Litigators, lawmakers seek to bail out those without coverageBy ARTHUR D. POSTALWashingtonPassage of legislation to ease the turmoil created by the lack of flood ...
Highline Media, parent company of National Underwriter, last week acquired Wealth Manager magazine from Bloomberg L.P. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.Along with ...
Recently, an Ohio FC&S reader wondered, more specifically worried, whether liability-based theories involving progressive damage could be applied in first-party property loss situations.
When I first came to the staff of The FC&S Bulletins, I was introduced to a number of insurance contract (policy) interpretative principles that underlie the basis of situational analysis for us
Every so often, even frequently, we get coverage questions that make us wonder what is wrong with people. Lose a dollar, sue. Get mad, sue. Sue to get even. Sue to get revenge. Sue, Sue, Sue.
New York's attorney general, Eliot Spitzer, spoke to the National Press Club in February, discussing the recent business scandals on which he has launched a crusade.
It was a dark and stormy night. The rain dripped from my fedora, as I sat at my lonely desk, looking out over the skyline (you would think that I could afford a place with a ceiling).
Jake takes a break from his drill press at the employer's appointed time, heads down the steps to the company break room for a Coke, slips on the last step, and breaks his ankle.