Lawyer Sued For Filing Claims on Behalf of Policyholders He Does Not Represent

Chip Merlin | Property Insurance Coverage Law Blog | January 14, 2016

I suppose if business is really bad for some lawyers, they could just fantasize about representing people and seeking justice. If the pleadings filed by Allstate are true, one Texas lawyer went beyond fantasy and literally filed insurance claims and threatened lawsuits on behalf of policyholders he never represented. The story was reported by Texas Lawyer. It stated in part the following:

Alleging Edinburg lawyer Richard Kent Livesay made “false and material misrepresentations” that he represented insureds in property damage claims, Allstate Texas Lloyd’s seeks a court order to prevent Livesay and his firm from demanding payment for property owners they doesn’t represent.
In a lawsuit filed in Tarrant County, Allstate alleges Livesay and his firm have engaged in a pattern of conduct throughout Texas in which Livesay “victimizes” Allstate insureds by falsely claiming he had been hired by them to represent them in property damage claims,” and by doing so, obtained information about the insureds’ policies and claims the defendants aren’t entitled to obtain.

 

“Livesay’s actions interfere with the contractual relationship between Allstate and its insureds, and interfere in the resolution of claims genuinely brought by insureds,” Allstate wrote in a petition filed Dec. 29 in Tarrant County.

 

Allstate seeks an injunction to prevent Livesay…from falsely claiming to Allstate that they represent homeowners in property damage claims, forwarding correspondence or communications to Allstate asserting they represent the insureds when they do not and forwarding demands for payment, threatening legal action “supposedly” on behalf of insureds when they have not been retained to represent them.

Allstate alleges that in the petition for claims filed by three policyholders in connection with a May 8, 2014, “weather event,” Livesay falsely informed that he and his firm had been retained to represent the insureds, and they sent a demand letter in all three cases notifying the insurance company they intended to pursue claims and seek damages.

….

In August 2015, Allstate alleges, each of the three policyholders notified the company that they had not hired Livesay or his law office and were not represented by Livesay.
In addition to the injunction, Allstate seeks actual damages of $1,099—consisting of fees paid to law firms the insurance company hired to respond to the demand letters—exemplary damages, interest and court costs.

To be fair, allegations are one thing and proof another in any lawsuit. Allstate is one of those companies that…

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