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Amid Surge In ERISA Suits Over American Century TDFs, Judge Grants Dismissal

CLEVELAND — On the heels of a surge of similar litigation over the selection and retention of American Century Fund target date funds (TDFs) as retirement fund options, an Ohio federal granted dismissal of a putative class suit on the grounds that at most, the allegations show “modest underperformance” that “is insufficient to infer imprudence.”

Judge Dismisses, Says PFAS Claims Against Kimberly-Clark Are Not Plausibly Alleged

NEW HAVEN, Conn. — A federal judge in Connecticut has dismissed, without further leave to amend, a putative class action alleging that Kimberly-Clark Corp. is the source of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) contamination in the local groundwater supply, ruling that the third amended complaint fails to plausibly allege that the plaintiffs’ injuries were caused by Kimberly-Clark.

Judge Cites 2nd Circuit Cases, Grants Injunction In Allstate No-Fault Fraud Suit

BROOKLYN, N.Y. — Citing precedent from the Second Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals, a New York federal judge on March 30 granted Allstate’s motion for a preliminary injunction to stay no-fault arbitrations in state court filed by the same medical provider defendants Allstate is suing in federal court over their alleged participation in a no-fault fraud Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) Act scheme, finding that “the risk of irreparable harm” absent a stay tips “the balance of hardships” in favor of Allstate because the outcome of the state court proceedings “could have a preclusive effect” on the federal court’s “ability to provide relief.”

Texas Panel Reverses Judgment Favoring Owner Of Totaled Car In Suit Against Insurer

AUSTIN, Texas — The Third District Texas Court of Appealsreversed and remanded an amended final judgment that granted summary judgment in favor of the owner of a totaled Audi for nearly $240,000 plus interest for the value of his car, damages and attorney fees and costs in his suit against his insurer alleging breach of contract and state law claims, finding that the owner failed to conclusively prove the claims as a matter of law and failed to establish the policy terms and independent damage.

Federal Government Tells High Court Judicial Review Of TPS Terminations Is Barred

WASHINGTON, D.C. — The Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) bars judicial review of the Homeland Security secretary’s designation of temporary protected status (TPS), as well as the termination of such designation, the secretary and other federal government agencies and officials argue in a petitioner brief filed March 30 in the U.S. Supreme Court.

Pollution And Contamination Exclusion Bars Coverage For COVID-19 Losses, Panel Says

HOUSTON — An additional insured is not entitled to coverage for business interruption losses caused by quarantine orders issued in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic because the commercial property policy’s pollution and contamination exclusion bars coverage, the 14th Texas Court of Appeals said March 31 in affirming a trial court’s ruling in favor of the insurer on breach of contract and extracontractual claims.

Hollywood Hotelier, Fired Worker Argue Arbitration Jurisdiction Case In High Court

WASHINGTON, D.C. — The U.S. Supreme Court heard oral arguments on March 30 in a dispute between the owners and operators of a West Hollywood luxury hotel and an employee terminated during the COVID-19 pandemic over whether a federal court that had original jurisdiction over a case and stayed it for arbitration maintains jurisdiction to confirm or vacate the arbitration award under the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA) without an independent jurisdictional basis.

High Court To Review Affirmative Defense Filing Dispute In Termination Case

WASHINGTON, D.C. — The U.S. Supreme Court on March 30 granted a petition for a writ of certiorari filed by a terminated employee of a Georgia district attorney’s office seeking review of whether the dismissal of her federal claims that she was terminated because of her pregnancy was proper when the affirmative defense her employer used as the basis of its summary judgment motion was not filed as part of its answer to her amended complaint in violation of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.

Asbestos Claimants Lose Bid For Direct Appeal Of Denial Of Chapter 11 Dismissal

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — A North Carolina federal bankruptcy judge did not misapply or misinterpret federal law or Fourth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals precedent in denying two asbestos claimants’ motion to dismiss the Chapter 11 case of Georgia-Pacific spinoff Bestwall LLC, a federal judge in the state held March 27 in denying the claimants’ request to certify the decision for direct appeal.

High Court Rejects Petition To Review Whether Gardasil Claims Were Untimely

WASHINGTON, D.C. — The U.S. Supreme Court will let stand a decision by the Fourth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals that the addition of the Gardasil vaccine to the Vaccine Injury Table was constitutional and that women must first file claims in the Vaccine Act compensation program before suing in a district court, according to a March 30 docket entry.

Microcaptive Structure Declared Noneconomic; Underpayment Penalties Upheld

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Applying a recently established framework governing the economic substance doctrine and disclosure requirements in microcaptive insurance cases, a U.S. Tax Court judge held that a purported captive arrangement failed both prongs of the economic substance test and sustained a 40% accuracy-related penalty for a nondisclosed noneconomic substance transaction.

LATEST NEWS

Judge Tosses Insurance Mogul Bid To Compel Arbitration Related To Equity Purchase
Amid Surge In ERISA Suits Over American Century TDFs, Judge Grants Dismissal
Plaintiff’s Talc Firm, Attorney Want Federal Disqualification Stayed
Judge Dismisses, Says PFAS Claims Against Kimberly-Clark Are Not Plausibly Alleged
DOL Seeks Comments On Proposed Revision To Foreign Worker Visa Program Wage Levels
Family Renews Attempt At Getting Asbestos Case Sent Back To State Court
Judge Cites 2nd Circuit Cases, Grants Injunction In Allstate No-Fault Fraud Suit
Federal Judge Refuses To Toss Insurer’s Lawsuit Arising From Minor’s Drowning Death
Judge: Expert In Insurance Coverage Dispute Can Testify, But With Limitations
Judge Tosses Negligence Claims Against Adjuster Over ‘Inflated’ Hurricane Damage
Texas Panel Reverses Judgment Favoring Owner Of Totaled Car In Suit Against Insurer
Judge Allows UCL, False Advertising Case Against Telehealth Company To Proceed
High Court Denies Debt Firm’s Petition In CFAA Suit Against Ex-Workers
High Court Rejects Certiorari In Counterfeiting Row With $9.3M Ruling
Federal Government Tells High Court Judicial Review Of TPS Terminations Is Barred
Amici Medical Companies To High Court: Affirm ‘Skinny Label’ Infringement Finding
With Objections Resolved, Residential Treatment Deal Wins Final Approval
Pollution And Contamination Exclusion Bars Coverage For COVID-19 Losses, Panel Says
Judge Lifts Stay Of Asbestos Group’s East Wing FOIA Case
FTC, AirAI Entities Reach Agreement Over Misrepresentation Claims
Fake Citations Lead To $15,500 Sanction, $94,700 In Costs And Fees
Hollywood Hotelier, Fired Worker Argue Arbitration Jurisdiction Case In High Court
Judge Grants Injunction In Anthropic’s Challenge To Supply Chain Designation
Owned Property Exclusion Bars Coverage For Asbestos Contamination, Justice Says
D.C. Circuit Denies EPA’s Bid To Sever Parts Of PFAS Rule That Groups Challenge
High Court To Review Affirmative Defense Filing Dispute In Termination Case
Asbestos Claimants Lose Bid For Direct Appeal Of Denial Of Chapter 11 Dismissal
Colorado County: Fracking Railroad Project Approvals In Uinta Basin Are ‘Unlawful’
Judge Blocks Enforcement Of Copyright Deposit Copy Requirement In Lawsuit
High Court Rejects Petition To Review Whether Gardasil Claims Were Untimely