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Full-Text Articles in Insurance Law
Legislative And Judicial Control Of The Terms Of Insurance Contracts: A Comparative Study Of American And European Practice, Spencer L. Kimball, Werner Pfennigstorf
Legislative And Judicial Control Of The Terms Of Insurance Contracts: A Comparative Study Of American And European Practice, Spencer L. Kimball, Werner Pfennigstorf
Indiana Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Insurance -- 1963 Tennessee Survey, Robert N. Covington
Insurance -- 1963 Tennessee Survey, Robert N. Covington
Vanderbilt Law Review
1. Definition of "Temporary Substitute Automobile." Defendant issued a public liability policy covering insured's use of a described vehicle (a 1955 Ford) as a taxicab. The policy contained a standard temporary substitute automobile clause, covering a non-owned auto-mobile "while temporarily used as a substitute for the described automobile when withdrawn from normal use because of its break-down, repair, servicing, loss or destruction."
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2. Application of Automobile Policy Liability Limits. A husband and wife (hereinafter H and W) were injured in an accident caused by the insured. In their actions against the insured W was awarded 4,500 dollars and H …
Insurance--Insured's Breach Of Cooperation Clause, Charles Ellsworth Heilmann
Insurance--Insured's Breach Of Cooperation Clause, Charles Ellsworth Heilmann
West Virginia Law Review
No abstract provided.
Abstracts Of Recent Cases, William Walter Smith
Abstracts Of Recent Cases, William Walter Smith
West Virginia Law Review
No abstract provided.
Deduction Of Interest On Loans Associated With Life Insurance Annuity Contracts, Converse Murdoch
Deduction Of Interest On Loans Associated With Life Insurance Annuity Contracts, Converse Murdoch
Villanova Law Review
No abstract provided.
Private Insurance As A Solution To The Driver-Guest Dilemm, Harvey R. Friedman
Private Insurance As A Solution To The Driver-Guest Dilemm, Harvey R. Friedman
Michigan Law Review
The duty of the driver of an automobile to his nonpaying passenger, and liability arising from the breach of that duty, has long presented a troublesome area of litigation for the courts and the parties involved. Application of standards unsuited for the peculiar risks of automotive transportation has produced inadequate compensation in some cases and excessive recoveries in others. Meanwhile, trial calendars are overcrowded with personal injury litigation, and insurance companies must bear the awards of sympathetic juries and those resulting from collusion between passenger and driver. The over-all expense of this method of determination of liability, far too little …