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Mutual Of Enumclaw Insurance Company V. Wiscomb: Excluding The Family Exclusion Clause, Janice L. Campton Jan 1983

Mutual Of Enumclaw Insurance Company V. Wiscomb: Excluding The Family Exclusion Clause, Janice L. Campton

Seattle University Law Review

This note examines Mutual of Enumclaw Insurance Company v. Wiscomb. The note supports the court’s decision to prohibit unbargained for family exclusion clauses, because it furthered the policies exemplified in the Financial Responsibility Law and the Underinsured Motorist Statute and acted consistently with its decision abrogating intrafamily tort immunity. However, the note argues that by suggesting it would uphold truly bargained for family exclusion clauses denying coverage to named insureds, the court ignored its own pronouncement declaring such clauses against this state’s policy of assuring compensation for the protection of innocent victims of negligent motorists.


Another Day Older And Deeper In Debt: Debt Limitation, The Broad Special Fund Doctrine, And Wppss 4/5, Dennis J. Heil Jan 1983

Another Day Older And Deeper In Debt: Debt Limitation, The Broad Special Fund Doctrine, And Wppss 4/5, Dennis J. Heil

Seattle University Law Review

The weakness of the Broad Special Fund Doctrine becomes evident when viewed in light of its application to an enormous debt such as construction of a multi-billion dollar power plant. Furthermore, the doctrine is directly at odds with the purposes underlying constitutional and statutory debt limitations. This Article presents a brief history of debt limitation provisions. Next, it discusses the history of the Special Fund Doctrine and sets forth criticisms of the Broad Special Fund Doctrine. The Article concludes by recommending a concept for a Narrow Special Fund Doctrine and applies it to the construction of two nuclear power plants …