Roy A. Mura’s Post

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Insurance Coverage & Fraud Attorney, Grammarian, Logophile, and Angler @ Mura Law Group, PLLC, Buffalo, NY. (I'm the one with hands in the background photo⬆, not the other animal.)

❗⚠UPDATE (01.02.22) -- The bill that NY Gov. Hochul signed is to be amended. My post about that is https://lnkd.in/eDsaVT2g ⚠❗ Happy New Year, everyone. 🎆 Unfortunately 2022 starts with some bad news 👎 for insureds and their liability insurers that are facing lawsuits in New York. Yesterday NY Governor Kathy Hochul signed S7052, New York's Comprehensive Insurance Disclosure Act, into law. The act transforms CPLR 3101(f) by now requiring that "[a]ny defendant, third-party defendant, or defendant on a cross-claim or counter-claim shall provide to the plaintiff, third-party plaintiff, plaintiff on counter-claim, and any other party in the action within sixty days after serving an answer pursuant to [CPLR] rule [320] or section [3011] or [3019] of this chapter notice and proof of the existence and contents of any insurance agreement under which any person or entity may be liable to satisfy part or all of a judgment that may be entered in the action or to indemnify or reimburse for payments made to satisfy the entry of final judgment." Proof of existence and contents of any potentially applicable insurance agreements--that doesn't sound so bad, right? Wrong. The "information and documentation" that must be disclosed are: >> " (i) all primary, excess and umbrella policies, contracts or agreements" issued by insurance companies, captive insurance entities, risk retention groups, reciprocal insurance exchanges, syndicates, surplus line insurers, and self-insurance programs; >> "(ii) a complete copy of any [such] policy, contract or agreement referred to in subparagraph (i) of this paragraph", including any insurance agreement's application for insurance; >> "(iii) the contact information, including telephone number and e-mail address, of any person or persons responsible for adjusting the claim made to or against the person or entity described in subparagraph (i) of this paragraph, including third-party administrators and persons within the insuring entity to whom the third-party administrator is required to report"; >> "(iv) the amounts available under any [such] policy, contract or agreement"; >> "(v) any lawsuits that have reduced or eroded or may reduce or erode such amounts referred to in subparagraph (iv) of this paragraph, including the caption of any such lawsuit, the date the lawsuit was filed and the identity and contact information of the attorneys for all represented parties therein"; and >> "(vi) the amount, if any, of any payment of attorney's fees that have eroded or reduced the face value of the policy, along with the name and address of any attorney who received such payments." If that weren't enough, the act imposes on the parties obligated to make these disclosures "an ongoing obligation to make reasonable efforts to ensure that the information remains accurate and complete, and provide updated information to any...

Roy A. Mura

Insurance Coverage & Fraud Attorney, Grammarian, Logophile, and Angler @ Mura Law Group, PLLC, Buffalo, NY. (I'm the one with hands in the background photo⬆, not the other animal.)

2y
Roy A. Mura

Insurance Coverage & Fraud Attorney, Grammarian, Logophile, and Angler @ Mura Law Group, PLLC, Buffalo, NY. (I'm the one with hands in the background photo⬆, not the other animal.)

2y

(Cont. 1/1 from post): The ongoing disclosure "obligation shall exist during the entire pendency of the litigation and for [60] days after any settlement or entry of final judgment in the case inclusive of all appeals." You catch that? Even BEYOND the conclusion of the case. What must accompany this new, comprehensive disclosure of "information and documentation"? A simple cover letter? No, no. Two, new certifications, of course. One by by the party obligated to make the disclosure under the new, but not improved, CPLR 3101(f), and the second by that party's attorney "stating that the information is accurate and complete, and that reasonable efforts have been undertaken, and in accordance with paragraph two of subdivision (f) of section [3101] of this article will be undertaken, to ensure that this information remains accurate and complete." When does this act take effect? IMMEDIATELY (December 31, 2021) "and shall apply to all pending actions. Any information required by this act that has not previously been provided in pending cases shall be provided within [60] days after such effective date." Defense counsel better get crackin'. They and their clients have until March 1, 2022 to comply with this new law.

Roy A. Mura

Insurance Coverage & Fraud Attorney, Grammarian, Logophile, and Angler @ Mura Law Group, PLLC, Buffalo, NY. (I'm the one with hands in the background photo⬆, not the other animal.)

2y

For everyone who commented on or liked this post (or found your way to this post first), my post on the possible revised CIDA bill is here: https://www.linkedin.com/posts/royamura_marked-up-s7052-comprehensive-insurance-disclosure-activity-6883531040527323136-kbP-

Vince (Vincent) Capaldi

Lifelong Insurance Nerd ┃ Self-Insurance Specialist ┃ Wholesale Insurance Broker ┃ Writer of the World's Longest Out-of-Office Messages

2y

Not surprising. It’s New York after all. If you read the “justification” section of the NY senate bill, there’s an odd phrase: “In personal injury cases, disclosure of complete and accurate information about the nature and extent of insurance coverage is often delayed. There is a confusing and often conflicting array of case law regarding what must be disclosed and when. Not only do these delays clog our over-burdened courts, they force injured New Yorkers to wait for the justice they deserve.” The phrase is in that last sentence. I’ve heard the term “justice they deserve” plenty of times - in television and radio ads for personal injury lawyers. I’m sure it’s just a coincidence. After all, it might not be a great idea to allow plaintiff attorneys to draft legislation that would benefit them directly, right? That would be crazy. (Sarcasm loading)

John Eggum

Partner and Shareholder at Foran Glennon. Trial attorney litigating insurance coverage and bad faith lawsuits and other commercial disputes. jeggum@fgppr.com

2y

This is such an administrative nightmare for carriers and defense counsel. And that’s putting aside the issue that some of the information will be difficult and in some situations impossible to gather.

Oy this whole thing belongs in the shredder

Laura M. Gregory, Esq., CPCU

Helping insurers with coverage issues & avoiding bad faith | Admitted in MA, ME, NH, VT | Elected Official | Bestselling Author

2y

Wow! When does this become effective? Thanks for the update Roy A. Mura.

Mark Tauber

Vice President - Specializing in Large business accounts and specialty ambulance insurance program

2y

Roy A. Mura happy new year to you, thanks in advance for your informative posts. I did not fully understand this new law, however, I am sure that it will not promote business in NY or make it easier fir insurance companies to do business in this state

Patrick Kelahan

| Building & Insurance Consultant | H2M a + e | 🐘Insurance Elephant🐘|Insurance Advocate

2y

“May be liable” and “may be entered.” #nametheworld #wearealltortfeasors Thanks for sharing, Roy A. Mura

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