Anti-Concurrent Causation Clause Eliminates Loss from Hurricane

Tred R. Eyerly | Insurance Law Hawaii     The court found the insured was not covered for losses caused by Hurricane Laura due to the implementation of the policy’s anti-concurrent causation clause. Aegis Sec. Ins. Co. v. Lejeune, 2021 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 106804 (W. D. La. June 7, 2021).      At the time of the… Continue reading Anti-Concurrent Causation Clause Eliminates Loss from Hurricane

Rather Than Limit Decision to “That Particular Part” of Developer’s Policy Necessary to Bar Coverage, 10th Circuit Renders Questionable Decision on Exclusion j(6)

William S. Bennett | SDV Insights The 10th Circuit Court of Appeals, applying Colorado law, recently extended Colorado’s broad application of the phrase “arising out of” in insurance interpretation, barring an insured real estate developer from receiving a defense to a suit alleging liability for construction of a defective retaining wall and associated resulting damage.1 … Continue reading Rather Than Limit Decision to “That Particular Part” of Developer’s Policy Necessary to Bar Coverage, 10th Circuit Renders Questionable Decision on Exclusion j(6)

In Rare Construction Law Ruling, Washington Supreme Court Affirms $9 Million Jury Verdict And Provides Guidance On The ‘Spearin Doctrine’

Ellie Perka | Lane Powell Construction Legal Update Large construction cases rarely come before a jury due to their complexity and the cost of litigation. It is even rarer for the Washington Supreme Court to weigh in. But the Supreme Court did so on September 2 in Lake Hills Investments, LLC v. Rushforth Construction Co., Inc.,… Continue reading In Rare Construction Law Ruling, Washington Supreme Court Affirms $9 Million Jury Verdict And Provides Guidance On The ‘Spearin Doctrine’

Mechanic’s Liens in DC, Maryland, and Virginia – Don’t Wait to Exercise Your Rights

Jackson Nichols and Paul Felipe Williamson | Cohen Seglias Pallas Greenhall & Furman A mechanics’ lien is an encumbrance on real property or a leasehold that acts as security for unpaid labor, material or construction services. Such liens are typically available to contractors on private jobs if they meet certain statutory requirements, though most states… Continue reading Mechanic’s Liens in DC, Maryland, and Virginia – Don’t Wait to Exercise Your Rights

How the Pandemic Pushed the Construction Industry Five Years Into the Future

Alexandra McManus and Hussein Cholkamy | Construction Executive On any given day, there are a multitude of variables playing out on construction jobsites, from maintaining daily logs to track hundreds of workers to creating daily schedules to keep projects on track. What made an industry that’s arguably about 20 years in the past get a… Continue reading How the Pandemic Pushed the Construction Industry Five Years Into the Future