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Full-Text Articles in Insurance Law

The Color Of Property And Auto Insurance: Time For Change, Jennifer B. Wriggins Jan 2022

The Color Of Property And Auto Insurance: Time For Change, Jennifer B. Wriggins

Faculty Publications

Insurance company executives issued statements condemning racism and urging change throughout society and in the insurance industry after the huge Black Lives Matter demonstrations in summer 2020. The time therefore is ripe for examining insurance as it relates to race and racism, including history and current regulation. Two of the most important types of personal insurance are property and automobile. Part I begins with history, focusing on property insurance, auto insurance, race, and racism in urban areas around the mid-twentieth century. Private insurers deemed large areas of cities where African Americans lived to be “blighted” and refused to insure all …


Do Credit-Based Insurance Scores Proxy For Income In Predicting Auto Claim Risk?, Darcy Steeg Morris, Daniel Schwarcz, Joshua C. Teitelbaum Jan 2016

Do Credit-Based Insurance Scores Proxy For Income In Predicting Auto Claim Risk?, Darcy Steeg Morris, Daniel Schwarcz, Joshua C. Teitelbaum

Georgetown Law Faculty Publications and Other Works

Auto insurers often use credit-based insurance scores in their underwriting and rating processes. The practice is controversial—many consumer groups oppose it, and most states regulate it, in part out of concern that insurance scores proxy for policyholder income in predicting claim risk. We offer new evidence on this issue in the context of auto insurance. Prior studies on the subject suffer from the limitation that they rely solely on aggregate measures of income, such as the median income in a policyholder's census tract or zip code. We analyze a panel of households that purchased auto and home policies from a …


Automobile Insurance Rates: Promulgation, Regulation, And Equal Protection, James J. Mcgraw Aug 2015

Automobile Insurance Rates: Promulgation, Regulation, And Equal Protection, James J. Mcgraw

Akron Law Review

T HE INTEREST in the price one pays for automobile insurance continues to grow at a rapid pace. The reason for this growing consumer interest may be attributed to the equally increasing need for automobiles, the price paid for them, and consequently, the need for insurance protection. This insurance protection has developed into a matter of major economic consequence to the auto owner.....The key to improved and efficient rate-watching is in the good faith efforts and perseverance of the policyholders themselves. Accordingly, an examination of the effects of consumerism along with a discussion of modern rate and regulatory developments is …


Girgis V. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.: Rescinding The Physical Contact Requirement In Ohio Uninsured Motorist Claims, Dominick Cirelli Jr. Jul 2015

Girgis V. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.: Rescinding The Physical Contact Requirement In Ohio Uninsured Motorist Claims, Dominick Cirelli Jr.

Akron Law Review

Nearly every state has a requirement concerning uninsured motorist coverage, although state statutes differ in their scope and language. There has been a great volume of literature discussing the applicability of uninsured motorist coverage in cases involving hit and run drivers. This casenote will set out the various state statutory approaches to hit and run vehicles under uninsured motorist coverage, as well as evaluate the Ohio Supreme Court's historical approach to the physical contact doctrine. The casenote will thoroughly address the Girgis opinion and its underlying rationale, as well as the repercussions of abrogating the physical contract doctrine. Finally, this …


Mandates, Markets, And Risk: Auto Insurance And The Affordable Care Act, Jennifer Wriggins Jan 2012

Mandates, Markets, And Risk: Auto Insurance And The Affordable Care Act, Jennifer Wriggins

Faculty Publications

Now that the Affordable Care Act (ACA) individual health insurance mandate has been upheld by the United States Supreme Court, it is an opportune time to examine precedents for the individual mandate that were not considered in the legislative debate or litigation about the ACA’s constitutionality, particularly auto insurance mandates. Although opponents’ arguments were cast largely as Commerce Clause claims, the arguments have a deeper foundation as claims about liberty and coercion which go far beyond the Commerce Clause. Although auto insurance mandates are obviously different, particularly in that they are state rather than federal, auto insurance mandates can help …


Claims And Coverage In Montana For Damage To A Victim's Family Members, Greg Munro Jan 2011

Claims And Coverage In Montana For Damage To A Victim's Family Members, Greg Munro

Faculty Journal Articles & Other Writings

This article explores those situations in which Montana tort law now recognizes secondary injuries to family members resulting from primary severe injuries or death of another family member, which recognition may invoke additional auto insurance coverage. The article first makes a short survey of the development of Montana tort law insofar as it has come to take cognizance of family injuries. The article then looks at the application of insurance law to those claims with special emphasis on recent cases.


Insurance, Robert A. Seligson Nov 2010

Insurance, Robert A. Seligson

Cal Law Trends and Developments

No abstract provided.


Defeating The "Step-Down" Clause In Auto Insurance, Greg Munro Jan 2009

Defeating The "Step-Down" Clause In Auto Insurance, Greg Munro

Faculty Journal Articles & Other Writings

This article addresses the increasingly occurring situations where "step-down" clauses are inserted in auto policies to defeat coverage for particular classes of claimants. The article points out that step-down clauses that reduce the recovery of family members to minimum limits and protection of permissive users to minimum limits are subject to challenge for being unfair, unconscionable, violative of public policy, violative of reasonable expectations, and for creating ambiguity in an auto policy, and as such, need to be scrutinized by the Montana Supreme Court.


Voiding Auto Insurance Clauses For Violating Public Policy, Greg Munro Jan 2004

Voiding Auto Insurance Clauses For Violating Public Policy, Greg Munro

Faculty Journal Articles & Other Writings

This article addresses how a lawyer faced with an unambiguous auto insurance policy provision detrimental to his insured or claimant may analyze the provision to determine if it is potentially void and unenforceable.


Exposing "Illusory" Underinsured Motorist Coverage, Greg Munro Jan 2003

Exposing "Illusory" Underinsured Motorist Coverage, Greg Munro

Faculty Journal Articles & Other Writings

This article addresses auto insurers that use the "narrow" Underinsured Motorist Vehicle definition and couples it with a "reducing clause." The article discusses the conflict between what the declarations page promises and the UIM benefit the policy will actually pay and argues that the definition and reducing clause violate the consumer's expectations and defeat the very purpose of UIM coverage causing an injustice to the insured who has been prudent enough to purchase UIM coverage to guard against the tortfeasor who carries minimum limits. The article urges attorneys to persuade the courts in Montana to invalidate the narrow definition and …


Obtaining Separate Limits Of Auto Coverage For Each "Occurrence" Or "Accident", Greg Munro Jan 2003

Obtaining Separate Limits Of Auto Coverage For Each "Occurrence" Or "Accident", Greg Munro

Faculty Journal Articles & Other Writings

This article examines the issue of what constitutes an "accident" or "occurrence" in auto liability policies that limit the insurer's liability for indemnity, defense, or other benefits to a set amount per "accident" or "occurrence." The article reviews a selection of cases from other jurisdictions because there is little Montana law delineating single "accidents" or "occurrences" for purposes of auto insurance. The article concludes with a list of factors that may be determinative and should be argued on the issue of whether there are multiple "accidents" or "occurrences" for purposes of triggering additional limits of auto insurance coverage.


The Constitutional Attack On Montana's Anti-Stacking Statute, Greg Munro Jan 2002

The Constitutional Attack On Montana's Anti-Stacking Statute, Greg Munro

Faculty Journal Articles & Other Writings

This article presents MTLA member Randy Bishop's amicus curiae arguments that challenge the validity of the Montana anti-stacking statute under four provisions of the Montana Constitution. The argument was written in support of the plaintiff in Hardy v. Progressive Specialty Insurance Company.


The Duty Of The Agent Or Broker To Recommend Underinsured Motorist Coverage With Adequate Limits, Greg Munro Jan 2002

The Duty Of The Agent Or Broker To Recommend Underinsured Motorist Coverage With Adequate Limits, Greg Munro

Faculty Journal Articles & Other Writings

This article addresses the question of whether an insurance agent or broker have any duty in Montana to recommend a particular coverage in a specific adequate amount. More specifically, the article explores what the agent or broker's duty is, if any, to recommend that the insured purchase UIM coverage and do so with an adequate limit of liability. Although the article focuses on the agent's duty to explain and recommend auto UIM coverage, the law and arguments discussed can be extrapolated to other coverage lines such as homeowners or commercial general liability.


The Case Against Montana's Anti-Stacking Statute, Greg Munro Jan 2002

The Case Against Montana's Anti-Stacking Statute, Greg Munro

Faculty Journal Articles & Other Writings

This article begins by noting that the 1997 anti-stacking statute is the number one problem faced by plaintiff's' counsel in Montana in attempting to secure adequate compensation for clients' injuries arising out of the operation of automobiles. The article charges that the brutal economics of the 1997 anti-stacking statute, which prohibits consumers from obtaining the benefit of multiple coverages for which they paid while allowing insurers a windfall by permitting them to collect multiple and ever increasing premiums for no coverage, has compelled attorneys to attack the statute.

The article presents a status report of a compendium of "stacking" cases …


The "Household" Or "Family" Exclusion In Auto Policies, Greg Munro Jan 2000

The "Household" Or "Family" Exclusion In Auto Policies, Greg Munro

Faculty Journal Articles & Other Writings

This article examines the household or family exclusion in casualty policies and how the Montana Supreme Court has responded to challenges to the exclusion. The article concludes that if attorneys adequately prepare the challenge, the courts in Montana will scrutinize the exclusion carefully.


"Stacking" In Montana In 1999, Greg Munro Jan 1999

"Stacking" In Montana In 1999, Greg Munro

Faculty Journal Articles & Other Writings

This article discusses the status of stacking, the aggregation of coverages by reason of multiple autos insured under a single policy as well as multiple autos insured under separate policies as long as the autos are insured with the same company, in Montana in 1999.


Invalidating Auto Insurance Provisions In Montana, Greg Munro Jan 1999

Invalidating Auto Insurance Provisions In Montana, Greg Munro

Faculty Journal Articles & Other Writings

This article reviews cases in which the Montana Supreme Court has invalidated or limited provisions of the standard auto policies. The article discusses three grounds when the Court generally has invalidated auto insurance provisions: 1) on ground of public policy per the Mandatory Liability Protection Act; 2) on ground of public policy per the Uninsured Motorist statute; and 3) on ground of defeating insurance consumer's reasonable expectations. The article concludes that the list of auto insurance policy provisions invalidated by the Montana Supreme Court is extensive, confirming the Court's commitment to test insurance provisions to ensure they comport with public …


Recent Case Developments, Jeffrey W. Stempel Jan 1999

Recent Case Developments, Jeffrey W. Stempel

Scholarly Works

Recent case developments in Insurance law in the year 1998-1999.


Disability And Income Loss Benefits Under The Minnesota No-Fault Act, Michael K. Steenson Jan 1998

Disability And Income Loss Benefits Under The Minnesota No-Fault Act, Michael K. Steenson

Faculty Scholarship

The Minnesota No-Fault Automobile Insurance Act was intended to ensure the “prompt payment of specific basic economic loss benefits to victims of automobile accidents without regard to whose fault caused the accident,” to prevent overcompensation of less seriously injured people by the interposition of tort thresholds, and to encourage appropriate medical and rehabilitation treatment by assuring prompt payment for that treatment. It seems clear that at least some of the initial promise of the Act has not been fulfilled. Payment of basic economic loss benefits, which the legislature intended to be paid promptly, has become bogged down in a quagmire …


The Entitlement Exclusion In The Personal Auto Policy: The Road To Reducing Litigation In Permissive Use Cases Or A Dead End?, Darla L. Keen Jan 1995

The Entitlement Exclusion In The Personal Auto Policy: The Road To Reducing Litigation In Permissive Use Cases Or A Dead End?, Darla L. Keen

Kentucky Law Journal

No abstract provided.


Proposition 103 And Automobile Insurance, Senate Committee On Insurance, Claims And Corporations Nov 1989

Proposition 103 And Automobile Insurance, Senate Committee On Insurance, Claims And Corporations

California Senate

No abstract provided.


Implementation Of Proposition 103, September 8, 1989, Senate Committee On Insurance, Claims And Corporations Sep 1989

Implementation Of Proposition 103, September 8, 1989, Senate Committee On Insurance, Claims And Corporations

California Senate

No abstract provided.


Implementation Of Proposition 103, August 28, 1989, Senate Committee On Insurance, Claims And Corporations Aug 1989

Implementation Of Proposition 103, August 28, 1989, Senate Committee On Insurance, Claims And Corporations

California Senate

No abstract provided.


Ralph Nader Gives Recommendations On Insurance Reform Post Proposition 103, Senate Committee On Insurance, Claims And Corporations Mar 1989

Ralph Nader Gives Recommendations On Insurance Reform Post Proposition 103, Senate Committee On Insurance, Claims And Corporations

California Senate

No abstract provided.


State Farm Insurance Company Rate Increase And The Insolvency Of Coastal Insurance Company, Senate Committee On Insurance, Claims And Corporations Feb 1989

State Farm Insurance Company Rate Increase And The Insolvency Of Coastal Insurance Company, Senate Committee On Insurance, Claims And Corporations

California Senate

No abstract provided.


Hearing On Enforcement Of Proposition 103 By The Insurance Department, Senate Committee On Insurance, Claims And Corporations Feb 1989

Hearing On Enforcement Of Proposition 103 By The Insurance Department, Senate Committee On Insurance, Claims And Corporations

California Senate

No abstract provided.


Hearing On Update On Enforcement Of Proposition 103, Senate Committee On Insurance, Claims And Corporations Jan 1989

Hearing On Update On Enforcement Of Proposition 103, Senate Committee On Insurance, Claims And Corporations

California Senate

No abstract provided.


Hearing On Proposition 103 Insurance Reform, Senate Committee On Insurance, Claims And Corporations Dec 1988

Hearing On Proposition 103 Insurance Reform, Senate Committee On Insurance, Claims And Corporations

California Senate

No abstract provided.


Insurance Companies' Post Proposition 103 Marketing Practices, Senate Committee On Insurance, Claims And Corporations Nov 1988

Insurance Companies' Post Proposition 103 Marketing Practices, Senate Committee On Insurance, Claims And Corporations

California Senate

No abstract provided.


No-Fault Auto Reparation In Florida: An Empirical Examination Of Some Of Its Effects, Joseph W. Little Jan 1975

No-Fault Auto Reparation In Florida: An Empirical Examination Of Some Of Its Effects, Joseph W. Little

University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform

This article discusses certain aspects of reparations systems that can be described by statistical parameters, but it does not attempt to evaluate whether or not pervasive sociological changes may result from legal modifications of the concept of fault. It may be that any erosion of fault as a legal concept will result in a decline in individual responsibility. The fact that some members of the bar and some members of the medical profession allegedly regularly engage in conspiracies to defeat the $1,000 medical expense threshold of the Florida statute could be cited as evidence of such deterioration. Nevertheless, this writer …