 (a), a claim the arbitrator upheld. 'Petitioner' challenged this, arguing a lack of evidence for the vehicle's principal use. The appellate court reversed the lower court's denial of 'Petitioner's' application, vacating the arbitration award due to insufficient evidentiary support for the arbitrator's finding.

Insurance LawWorkers' Compensation BenefitsArbitration AwardVacatur of AwardLoss Transfer ProvisionsPersonal Injury Protection (PIP)Principal Use of VehicleCommercial VehiclePassenger VehicleSubrogation
References
17
Case No. MISSING
Regular Panel Decision

McLaughlin v. Midrox Insurance

This case involves an appeal concerning an insurance coverage dispute. Plaintiffs sought to compel Midrox Insurance Company to indemnify the Blodgett Brothers Partnerships for a $1 million judgment in an underlying personal injury action. The accident involved a motorcycle operated by plaintiff Charles R. McLaughlin and a pickup truck driven by Ronald Blodgett. Midrox had disclaimed coverage, arguing the accident occurred off insured premises and involved a registered vehicle. The court affirmed the lower court's decision, ruling that the farmowner's policy did provide coverage. The court determined that public roadways used for transporting materials between farm parcels could be considered 'insured premises' and that the pickup truck's agricultural registration did not negate coverage given its exclusive use for farming purposes.

Personal InjuryFarmowner's InsuranceInsurance CoverageAgricultural TruckPolicy InterpretationOff-Premises AccidentPublic RoadwaysSummary JudgmentIndemnificationVehicle and Traffic Law
References
5
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