Mealey Publications™

TOP STORIES

2nd Circuit Affirms Injunctive Ruling In GEICO RICO Dispute With Medical Providers

NEW YORK — The Second Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals on Feb. 3 affirmed a lower court ruling granting injunctive relief to GEICO in its Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO) no-fault fraud suit against medical providers, finding that the lower court did not abuse its discretion in staying the providers’ state court proceedings seeking more than $2 million in judgments against GEICO.

Dismissing ERISA Tobacco Surcharge Case, Judge Gives Employer Outlier Win

ST. LOUIS — Giving an employer an outlier victory in a putative class action that is similar to many other recent Employee Retirement Income Security Act challenges to tobacco surcharges, a Missouri federal judge on Feb. 3 dismissed the complaint with prejudice and said the statute at issue “does not impose a retroactive reimbursement requirement for tobacco cessation surcharges."

Fee Exclusion Bars Professional Liability Coverage, 2nd Circuit Affirms

NEW YORK — The Second Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals on Feb. 3 affirmed a lower federal court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of primary and excess professional liability insurers, holding that a fee exclusion bars coverage for a financial services company insured’s liability in two underlying class actions alleging that certain mortgage loan fees were unlawful and the insured was derivatively liable under the Home Ownership and Equity Protection Act.

California Top Court Remands Hard To Read Arbitration Terms Ruling In Nissan Case

SAN FRANCISCO — A divided California Supreme Court clarified that while an employment contract’s format is generally irrelevant to the substantive unconscionability analysis that focuses on the fairness of the terms, “courts must closely scrutinize the terms of difficult-to-read contracts for unfairness or one-sidedness,” remanding for further consideration a lower court’s ruling that small, barely readable print supports findings of substantive and procedural unconscionability in the case of a former Nissan employee who sued for wrongful termination after signing such an agreement.

Split Kentucky Panel Orders New Damages Trial In STD Benefits Case

FRANKFORT, Ky. — In an unpublished opinion, a split Kentucky appeals panel reversed and remanded a ruling against the third-party administrator of a short-term disability (STD) plan in a long-running case where a jury awarded the claimant $7,125,000 in emotional distress and punitive damages

Underlying Damages Economic, No Additional Insured Coverage Owed, Federal Judge Says

SAN DIEGO — A federal judge in California on Feb. 2 granted an insurer’s motion to dismiss a real estate agent insured’s breach of contract, bad faith and declaratory relief lawsuit seeking additional insured coverage for an underlying lawsuit alleging that the real estate agent deliberately misrepresented a coastal residence for sale, holding that the underlying action involves economic damages and not bodily injury or property damages to trigger coverage under the policy.

Third-Party Payer Class Tells High Court That Review Not Needed In Certification Spat

WASHINGTON, D.C. — A Ninth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals ruling that found no error in the certification of a national third-party payer (TPP) class of entities that paid for the diabetes drug Actos, despite the court recognizing that there is no way to calculate the number of class members that were not harmed, does not warrant review by the U.S. Supreme Court, Painters and Allied Trades District Council 82 Health Care Fund argues in an opposition filed Feb. 2.

Split Federal Circuit Affirms Noninfringement Finding For Massager Design Patent

WASHINGTON, D.C. — A split Federal Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals panel on Feb. 2 affirmed a Maine federal judge’s grant of summary judgment of noninfringement in a dispute over a design patent describing a body massaging device; the panel majority held that a reasonable jury could not have found infringement under the judge’s construction, while the chief circuit judge wrote in dissent that the majority and the judge focused too much on individual features and not the similarity of the overall design.

23andMe Bankruptcy Judge Approves $50M Settlement; Data Breach MDL To Be Dismissed

The parties to multidistrict litigation in California federal court against 23andMe Inc. and affiliates for a data breach in which millions of customers’ genetic data and personally identifiable information (PII) was hacked filed a joint status report on Feb. 2 stating the plaintiffs will move to dismiss the MDL following the final approval in Missouri federal bankruptcy court of a settlement worth up to $50 million to resolve U.S. customers’ claims against 23andMe, with 25% allocated for attorney fees.

Iowa High Court Reverses Ruling Denying Dismissal Of Police Data Access Suit

DES MOINES, Iowa — A unanimous Iowa Supreme Court reversed and remanded a lower court ruling denying dismissal of a common law and statutory law privacy violation suit against a police department, a police officer and related officials and entities alleging that the officer improperly accessed confidential databases of local residents for his own personal use, finding that the suit is “time-barred” under the statute of limitations.

PPP Loan Recipient Says False Claims Act Suit Fails To Show Knowing Falsity

SAN DIEGO — Asserting that a False Claims Act (FCA) claimant had no direct knowledge of the details of a Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loan application process and thus could not show a knowingly false statement made in connection with the application, a construction equipment dealer moved a California federal court for summary judgment in a lawsuit by a former employee alleging that the dealer received the COVID-related loan by altering or misrepresenting its payroll records.

LATEST NEWS

2nd Circuit Affirms Injunctive Ruling In GEICO RICO Dispute With Medical Providers
Dismissing ERISA Tobacco Surcharge Case, Judge Gives Employer Outlier Win
Florida Jury Returns Defense Verdict In Sickly Smoker’s Defect Design Lawsuit
Groups Dispute CAA Exemption From Taconite Rule In Another Suit Against Trump, EPA
Drugmakers Argue Claims In Depo-Provera MDL Are Preempted By Federal Law
Storm Damage Coverage Suit Dismissed Following Settlement Of Insured’s Claims
Judge Seeks More Settlement Details In Class Suit Over Tire Company Data Theft
Fee Exclusion Bars Professional Liability Coverage, 2nd Circuit Affirms
D.C. Circuit Denies Rehearing Requests By Ousted NLRB, MSPB Members
Judge Compels Arbitration In Dubai After Previous Arbitration Center’s Abolition
California Top Court Remands Hard To Read Arbitration Terms Ruling In Nissan Case
Judge Finds Unconstitutional Provisions Of Trump Federal Election Executive Order
Judge Refuses To Dismiss BSA Settlement Trustee’s Bad Faith Suit Against Insurers
Judge Denies Google Users’ Bid For $2.36B, Won’t Decertify Data-Gathering Classes
PTAB Right To Invalidate Roof-Mapping Patent, Federal Circuit Holds
DOJ Files Statement Of Interest In ADA ‘Violation’ Online Retailer Class Suit
Groups File CAA Suit In D.C. Over Ethylene Oxide Exemption Proclamation
1st Circuit Upholds Luxury Hotel’s Unpaid Wages Settlement With Former Workers
IRS Maintains That Captive Final Rule Was Based On Data And Prior Litigation
Split Kentucky Panel Orders New Damages Trial In STD Benefits Case
Federal Judge Refuses To Reconsider Ruling In Trade Secret Suit Against Insurer
Interlocutory Appeal Of August Partial Dismissal Of USAID Shutdown Suit Denied
Illinois Graduate Class Certified In BIPA Case Against Ceremony Photographer
Magistrate Orders Parties To Produce Documents In ‘Upcoding’ Insurance Fraud Row
Use-Of-Force Expert Can Testify On Whether Deputies Acted Within Standards
Underlying Damages Economic, No Additional Insured Coverage Owed, Federal Judge Says
5th Circuit: District Court Wrong To Dismiss Stock Drop Suit With Prejudice
Third-Party Payer Class Tells High Court That Review Not Needed In Certification Spat
Judge Enjoins $21K Fine Against Texas Vape Shop, Citing Constitutional Issues
Wash. State Grain Terminal Owner To Pay $320K To Settle Stormwater Runoff CWA Suit