The Insurance Law Section invites you to get published!
The Section allows members to publish shorter articles (typically 500–750 words with no footnotes required) about a variety of insurance law issues:
- summarize a new court opinion;
- offer a practice tip;
- explore a new statute or proposed legislation;
- highlight an industry issue;
- provide insight into a niche topic; or
- anything of interest to Section members!
Please email Blair Dancy for more information!
*Publication is not an express or implied endorsement of content on the part of the Insurance Law Section. The Section reserves full discretion to accept or reject articles as it sees fit.
- Texas Supreme Court Rules That Excess Policy’s Qualified Form Following Provision Did Not Include Coverage for Defense CostsBy Bob Allen, Allen Law Group The Ohio Casualty Insurance Company v. Patterson-UTI Energy, Inc., ___ S.W.3d ___; 2024 WL 5172096 (Tex. 2024) In Ohio Casualty v. Patterson, the Texas Supreme Court analyzed the contractual relationship between an insured (Patterson) and an excess carrier (Ohio Casualty). The subject of their dispute was coverage for defense expenses…
- Practice Pointer – Top 10 Tips for Examinations Under OathBy Marjorie Nicol, Houston Office of Shackelford, McKinley & Norton, LLP *Marjorie is a Partner in the Houston Office of Shackelford, McKinley & Norton, LLP, specializing in insurance coverage litigation on the carrier side.
- Practice Pointer – Top 10 Tips for Drafting an Appellate BriefBy Haley M. Owen, Fifth District Court of Appeals Navigating the complexities of insurance law in appellate courts requires the ability to communicate effectively with judges and staff attorneys who may be unfamiliar with insurance law. Here are ten essential tips for drafting compelling insurance law appellate briefs: 1. Understand Your Audience: Judges and staff attorneys…
- Practice Pointer – Top 5 Steps for Submitting a Property Damage ClaimBy Karly Houchin, Partner focusing on construction law at Allensworth in Austin 1) Make sure you have the right type of policy for the claim you are submitting. Is it a claim for the client’s own property (first party)? Or is it defending against a claim made by someone else (third party)? See: Lee Shidlofsky…
- Continuous or Progressive Injury and Damage Exclusion in Commercial General Liability Policies – A Workaround to the Actual Injury Trigger?Most construction project participants procure insurance through a traditional approach: each project participant acquires their own insurance as required in their contracts. Under this approach, the owner might provide builder’s risk and property insurance, while the general contractor is responsible for carrying commercial general liability (CGL), worker’s compensation, and automobile liability insurance, and subcontractors have…